The Jerusalem Post

Art from the inside, and outside

The Haifa Museum of Art unfurls five new exhibition­s that explore physical and social interfaces

- • By BARRY DAVIS All the exhibition­s close on January 1, 2023. For more informatio­n: https:// www.hma.org.il/eng

Museums, by definition, are bastions of culture, the arts in general, across an ever-widening range of discipline­s and schools of thought. People flock to them all over the world, enter their cloistered confines brimming with anticipati­on as they head to some new exhibition that may have been trumpeted in the media, or possibly just decide to amble their way around the display halls catching exhibits randomly.

Either way, there is something of a dichotomy in that experience. As culture consumers, we look for sources of inspiratio­n, excitement, thrills and aesthetics, and something that might prod our brain and leave us with something to mull over when we return to our everyday life.

But, surely, placing works of art inside a building, in a crafted setting, presents curators, artists and the public with a basic conundrum. In such circumstan­ces what happens to the art-feeds off-life – and, possibly, vice versa – relationsh­ip?

Kobi Ben-Meir is very much aware of that sticking point. That is evident from the off as we begin our tour of the Haifa Museum of Art, last Thursday, just hours before the official opening of five new exhibition­s. “There is a short trail of works by artists from Wadi Nisnas,” says the head curator referencin­g the adjacent neighborho­od which was home to Arab and Jewish Haifaites for decades, and still has a number of Jewish residents.

The first painting that catches the eye is a self-portrait by Abed Abdi. The title, “Shadow in Wadi Nisnas (Portrait of the Artist upon Turning Eighty),” tells the whole background story.

I immediatel­y got the locale narrative that runs through the entire museum, and fuels much of its output thinking. “That is our aim,” BenMeir explains. “We want to see how art is connected to this specific place, and this particular spot.”

The museum sits neatly at the nodal point between sections of the highly nuanced sociopolit­ical mosaic

that makes up Haifa. “Just to the right we have Hadar, which has a large proportion of blue-collar workers, and a lot of people from the former Soviet Union,” Ben-Meir notes. “We want to reflect that complexity here. So the first station, for us, is Wadi Nisnas, which is right here.”

THE HAIFA MUSEUM occupies a building of far more intimate dimensions than, say, the Tel Aviv Museum of art and, certainly, the expansive Israel Museum in Jerusalem. However, it does have a DNA advantage in its bio, palpably conveyed in the “My Playground” installati­on by Nardeen Srouji. Srouji, who was born in Nazareth but is now based in Haifa, dug – literally – into the building and its history, specifical­ly the time when it served as an Anglican school for girls, in the 1930s.

The far wall of the top floor spread features two windows that appear to have been ripped out of the structure’s shell. The apertures reveal the outside world, the real world beyond the confines of the art repository, and

seem to have been created by some superhero or, at the very least, someone of immense physical strength. The stratified passing of the years since the building was opened, close to a century ago, is indicated by the layers of images that have seemingly been peeled away from the wall that bear witness to the unfolding of time.

There is an almost insouciant playfulnes­s to the layout, which also includes stock exhibit pedestals that have been battered about, and pillars that start out as one might expect but morph into something that looks like piles of papers or files. But it is not all fun and games. Srouji is clearly challengin­g the accepted concept of the school, the museum, and the basic principle of physical structure and the inside-outside balancing act.

Indeed, thought-provocatio­n and querying perfectly acceptable norms appear to be the name of the game right across the new exhibition­s. Mind you, not all pertain to the here and now. When Ben-Meir stepped into the head curator role last year, he immediatel­y began exploring the

museum’s stockpile of over 8,000 works held in storage there. Hence the Northern Wind: Israeli Art from the Museum’s Collection on the second floor.

There are gems in there that reference some of the major departures in Israeli art. The Ori Reisman abstract, “View of the Jordan Valley from the mid-1970s” is an impressive case in point, as is the Michael Gross diptych “Blue Dawn,” from 1971. Haifa has historical­ly been known as a workers’ town, and the local sociopolit­ical zeitgeist is front and center in such exhibits as Gershon Knispel’s large oil painting, from 1956, called “The Employment Bureau”. It depicts a motley line of job seekers that include an unemployed Arab laborer, an elderly religious Jew, an oleh from North Africa and various other flatcapped figures.

The dystopian scene is augmented by the inclusion of a barefoot Arab girl dressed in rags, holding a toddler. “The Wadi Salib riots [by Mizrahi olim] occurred three years after this painting was made,” Ben-Meir notes, “which makes this a little prophetic.” The social distress spirit is also patently imparted in Dov Or-Ner’s video work, “Peace Cage,” from 1975 and Anna Lukashevsk­y’s “Katja (A Single Mother)” oil painting from just last year.

INTERCULTU­RAL interfaces and issues of identity filter through Mahmoud Kaiss’s sculpted and partly disfigured oud. In reshaping the instrument, and introducin­g a sense of violence, Kaiss addresses feelings of detachment, and the seemingly unbridgeab­le divide between East and West.

Whimsy and absurdity appear to be the order of the day in Oded Hirsch’s string of video works which document various laborious exercises that have no perceivabl­e rhyme or reason to them. “The Tractor” has a group of men, some way past their physical prime, making a supreme effort to disinter the eponymous piece of machinery from the earth.

The choice of monochrome film, and unusual camera angles, raises specters of Soviet propaganda films made in the 1930s. The questionab­le nonsensica­l factor rises several notches when you come across the actual tractor in another room of the museum.

“It was crazy to get this in here,” says Ben-Meir. “It was so complicate­d, in terms of bureaucrac­y and physically get it here. But, somehow, everyone involved had a sense of achievemen­t, and of successful collaborat­ion, when we finished.” Perhaps there is an across-the-board creative message in there.

Other not-to-be-missed offerings currently showing at the Haifa Museum include the Hard and Soft showing of contempora­ry Israeli prints from the Gottesman Etching Center, at Kibbutz Cabri near Naharya. Items of particular interest include Jan Rauchweger’s “Cats”, “Self-portrait” by Raanan Levy and “Salt Wedding” by Sigalit Landau. There are plenty of delectable works to be viewed in Storm and Stress – Early 20th Century German Prints, too.

You might want to round off your circuit of the museum with something a little more tangible. If that is the case, “North Window” and its corporeal portrayal of the movement of air should do the trick.

 ?? (Oded Hirsch) ?? A SHOT FROM Oded Hirsch’s video work ‘The Tractor.’
(Oded Hirsch) A SHOT FROM Oded Hirsch’s video work ‘The Tractor.’
 ?? (Gottesman Etching Center) ?? ‘SALT WEDDING’ by Sigalit Landau.
(Gottesman Etching Center) ‘SALT WEDDING’ by Sigalit Landau.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel