The Jerusalem Post

Opening up to Karavan

This year’s Tel Aviv Open Houses Festival salutes acclaimed sculptor Dani Karavan

- • By BARRY DAVIS For more informatio­n, https://www.batim-il.org

It sounds a little akin to the old philosophi­cal teaser that ponders whether a tree falling in a forest, when no one is around to hear it, actually makes a sound. It may follow that a work of art might not exist if no one sees it.

Dani Karavan had no such problems. The celebrated Israel Prize-winning sculptor let it all hang out for all and sundry to observe and touch. Karavan died a year ago, at the age of 90, and his very public oeuvre is currently being saluted with a slew of events as part of this year’s Open Houses Festival in Tel Aviv.

It is only fitting that an artist, who left such a weighty mark on his adopted hometown of Tel Aviv, should be given an official pat on the back, albeit posthumous­ly, in that very city. Saturday’s Karavan rollout takes in a bunch of guided tours of relevant geographic­al points, including his Adama, Admati (The Earth) creation located at the branch of Bank Hapoalim on Yehuda Halevi Street, comprising cubes of earth, plexiglas, optic fibers and wood. Then, there is his iconic and hugely impressive White Square arrangemen­t, which sits atop a hillock in the Edith Wolfson Park, offering a spectacula­r view of the urban spread.

And if that doesn’t give the festival goers a sense of the man behind the sculptures, surely the visit to Karavan’s studio should do the trick. That sounds like a bit of a courageous move to allow strangers into the late great artist’s inner sanctum.

“I suppose so, but that is totally in keeping with my dad’s spirit,” says his daughter, Noa Karavan Cohen. “Firstly, to begin with, his studio was in the house, so I got to spend a lot of time there. It was like a

funfair, with piles of paper, a sketching desk and lots of other things.” That laissez faire mindset, she says, applied to people outside the family circle, too. “My father was always connected to people, particular­ly at his main studio in Paris. He loved meeting people and making his work accessible to them.”

Even so, Karavan Cohen says it took a while to introduce the studio slot to the festival itinerary. “That wasn’t the first thing we thought of. We thought of Culture Square [in Habima Square] and White Square, Bank Hapoalim, Bank Leumi. But Aviva Levinson, who thought up the event, asked if we would be willing to run tours of the studio. I, of course, consulted my mother first; we immediatel­y said yes.”

It seems there was nothing Karavan liked more than having strangers shuffling up to his works, and getting down and dirty with them. “They called

up my father one day and told him people are climbing all over the monument. It’s a disaster,” Karavan Cohen laughs. The piece in question is the hulking Negev Monument in Beersheba. “My dad said: ‘That’s wonderful! That’s just what I wanted to happen.’ He wanted people to get to know his art with all their senses, which is why, I think, music was very important to him.”

The said large scale piece down south, intriguing­ly, has a tubular tower section with holes in it. The inrushing wind produces different notes, according to the size of the hole and the velocity of the air movement at the time. “He always looked for a way to introduce a musical element to his work,” Karavan Cohen explains. “If there was no music, even just the sound of the location or what goes on there will do.”

THAT MAKES his art both site-specific and interactiv­e. “He made a video of the Negev Monument, for the Venice Biennale,” Karavan Cohen continues, “and in the film you can hear people crunching across the gravel there.” Hence the soundtrack to the sculpture, I suggested. “Yes,” comes the reply. “That and the wind.”

While, naturally, the Open Houses tribute largely addresses his contributi­ons to the local landscape, Karavan also produced works for commission­s received from overseas. That will be conveyed in the

Dani Karavan Across the Globe presentati­on of video clips, projected onto the front wall of Habima Theater.

The screening will feature environmen­tal sculptures located in public spaces around the world, including: the gargantuan Axe Majeur in Cergy-Pontoise near Paris,

Murou Art Forest in Japan, and

Passages – Homage to Walter

Benjamin in Portbou, Spain. Passages references the German Jewish philosophe­r who committed suicide in the Pyrenees, in 1940, when he realized the fascist authoritie­s in Spain were going to return him and his fellow Jewish would-be escapees back to the Germans.

Karavan’s extensive portfolio includes several Holocaust-related installati­ons, and not all specifical­ly Jewish. There is, for example, his Sinti and Roma Memorial in Berlin’s Tiergarten park, and Way of Human Right in Nuremberg. The latter, in fact, was not in the original purview, but Karavan found a way of connecting the city with its Nazi past and to pointing the way to a better future.

“It was important for him to introduce human rights into a work for Nuremberg,” Karavan Cohen notes. “When he suggested it to the Germans, it wasn’t something that was

in the commission, and he around on Saturday afternoon was certain they would reject to lead a tour of some of the relevant the idea. They only asked for architectu­ral gems, and something that would connect talk about how she and Karavan the old and new parts of the envisaged turning their museum there.” The proposal vision into enduring reality. was to have a positive ripple “Nitza will also talk about how effect. “They not only accepted she became involved in the the idea, they decided to award project because of my father a prize, every two years, to a and it will be a kind of homage champion of human rights.” to Dani Karavan,” Karavan

There is more to the Karavan Cohen explains. It will be just legacy, which is apparent in one of several salutes to the the Open Houses legacy. “Dad visionary artist. was one of the instigator­s of Elsewhere across the extensive the White City project,” says Open Houses spread, there Karavan Cohen, referencin­g are opportunit­ies to learn the initiative to apply for UN about urban renewal plans for Heritage Site status for Tel the dusty area around the bus Aviv’s unparallel­ed collection station, a look at how to create of Bauhaus, or Internatio­nal sustainabl­e neighborho­ods, Style, architectu­re. “He went to learn about plans to make Tel Chich [Tel Aviv Mayor Shlomo Aviv more bike-friendly, pay a Lahat] in the 1980s and told visit to a sabil – public drinking him there is a treasure here, fountain – built in 1815, and which must be preserved.” pop into a design hub located

The person charged with in a converted flour mill. sprucing up the buildings was visit: Nitza Szmuk, and she will be

 ?? (Dani Karavan Colection) ?? DANI KARAVAN’S Culture Square creations at Habima Square.
(Dani Karavan Colection) DANI KARAVAN’S Culture Square creations at Habima Square.
 ?? (Dan Karavan Collection) ?? A KARAVAN work at the central courthouse in Tel Aviv.
(Dan Karavan Collection) A KARAVAN work at the central courthouse in Tel Aviv.

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