Exhibitions

Thursday, 13.10.16, 20:00
Friday, 10.03.17

Curator: Dr. Irit Miller

More info: 04-6030800

A Private Moment in Public

The exhibition "A Private Moment in Public" addresses the capture of personal, intimate moments that remove the usual defenses and masks donned in front of the camera. Such intimate moments appearing in the public eye evoke sensations poised between distance and closeness, familiarity and concealment, intimacy and publicity.

Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17
More info: 04-6030800

Artist Wall: Belle Shafir

Born in Germany, 1953 / Lives and works in Israel

Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17
More info: 04-6030800

Artist Wall: Israël Thomas

Thomas Israël creates interactive works, video installations, sculptures, and performance. Having begun his career in theater, his atypical approach to digital arts revolves around the themes of the body, time, and the subconscious.

Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17
More info: 04-6030800

The Wax Museum: Approaching Celebrities

The exhibition focuses on works of art that correspond with wax museums featuring historical and celebrity figures that reflect our interest in watching famous characters. Visitors can pose next to a famous character and “meet” the subjects of admiration, which are unapproachable, in terms of place and time.

Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17
More info: 04-6030800

19th Century Prints and Photographs of Jerusalem

This exhibition is based on the National Maritime Museum's rich collection of prints. It examines how the city was represented in the 19th Century, also in relation to early photographs.

Saturday, 05.11.16, 10:00
Sunday, 27.08.17
More info: 04-6030800

Street View

Group exhibition

Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17

Curator: Svetlana Reingold

More info: 04-6030800
Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17

Curator: Svetlana Reingold

More info: 04-6030800
Saturday, 18.02.17, 20:00
Sunday, 15.10.17

Curator: Efrat Aharon

More info: 04-6030800

Post-postmodernism ≠ Utopia

The new exhibition cluster

From modernism and the metaphysical ideal, through postmodern dystopia, contemporary art seems to be returning to a utopian vision of the future. The new cluster of exhibitions explores the construction of the utopian space as a fortress of hope for socio-political change and its promotion in contemporary art. Its aim is to examine the phenomenon of post-postmodernism, gaining strength in recent years and expressing the present generation's attempt to overcome the postmodernism of the late twentieth century, as a generalized reaction to the present, crisis-ridden moment.

Saturday, 23.07.16, 20:00
Saturday, 21.01.17
More info: 04-9115997