Exhibitions
Adrian Paci: Still Voices
Extending over an entire floor, the exhibition is dedicated to a wide survey of video works by world-renowned artist Adrian Paci, starting with his earliest work from 1997 and concluding with two world premieres of his recent works from 2021. Paci is one of the most prominent and influential contemporary artists, who over two decades has been sensitively commenting on current political and social upheavals, while maintaining a unique humanistic voice. His art focuses on the individual, on singular human beings living within a collective, whose voices, facial expressions, and bodily movements are explored in his videos as in portraiture. From a close examination of specific people and unique situations, Paci zooms out to reflect on universal concepts and feelings such as loss and the struggle to overcome it.
Anna Lukashevsky: Types
New Exhibition
With a deep fondness for eccentric men and women, Anna Lukashevsky wanders in the vicinity of her Hadar studio in Haifa, "hunting" types on the street: people who fit into clear ethnic and social characteristics, but something unique in their personality deviates from the "type" and captures her gaze. When she encounters an interesting figure, she makes a quick drawing on the spot and then invites that person to her studio; there, during several sessions, while conversing with the sitter, she paints and extracts a multi-dimensional individual from the ethnic-social category.
Volkan Kızıltunç & August Sander: The Look
New Exhibition
Centered on photographic portraits, the exhibition brings two artists together, separated by a hundred years—Volkan Kızıltunç and August Sander. The subjects of the portraits look directly at the camera, but rather than momentary, one-sided gazes, these are long observations between the photographers and photographed. The gaze is a means of dialogue between two subjects, who acknowledge the other's subjectivity while looking at each other. Where the photographers and their subjects looked at one another, a bond of gaze is now formed between the viewer and the work of art.
Artist Room: Aviva Uri
New Exhibition
Aviva Uri's ability to touch on raw emotion, and the intense expressive quality typifying her work, have made her a highly influential, mythical figure in the history of art in Israel. The exhibition presents an outstanding selection of Uri's works, all from the collection of Haifa Museum of Art.
Artist's Room: Reuven Berman Kadim
New Exhibition
The exhibition is centered on The Open Receptacle—a significant gift recently received at Haifa Museum of Art. In this work, one may discern Berman Kadim's transition from two-dimensional to three-dimensional work and his engagement with architecture. The structure of the receptacle is reminiscent of wooden Egyptian sarcophagi, and its proportions are based on the arithmetic ratio used in the design of the Parthenon floor—a Greek temple from the 5th century BCE in Athens, considered the epitome of classical architecture, whose floorplan is painted on the bottom of the receptacle.
The Japan of Dani Karavan
Current Exhibition
Dani Karavan |1930-2021| translated his artistic language without losing his roots and created a dialogue between his works and the Japanese place and experience. Three central works, in terms of their scope and level of conservation, are located along the length of Japan, on three different islands: On the northern island of Hokkaido, the "The Way to the Hidden Garden" is located in a sculpture forest on the outskirts of Sapporo; on the main island of Honshu, in Nara Prefecture, is the Murou Art Forest; and on the southern island of Kyushu, where the work "Bereshit" stands. This exhibition focuses on these three works.
Dani Karavan‘s environmental art includes the elements of experience, reaction, and the connection between it and the visitor. The visitor is not an external factor, a stranger, but must move within the work to experience it, and the work is not complete without the visitor. Already at first glance, the works invite the visitor to discover them from within. The three works are "site-specific", and any attempt to move them elsewhere will remove them from their unique context to the local history and geography. In the three works there is a discourse between the parts of the work, near or far, and they are a complete work only taken together as a whole.
BLINKING – Yasuhiro Suzuki
Current Exhibition
Yasuhiro Suzuki | b. 1979 | is an artist designer. Suzuki does not meet the conventional definition of a designer because his creations are not limited only to aesthetic and useful products. His designs improve our quality of life, thanks to the encounter between them and the environment in which we live.
In a scientific approach interwoven with fine humor, Suzuki expresses his inner world and the way he looks at and experiences the world and the environment. Everyday experiences of joy and fear take center stage in his works. With great talent, Suzuki disassociates objects from their daily and familiar use, and gives them a new identity. Thus, cabbage leaves turn into a bowl, a gun shoots eyedrops and a tree’s leaves are replaced with eyes. Suzuki blurs the line between humans and nature – nature appears in the human body and Man is assimilated into nature.
Illustrations, seemingly simple, are an integral part of his creative process, and through them Suzuki reveals the mechanism of his thoughts. The explanations that accompany the exhibits were written by the artist. The exhibition makes accessible product, illustration, and text, the three dimensions in which the artist deals.
PULLING FACES
New Exhibition
Comic drawings (in Japanese: manga or kyoga) have a long history in Japan, dating back to the religious sphere as early as the 8th century. The drawings were secularized and appeared in the Edo period, from the 17th through the mid-19th centuries, as humorous depictions without religious context.
The collection of works displayed here was created by three artists from the Utagawa school, which is considered one of the leading schools of ukiyo-e ("Pictures from the Floating World"). This genre depicts, in paintings and prints, the popular culture of the period. These works reflect the comic aspect of everyday scenes of human life and its ability to help deal with the difficulties of life. Some focus on facial expressions and others on situations that bring a smile to the face of the viewer. The three artists, Toyokuni, Hiroshige and Kuniyoshi, used to sign their works with a special signature meaning "caricature by the artist". The humor shown here crosses cultures and times and serves as a connecting thread between the daily lives of the people of the past in Japan and our lives in the present.
Hermann Struck: Spirit and Matter
This exhibition presents a selection of Struck’s works from the museum’s collection, reflecting his entire artistic career. The exhibition also aims to acquaint the visitors with his home, through a display of selected furniture and personal items belonging to the artist.
The exhibition reveals Struck’s emphasis on portraiture and landscape.
Perestroika in Haifa 30 Years of Aliyah from the Former Soviet Union
Current Exhibition
This exhibition marks three decades since that major wave of immigration from the former Soviet Union. The influx made a decisive impact on Israel, not only in terms of its sheer numbers, but in the distinct culture and outlook that the new immigrants brought with them. Although they settled throughout the country, the city of Haifa stood out because of the size of the community that made its home there. Its presence began to be felt throughout the city, on Russian-language signs, in shops, a variety of workplaces, and more. The new immigrants were able to preserve their old culture and traditions almost entirely, while at the same time acclimating to their new country. They rebuilt their lives in Israel – and within it, Haifa – achieving in essence their own private perestroika.
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