Efrat Shvily

Efrat Shvily (Hebrew: אפרת שוילי, born 1955) is an Israeli artist based in Jerusalem. She has exhibited her work in the 50th Venice Biennale and the 8th International Istanbul Biennial, both in 2003.[1]

Overview

Shvily has had many of international solo exhibitions and has participated in group exhibition in the USA, Europe, and elsewhere.[2]

Her work, influenced by her occupation as a journalist and education in political science, has been mainly focused on Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories and the different aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Most notable in this theme as well as Shvily's career are the two series: "New Homes In Israel And The Occupied Territories" – A series of photographs documenting "Anonymous deserted buildings",[3] Arabic houses, in occupied territories; "Palestinian Cabinet Ministers" – A series of portraits of all the Palestinian government ministers.

In recent years Shvily has been focused on video as her main artistic medium, producing at the latest the show "The Jerusalem Experience" which exhibited in Graz. Austria.[4]

Solo exhibitions

"New Homes In Israel And The Occupied Territories"

In this project Efrat Shvily presents a series of scenery photographs showing abandoned or unoccupied houses and buildings, all of which located either on Israeli or Palestinian territory. The buildings, some old, some new, are unaccounted for, unexplained by the artist, presented as they are "barren, devoid of human presence, abandoned and neglected".[6] Their ghost-like presence alludes to the power struggle and political tensions in the area. The two mediums of architecture and photography enact a battle between change and memory, as Shvily's own documentation of the buildings – political tools and means, as well as ends within themselves – takes on the role of a political act. The photographs attempt to both salvage what is lost in the Palestinian territories, while exposing the unnaturalness, the strangeness of the new settlement – and all of this is done within a blur, not distinguishing between the two types of structures in any formal way.[7]

References

  1. "International Center of Photography".
  2. 1 2 "Efrat Shvily CV – Artist Page at Sommer Contemporary Art Website".
  3. "Christies".
  4. "Camera Austria".
  5. Jones, Ronald (1 December 2004). "Efrat Shvily / David Reeb: Sommer Contemporary Art". ArtForum International. Retrieved 18 July 2016 via HighBeam Research. (subscription required (help)).
  6. Azoulay, Ariella (2003). Photography as a barrier to the euphemistic gesture. Rotterdam: WITTE DE WITH, Center for Contemporary Art. ISBN 90-73362-58-X.
  7. David, Catherine (2003). New Homes In Israel And The Occupied Territories: Introduction. Rotterdam: WITT DE WITH, Center for Contemporary Art.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.