Israel / One

Contemporary Artists from Israel

Catalogue of the Imago Mundi Collection: Israel / One (2013) by Contemporary Artists From IsraelImago Mundi

Land of Olive Groves and Art

‘Art cannot change the whole world’ – said the Croatian director Jakov Sedlar, author of a bold film that takes the story of Anne Frank to the Palestinians of the Gaza Strip. ‘But – he continued – we can help to understand it a bit more.’

Gil Yefman - From One To None, Gil Yefman, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Gil Yefman - From One To None (2013)

Pnina Reichman - Refusal, Pnina Reichman, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Pnina Reichman - Refusal (2013)


In a country where contradictory identities, hopes and dreams, violent clashes and fragile truces coexist, the force of an authentic and thriving cultural laboratory can be seen and felt. An artistic vitality that is on a par with the great world capitals, aware of its own potential: of what culture can do to help to heal wounds.

Zohar Gotesman - Sanctum Preputium, Zohar Gotesman, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Zohar Gotesman - Sanctum Preputium (2013)

Elsa Ers Brosh - The Patriarch, Elsa Ers Brosh, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Elsa Ers Brosh - The Patriarch (2013)


Art can alleviate pain’, says Israeli artist Menashe Kadishman. I would add it can act as a bridge: between men and their feelings, between despair and hope, between the past and the future, particularly where the on-going and historic interweaving of different cultures and stories creates a compelling
artistic mix.

Zvika Kantor - God Almighty, Zvika Kantor, 2012, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Zvika Kantor - God Almighty (2012)

Ravit Mishli - Ashtray, Ravit Mishli, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Ravit Mishli - Ashtray (2013)

Tel Aviv is a good example, the ‘White City’, whose Bauhaus architecture has earned it the status of UNESCO World Heritage Site. The cultural and economic capital of the country, which celebrated its centenary in 2009, has more than four thousand buildings designed between 1931 and 1956 by the architects of the movement founded by Walter Gropius, who trained in Europe and emigrated to Israel, complementing the city’s eclectic and oriental style with more modern and western forms of expression.

Jenifer Bar Lev - United Colors Of Death, Jenifer Bar Lev, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Jenifer Bar Lev - United Colors Of Death (2013)

Ariela Plotkin - Untitled, Ariela Plotkin, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Ariela Plotkin - Untitled (2013)


The presence of the Silicon Wadi, the area with the highest concentration of activities related to the new economy and telecommunications, highlights its modern and cosmopolitan character. Today, like in New York, Berlin or Milan, the paintings of young artists on the walls of the suburbs bring colour to the image of the city.

Anat Betzer - The One?, Anat Betzer, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Anat Betzer - The One? (2013)

Raafat Hattab - One, Raafat Hattab, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Raafat Hattab - One (2013)


In Jerusalem, meanwhile, Anish Kapoor’s huge hourglass welcomes visitors from around the world to the new Israel Museum. In the Shrine of the Book, which resembles the domed lid of a jar, a number of the Dead Sea Scrolls are preserved, the oldest biblical manuscripts in the world. And in the Billy Rose Art Garden, the sculpture park on the west side of the museum, sculptures by Rodin, Calder, Moore and Picasso can be admired.

Lea Avital - Untitled, Lea Avital, 2014, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Lea Avital - Untitled (2014)

Yair Garbuz - Old Masters, Yair Garbuz, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Yair Garbuz - Old Masters (2013)



A few kilometres from Tel Aviv, lies the Design Museum Holon created by Ron Arad, with its naturally red Italian oxidized steel shining in the Israeli sun. Amid the sinuous spiral ramps and large rooms that host international exhibitions, the objective of the training and education of the new generations is unmistakable. Through painting, design, architecture, photography, installations, video - in a word, art - Israel faces the world and reflects on itself in order to reinvent the future of a country that is both rooted in history and projected toward tomorrow.

Ashraf Fawakhry - Tayara Haramiyi (Title Of A Traditional Children’s Song: Planes & Thieves), Ashraf Fawakhry, 2012, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Ashraf Fawakhry - Tayara Haramiyi (Title Of A Traditional Children's Song: Planes & Thieves (2012)

Ella Amitay Sadovsky - Minute Flower Arrangement, Ella Amitay Sadovsky, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Ella Amitay Sadovsky - Minute Flower Arrangement (2013)


After the mass persecution of Jews in Europe and the Holocaust, the Israelis have built not only a new state but a new way of living together in a natural landscape that is arid but full of potential, strong ideas, hope.

Durar Bacri - Northern Landscape, Durar Bacri, 2014, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Durar Bacri - Northern Landscape (2014)

Today, Israel is a young country with a three thousand year history, which through work, research and development has been able to render its lands as fertile as its ideas, its aspirations, its vision and its imagination.

Khetam Heby - Between My Roots, Khetam Heby, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Khetam Heby - Between My Roots (2013)


This Imago Mundi collection is an opportunity to acknowledge the originality and the value of the Israeli culture and its artistic production. It demonstrates how this dusty, disputed land, where olive groves have always grown, is also filling with the colours of art.

Gilad Efrat - Ape, Gilad Efrat, 2013, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
Show lessRead more

Gilad Efrat - Ape (2013)

Credits: Story

Curators
Naomi Aviv & Daniel S. Milo

Assistant curator
Smadar Keren

Assistant
Danielle Angel

Organization
Valentina Granzotto

Editorial coordination
Enrico Bossan

Texts
Luciano Benetton
Naomi Aviv & Daniel S. Milo
Dr. Gideon Ofrat

Editing and translation
Emma Cole
Sara Favilla
Daniel S. Milo
Roaa Translation & Publishing Pietro Valdatta Dina Yakerson

Book design
Marcello Piccinini

Photography
Marco Zanin (Artworks)

Production
Marco Pavan

Cover
Avner Ben-Gal - Fox

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Related theme
What is Contemporary Art?
Challenging the notion of art itself – explore the art of our recent past, present and future
View theme
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites