The Jerusalem Post

Art pop-ups

Transformi­ng Jaffa through gallery spaces

- • By REBECCA STADLEN AMIR/ISRAEL21c www.israel21c.org

When Stockholm art institutio­n Magasin III began revamping an old restaurant space in a residentia­l area of Jaffa, many neighbors had guesses as to what was about to come. One predicted a car showroom, another anticipate­d a display of kitchen and bath fixtures. Those who dared to ask learned that the former bi-level eatery between a synagogue and a barber shop would become a light-washed gallery for contempora­ry art.

After a year-long renovation, the 180sq.m. (2,000-sq.ft.) space features floor-toceiling glass on both ends, allowing its illuminate­d exhibition­s to be viewed from the outside by passersby around the clock, free of charge.

Though the contempora­ry art scene in the city of Tel Aviv-Jaffa may have originated further uptown in the Gordon Street area, galleries have steadily been working their way south to Jaffa over the past few years along with many artists and studios.

“The more the city is developing, the more the artists are pushed south and the more the galleries are following them,” said art adviser Sarah Peguine. Her company, Oh-So-Arty, offers private and public contempora­ry art tours in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem as well as 20 cities around the world including New York, London, Paris and Berlin.

Jaffa is new on her list of monthly public tours. In comparison to south Tel Aviv, which Peguine describes as industrial, Jaffa is more residentia­l. Its historic neighborho­ods are home to Jews, Christians and Muslims, offering an inspiring environmen­t for art and culture that embraces religious, economic and cultural diversity.

“Jaffa is an area that is going through a change in the past couple of years and Magasin III really wanted to be part of it,” said Magasin III gallery manager Karmit Galili. “This neighborho­od is very diverse and we like to find ways to involve people in what we’re doing, whether it’s by looking, by walking in, or taking part in other ways in the future.”

Magasin III, named for the Swedish word for “storehouse,” has hosted many of the world’s leading contempora­ry artists in its 30-year history as a museum and foundation for contempora­ry art in Stockholm, including Ai Weiwei, James Turrell and Pipilotti Rist. The January 2018 opening of its new outpost in Jaffa adds to the piling list of evidence that the area is undergoing a significan­t cultural awakening.

Peguine said she noticed the city’s art scene in the south starting to pick up about two years ago, with a number of new spaces and well-known galleries opening satellite locations.

Gordon Gallery, establishe­d in 1966 on its namesake Gordon Street in Tel Aviv, opened its third location on the southern fringe of Tel Aviv in 2016, bridging the gap between the more industrial neighborho­ods of the south with the more tourist-friendly areas of Jaffa. The white-cube gallery space replaced an old warehouse and sits between a carpentry workshop and a zipper factory.

Within about 15 minutes’ walking distance, passing Magasin III on the way, is Beit Kandinof, an alternativ­e art space that hosts monthly exhibition­s, classes and lectures, along with a bar and restaurant that operates into the night. The unique space has been open for about a year and has already become a Jaffa hangout for young artists and creatives. Its proximity to Jaffa’s eclectic flea market has also made it a popular tourist spot.

“Our crowd is everybody – from young tattooed hipsters smoking cigarettes, to an older couple enjoying a cocktail, to big families, to tourists. We’re a really accessible space to everyone,” said artist Arianna Fornaciai, who owns and runs the space along with Amir Erlich.

While Gordon Gallery and Magasin III host internatio­nally renowned artists, Beit Kandinof is one of several Jaffa art spaces that aim to support local, emerging artists. The multi-functional space includes two rooms for artist residencie­s, including one recently establishe­d for alumni of Shenkar College of Engineerin­g and Design. Visitors wander in to discover new artists and support local talent whose work is relatively affordable in comparison to prices at more traditiona­l galleries.

Other eclectic cultural hubs include Cuckoo’s Nest and Alamacén, whose gallery-meets-gathering-spaces serve both the local and internatio­nal communitie­s, creating interactio­ns between the neighborho­od’s residents and its guests.

Galerie Charlot, an internatio­nal gallery from Paris, opened its Jaffa outpost in 2017 with a focus on the relationsh­ip between art, technology and science. Its location in Kedumim Square at the center of Old Jaffa is surrounded by archeologi­cal remains, restaurant­s and souvenir shops, making it an easy stop-in for those touring the area.

Inside Galirie Charlot, preserved stone archways combine with stark-white walls to create an old-meets-new environmen­t that has become very typical of Jaffa. The curators follow this sentiment as well, displaying digital and emerging art forms by both Israeli and internatio­nal artists.

“We’re trying more and more to be involved in the internatio­nal art scene. It’s our biggest challenge but I think we’re becoming more and more successful with it,” said Peguine, who is working on developing an internatio­nal online platform for discoverin­g and purchasing contempora­ry Israeli art with Gordon Gallery Director Michal Freedman.

“All of the people in the art world in Tel Aviv are trying to push it internatio­nally, whether it means bringing Israeli artists outside of Israel or bringing internatio­nal artists here.”

Certainly in Jaffa, where diverse visitors from three religions and hundreds of countries come to get a taste of Israeli design, food and culture, the art scene is on the internatio­nal map.

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 ?? (Facebook) ?? GORDON GALLERY’S second location is on the border of south Tel Aviv and Jaffa.
(Facebook) GORDON GALLERY’S second location is on the border of south Tel Aviv and Jaffa.

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