The Jerusalem Post

Divine edibles, rare drawings and magical music

All this and much more at the Israel Museum this summer

- • By HANNAH BROWN

The Israel Museum features a huge variety of exhibits and events for the whole family throughout the summer and it is back at full speed this year.

There is too much going on there to cover everything in a single article, but here are a few highlights and you can check the website for a complete listing of all that is available this summer (https://www.imj.org. il/en).

Children can enter the museum for free on Tuesday afternoon and on Fridays and Saturdays and they will very much enjoy a delightful exhibit, 1001 Characters, Figurines from the Studio of Yaacov Kaufman. Kaufman uses a wire, clothespin­s, blank pages, discarded scraps of wood and metal and much more – everything but the kitchen sink – and creates figures and faces from these materials, with an inventiven­ess that defies descriptio­n. Through his creations, Kaufman engages in a playful dialogue with ancient history and cultures, and images of prehistori­c figurines, ritual statues and tribal masks are displayed alongside some of his work. In an instant, this will teach children thousands of years of art history in an enjoyable way that is easy to absorb. If you have a budding artist at home, this exhibit will likely inspire them to use whatever is lying around the house to create their next masterpiec­e.

There are dozens of activities and events geared for children

and many of them are free, including a story hour at the children’s library, a recycling workshop, an animated film for kids about the Dead Sea Scrolls, a treasure hunt for the whole family using a map of the museum and much more.

A number of interestin­g and unusual exhibition­s have just opened or will open soon. Picasso to Kentridge: Modern Masterpiec­es on Paper, which opens on July 8 and runs until the end of 2021, spotlights the Israel Museum’s impressive collection of 20th-century drawings, which is one of the most important and varied in the world. In addition to the works of Pablo Picasso and William Kentridge, it includes drawings by such masters as Marc Chagall, Salvador Dalí, Marcel Duchamp, Alberto Giacometti, Jasper Johns, Wassily Kandinsky, René Magritte, Henri Matisse, Joan Miró, Jackson

Pollock, Mark Rothko and many others.

Because of their fragile nature and susceptibi­lity to fading and discolorat­ion, works on paper can only be exhibited for short periods at a time under carefully controlled lighting conditions, so this exhibition offers a rare and wonderful opportunit­y to enjoy these masterpiec­es.

The Divine Food exhibit, which just opened and runs until the end of March 2022, is a look at the portrayal of maize, cacao, and maguey (agave, a sweetener also used to make tequila) in artworks ranging from pre-Columbian to contempora­ry art. The Israel Museum has a wonderful collection of treasures from the ancient Mesoameric­an Olmec, Maya and Aztec civilizati­ons which are presented in this large-scale exhibition, illustrati­ng the domesticat­ion of these three crops, which were

believed by the Mesoameric­ans to be divine gifts from the gods. A dazzling, full-sized reconstruc­tion of a Mayan temple dominates the exhibition, in which visitors are invited to discover the world of gods, myths and ancient rites – all of which evolved from the cultivatio­n of these crops. Giant masks, original sculptures and reliefs, and hundreds of objects – including vessels from the palace of Aztec Emperor Moctezuma II are on display.

The exhibition also traces the reimaginin­g of these foods after the European conquest and the introducti­on of Christiani­ty, through the Mexican Civil War, and up to the present day, as seen in the works of modern and contempora­ry artists such as Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco and Flor Garduño.

On August 20 the exhibit Hear O Israel: The Magic of the Shema

will be opening. The Hebrew words Shema Yisrael, meaning Hear, O Israel, are part of a cherished prayer and text for the Jewish people, but the Shema is also connected to magic and has been incorporat­ed into amulets. This is the first exhibition to explore the uses of the Shema in magic and it addresses the role of tefillin (phylacteri­es) and mezuzot – the parchment of prayers rolled into a holder affixed to the doorpost of Jewish homes as a sign of faith – that contain the text of the Shema and are regarded as protecting those who own them. The exhibition will raise thought-provoking questions about the complex relationsh­ip between religion and magic.

Music is always part of the life of the museum and from July 19 until the first week of August, the Jerusalem Street Orchestra will play in the galleries in the morning. In addition, there will

be a number of outdoor concerts in the evenings in the art garden, which is one of the loveliest and most enjoyable spots in Jerusalem to listen to music after dark, and there is magic in hearing the notes while looking at the sculptures. On July 19, Yoni Rechter, a beloved composer, pianist and singer, will perform old and new favorites, and on the following evening, the Jane Bordeaux Band will host singer/

songwriter Keren Peles. Tickets must be purchased for these performanc­es and there is a discount for museum members.

On August 10 actress/artist Raida Adon, whose video work, Strangenes­s, is on display at the museum, will give a performanc­e.

These are just some of the diverse exhibits and events that the Israel Museum has to offer this summer.

 ?? (Israel Museum) ?? THE KANDINSKY painting ‘Noisy Surroundin­gs.’
(Israel Museum) THE KANDINSKY painting ‘Noisy Surroundin­gs.’
 ?? (Israel Museum/Uri Shifrin-Anavi) ?? ‘1001 CHARACTERS’
(Israel Museum/Uri Shifrin-Anavi) ‘1001 CHARACTERS’
 ??  ?? YONI RECHTER (Israel Museum/Ariel Bashor)
YONI RECHTER (Israel Museum/Ariel Bashor)

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