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genius loc / Rothschild Fine Art


טלפון - +972 77 5020484
28/01/2016 to - 13/03/2016

?are forever read as demarcating
ruined Palestinian villages.
This mode of observation came to the fore in 1993-94 with Larry Abramson’s “Tsooba” series of small oil paintings (25x25cm) of the landscape around Kibbutz Tzuba, encompassing the ruins of the Arab village of Tzoba, now part of the hiking
route in the area. He pressed newspaper pages from Hadashot, a leftist daily (closed down around that time) onto the surface of the canvases, then peeled them off. The series generated a discourse on the inevitable politicization of the Israeli landscape.
The issue of blind spots in the gaze has become a litmus test of an artist’s moral stance. (In the early years of statehood, painters depicted Arab villages as documentation and commemoration. What Abramson did was to make present the
blindness that became part of the Israeli gaze and the rapidity with which ruins were transformed from a monument to pain into romantic or transparent structures). W.J.T. Mitchell published his influential book Landscape and Power in 1994. The
essays delineated a challenging political line of thought on reading landscape. Along with articles on the New Zealand landscape and the white settlers’ war against the Maori, the politics of British garden landscaping and representations of African
landscapes, Mitchell also referred to representations of landscape in Israel-Palestine. In the Introduction to the second edition (2002), Mitchell wrote that he would have changed the title to Space, Place, and Landscape: “Landscape exerts a subtle power
over people, eliciting a broad range of emotions and meanings that may be difficult to specify.” Mitchell explains the differences and divisions between space (less defined) and place (which has ownership), and examines when “space” or “place” becomes
“landscape.” In this context we may note the Hebrew word “makom,” used to refer to both locale and the Omnipotent.
 
The current exhibition lies in the field of what Mitchell has formulated as “a range of emotions and meanings…” The genius loci in classical Roman religion refers to the protective spirit of the place; in contemporary usage, the Latin expression which
formerly meant “local deity” now refers to the essence or soul of a place. The artworks in the exhibition genius loci are not manifestos, but they do act in the world. They operate in the silence between notes, not necessarily referring to a
specific landscape, but indeed to a place.
 
***
Eleanor Ray is an American painter who captures infinite expanses in her smallscale paintings, which fill the eye. Her exquisite precision and bold placement of colors create a system in perfect equilibrium. Waterscapes and a field face viewers
confidently and calmly, overflowing what is contained in the viewer’s gaze. The void dominates Mosh Kashi’s fields, as if their moment were that of an early stage of creation after the primordial waters were separated into heavens and seas.
The gaze hovers over the works and celebrates the immutable presence of their emptiness.

The haystack in the foreground of Yehuda Armoni’s painting is cradled in art historical memory, between Jean-François Millet’s The Gleaners (1857) and Claude Monet’s Haystacks (1890-91). The richness of the paintings from a different century
and a different locale adds a subtle layer of meaning in a place where the constant threat of desertification lurks.

Works by Uri Blayer, Tali Navon and Hadar Gad touch upon, but are not limited to the Israeli present. “Grey Valley” by Blayer depicts the Huleh Valley, a place steeped in the Zionist national myth; the city seen in the background is Kiryat Shmona, named for the eight who fell in the battles for Tel Hai. The Huleh swamp was drained in the 1950s as a national project, regarded as a modern bettering of the land that dramatically altered the ecological balance and the genius loci. Part of the swamp was revived in the ‘90s in an artificial process, creating a site whose symbolic importance marked a pivotal moment in the Israeli attitude to environmental issues and to the exercising of power. Blayer’s painting is both ambivalent and enigmatic,
containing the present as well as the memory of the past, wound and balm.
 
Tali Navon’s video is a collage of images, the yearning for an ideal Nature crossed with a look at Habima Square in Tel Aviv (designed by Dani Karavan). The square has an official state character, blazing white, exposed and barren. Nature in the
square is but a nostalgic memory, out of context: it is a landscaped garden shaped as a memory of open spaces now threatened by construction. The layered images in the video are imbued with a deep feeling of disruption. Underneath Habima Square is a protective security space and a spacious bomb shelter, structures required by law, concealed spaces forming an underground asylum seeping into the seemingly safe reality above.
 
Hadar Gad’s painting of Kibbutz Ein Harod’s cemetery encodes local landscape elements. In her painting of this secular pilgrimage site, she works with the angle of encounter between irrigation pipes, exposed ground, heaps of leaves and foliage
climbing up cypresses. The attempt to control Nature is blunt, yet the aridity is a constant reminder of the effort required to keep drought at bay.
 
American artist Stuart Shils paints what is perceived in the blink of an eye and stamped in one’s memory. Infinite shades of green are reflected in the water with an almost imperceptible ripple. The reflection of what may be a tree or a thicket is not
refracted. Shils paints from observation , but the resulting entity, the object, is notformed from what Aristotle called “mimesis.” Instead, Shils makes the elusive permanent, consolidating the spirit of the place, making it present.
There is no refuge from recent history and current political and ecological events. Romanticism would have us believe that when the wounds in the local landscape heal, they will become layers of memory in the local spirit of the place.



location - Rothschild Fine Art

Time - 28/01/2016 to - 13/03/2016

Exhibition opening - 28/01/2016

Link - http://rgfineart.com/



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