Oren Eliav is participating in an artists panel during the last weekend of the group exhibition “Take Painting” at the Petach Tikva Museum of Art, curated by Larry Abramson.
Friday, December 16th 1:00pm
Free Admission
You are all invited!
From the press release:
“Early Netherlandish altarpiece paintings were a devotional object, kept closed and opened for display on sacred days. The act of looking was part of a religious ritual. To keep the viewer engaged, some manipulations were employed: e.g., the painted spaces corresponded with the object’s actual frames, oscillating the viewer’s attention between the painting’s inner reality and the one outside. I try to intensify this optical ambiguity by collapsing the original altarpiece image on itself, multiplying its perspectives, disrupting the conclusive visual array of the original painting and replacing it with one that is still unfolding. Today, the altarpiece may be regarded as obsolete, but in my view, its power as a visual apparatus is not lost. Seeing and believing remain interlaced, and contemporary painting is the perfect site to test their affinity.Today, our eyes are trained to quickly interpret flickering images. Paintings, however, are not flickering light, but congealed matter. This opposition between the medium’s attributes and its current surroundings creates a fertile ground. I do not know if painting today stands “ahead of the camp,” as in avant-garde, but it seems to stand a bit outside the camp, where the most interesting things happen.Painting is a tricky object, constantly slipping between matter and imagination, here and there. Since it cannot prove that there is something beyond its materiality, painting will always ask of its viewer for a leap of faith.”
Sunday
Monday
Tue – Thu
Friday
Saturday
Closed
By appointment only
11:00 – 18:00
11:00 – 14:00
11:00 – 14:00
Design by The-Studio
Code By Haker Design
Sunday
Monday
Tue – Thu
Friday
Saturday
Closed
By appointment only
11:00 – 16:00
11:00 – 14:00
Closed