Exhibitions
Shmuel Bonneh: From the Land of the Bible to the Great Sea
In 1971, the Haifa Museum of Art held a retrospective exhibition for Shmuel Bonneh. Almost 50 years later, the Mané-Katz Museum is proud to present Bonneh's rich artistic career, in an exhibition showing a selection of his best works.
Chen Cohen: Instruments and Gestures
Over the past year, Chen Cohen photographed her medical routine in various clinics and at the Bnei Zion Medical Center in Haifa. She focused on the medical instruments and her encounters with the medical staff—meetings intended to treat the body, which were full of tenderness and compassion, healing the soul, too. She did not document the treatments from a seemingly objective position, or one that emphasizes the difficulty of being the object of a medical examination, but rather performed for the camera. She came to the check-ups as a healing shaman, always dressed in the same long black dress, which is contrasted with the white space. The camera she installed in the clinic transformed the event into an artistic act addressing beauty and love.
Astronomy Photographer of the Year
Astronomy Photographer of the Year is the world’s leading astrophotography competition. Every year astronomers and photographers from around the world enter their best images of all things celestial.
This exhibition showcases the 32 prize-winners from 2022 alongside a selection of images that made last year’s shortlist. Captured using a range of equipment, from sophisticated cameras and telescopes to tablets and mobile phones, these photos reflect the skill, passion, creativity and enthusiasm of the global astrophotography community.
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'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.
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.
The Haifa Way: 70th Anniversary of Haifa Museum of Art
New Exhibition
Haifa Museum of Art, one of the first museums established in Israel, is celebrating its 70th anniversary this year. A museum's material heritage is embodied in its collection, in the works it purchased and those donated to it. The works in the collection determine the museum's genetic code, and each new work entrusted for safekeeping joins its predecessors in shaping the museum's identity. This exhibition sets out to decipher the identity of Haifa Museum of Art by delving into its collections, asking where it is headed in the future.
Treasures of the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art
On the celebrated occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art, a wide variety of artworks from the Museum’s collection will be displayed. It is one of the most important and fascinating collections outside Japan. The collection comprises mostly of Japanese artworks from the Felix Tikotin Collection, to which donations of private collections were added, among them, the collections of Lewis B. Gutman and Daniel and Hilda Lebow of New York, the collection of Abraham Horodisch of Amsterdam, the collections of Shulamith and David Rubinfien and Sandra and Kenneth Bleifer of California, the collection of Michael Rukin of Boston and many others.
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