Staring Back at the Sun: Video Art from Israel, 1970–2012
An Exhibition and Public Program An Exhibition and Public Program in Collaboration with Artis (2nd day)

Zachęta / cinema room (entrance from Burschego street)
free entry

Films with English subtitles.

23rd of April (Saturday)

5 p.m. — Introduction by Avi Feldman

5.30 p.m. — THE RISE OF THE MEDIUM: PART III 1997-2005. Curated by Sergio Edelsztein
Total running time: 62 minutes

By the end of the 1990s and early 2000s, a group of young artists, including GUY BEN-NER, DORON SOLOMONS, BOAZ ARAD, YAEL BARTANA, SIGALIT LANDAU, ROEE ROSEN, and many others had established video as the dominant medium in Israel. These artists came of age when visual culture in Israel changed radically. The economy was liberalized in the mid 1980s and brought with it a slew of consumer goods, enabled more accessible travel abroad, and expanded Israeli television from one, state-run black and white channel to hundreds of international channels, from CNN to MTV, and a new Israeli commercial TV channel that was the first to broadcast advertisements. The economic expansion that took place in the late 1980s and 1990s coincided with the first Palestinian uprising, or Intifada, followed by the Oslo Peace Process that came to an end with the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995, and further political precariousness. From early on, most of the leading artists of this generation engaged with the day-to-day political realities of living in the Middle East as the basis of their practice. When the second Intifada broke out in 2000, they were well positioned formally and conceptually to react to a period of radical social unrest. This third section illuminates the maturation of video as a medium in Israel, and the almost immediate requirement that it reckon with a violent, tumultuous reality being played out in the Middle East and on televisions around the world.

6.30 p.m. — Introduction by Avi Feldman

7 p.m. — STATE OF AMNESIA: RECENT VIDEO FROM ISRAEL: PART IV 2005–2012. Curated by YAEL BARTANA and AVI FELDMAN
Total running time: 61 minutes

Radical innovation in video art in Israel over the last decade has made it the most significant creative period in the country’s artistic history. While most nations can cite painting as the origin point and standard-bearer for their artistic traditions, Israel could say the same for the moving image. The final section of this program highlights works made about the political and social reality in Israel today and how artists grapple with the seeming status quo of a nation in perpetual conflict.



Staring Back at the Sun: Video Art from Israel, 1970-2012, traces the development of contemporary video practice in Israel and highlights work by artists who take an incisive, critical perspective towards the cultural and political landscape in Israel and beyond. Staring Back at the Sun showcases 35 artworks, including early performances, films and videos never before presented outside of Israel. Divided into four historic and thematic sections, this program focuses on the activist impulse in video art-making in Israel over the last four decades. Informed by the international history of video art, the program traces the development of the medium in Israel and explores how artists have employed technology and material to examine the socio-political status quo through themes such as the prominence of political conflict in mass media; the liberalization of the economy; and the impact of free market politics on Israeli culture.

participating artists: Boaz Arad, Maayan Amir & Ruti Sela, Yossi Atia & Itamar Rose, Yael Bartana, Irit Batsry, Guy Ben Ner, Hila Lulu Lin Farah Kufr Birim, Michael Druks, Buky Schwartz, Benni Efrat, Avraham Eilat, Nir Evron, Yair Garbuz, Gideon Gechtman, Moshe Gershuni, Tamar Getter, Dor Guez, Sigalit Landau, Raffi Lavie, Motti Mizrachi, Avi Mograbi, Michal Naaman, Joshua Neustein, Miri Nishri, Nira Pereg, Dov Or-Ner, Gilad Ratman, Roee Rosen, Henry Shelesnyak, Ran Slavin, Doron Solomons, Micha Ullman, Rona Yefman [& Tanja Schlander], Dan Zakhem, Nana & Boaz Zonshine

curators: Yael Bartana, Sergio Edelsztein, Avi Feldman, Chen Tamir, Ilana Tenenbaum 

Yael Bartana is a Berlin-based artist best known for videos that explore the relationship between documentary and fiction. Her work engages with cultural and collective identity in relation to social phenomena such as ceremonies and rituals.

Sergio Edelsztein is director and chief curator of the Center for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv, which he founded in 1998. He has curated numerous exhibitions in Israel and internationally, including Israel's pavilion at the 24th São Paulo Biennial (1998) and the Israeli pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 2005 (Guy Ben Ner) and 2013 (Gilad Ratman).

Avi Feldman is an independent curator and writer based in Tel Aviv, Berlin and Dresden. He was the director and co-curator of Vdance International Video and Dance Festival at the Tel Aviv Cinematheque, and has worked as associate curator for avant-garde film at the Jerusalem International Film Festival and the Petach Tikva Museum of Art.

Chen Tamir is curatorial associate at Artis and curator at the Center for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv. She was recently listed by artnet as one of 25 women curators on the rise and by Artslant as one of 15 curators to watch in 2015. She is organizing curator of this program.

Ilana Tenenbaum is an independent curator based in Haifa, Israel. Previous positions include chief curator of contemporary art at the City Gallery in Kfar Saba, Israel and founding director and curator of the New Media Center at the Haifa Museum of Art. Her curatorial work focuses on the research and documentation of video art, including projects such as Videostoria, the first exhibition series to systematically survey the history of the projected image in Israeli art. 

Program organized with Artis with support from the Polish Institute in Tel Aviv.
https://artiscontemporary.org/
http://www.polishinstitute.org.il/

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