Eitan Ben Moshe’s refusal to accept a consumerist status quo expands to the streets, where he once offered a homeless person an enormous pearl.
Young photographer’s Oct. 7 exhibition shown at Jpost Berlin Conference
Three Israeli artists whom I have chosen to interview for the Magazine, each with a very different approach, agreed to answer my three questions.
The exhibiting artists include some who were taken hostage or murdered in October, as well as residents of southern Israel, who along with their families experienced the loss, destruction, and pain.
Walking through the exhibition titled “Splinter from the Storm,” one can see the parallels and the contrasts of the Land of Israel thousands of years ago with that of today.
Many of the works on display at the Djanogli Gallery are replicas of murals first created in Tel Aviv, some sprayed directly onto the walls of the gallery, others painted on canvas.
The results of the Lithuanian-born oleh’s documentary trips, and his own place in the snaps, are currently on show in the “Photo Watchmaker” exhibition at the Eretz Israel Museum in Ramat Aviv.