news
This category contains the following articles
- Ways of Seeing Abstraction: Yto Barrada, Autocar - Tangier, 2004
- Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt - Gilbert & George: The Great Exhibition
- Sammlung Goetz at Haus der Kunst - Cyrill Lachauer. I am not sea, I am not land
- Kunsthalle Zürich - Pati Hill: Something other than either
- Ways of Seeing Abstraction: Karla Knight, Spaceship Note (The Fantastic Universe), 2020
- ICA Boston - "i´m yours: Encounters with Art in Our Times"
- Ways of Seeing Abstraction: Lada Nakonechna, Merge Visible. Composition No. 45, 2016
- Tel Aviv Museum of Art - "Desktop: Artists During COVID-19"
- Fondazione Prada - "Finite Rants"
- Ways of Seeing Abstraction: Tobias Rehberger, Ohne Titel, 2000
- Musée d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean - "Me, Family"
- Dallas Museum of Art - "Arthur Jafa: Love is the Message, The Message is Death"
- Ways of Seeing Abstraction: Phillip Zaiser, Testbild, 2000
- Deutsche Bank Collection Live - Meet the Artist
- New Museum - "Grief and Grievance: Art and Mourning in America"
- Feminist View of Pakistan: Umber Majeed is a Fellow of the New York Foundation for the Arts
- Painter. Rebel. Teacher. - K.H. Hödicke at the PalaisPopulaire
- Space Experiments: Seven artists versus architecture at the Hamburger Kunsthalle
Tel Aviv Museum of Art – “Desktop: Artists During COVID-19”
In Israel, the situation is easing again. In the second lockdown, however, our ArtCard partner museum, the Tel Aviv Museum of Art
also remained closed for a long time. But during this time, too, the
question was raised as to what role art could play in the pandemic and
where it could even take place.
To answer this question, the museum asked numerous Israeli artists to show their studios, their materials, and the place where art is usually created— the desktop—in short films they made themselves. The term refers to both the top of a desk and the working area of a computer screen. Many incredibly intimate portraits were created, which not only bring art closer to us, but also the people who make it. Although the contributions are mostly in Hebrew, this is a must-see experiment that gives astonishing insights into the Israeli art scene—even for an international audience.
Desktop:
Artists During COVID-19
Online exhibition
Tel Aviv Museum of Art
tamadesktop.com
To answer this question, the museum asked numerous Israeli artists to show their studios, their materials, and the place where art is usually created— the desktop—in short films they made themselves. The term refers to both the top of a desk and the working area of a computer screen. Many incredibly intimate portraits were created, which not only bring art closer to us, but also the people who make it. Although the contributions are mostly in Hebrew, this is a must-see experiment that gives astonishing insights into the Israeli art scene—even for an international audience.
Desktop:
Artists During COVID-19
Online exhibition
Tel Aviv Museum of Art
tamadesktop.com