Israeli
artist depicts pain of rootless Jews in Berlin
exhibition
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[September 17, 2014] By
Helen Cahill
BERLIN (Reuters) - Moshe
Gershuni's expressive, historically loaded art, which
places symbols of the Holocaust in a religious setting
and seeks to polarize opinion about current Israeli
society, seems unlikely to reward the casual viewer.
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Titled "No Father No Mother", the retrospective of paintings
and ceramics since 1979 in the New National Gallery is the first
solo show by an Israeli artist to be opened at Berlin's premier
location for modern art.
The focus is especially poignant in Germany, where a Jewish
population of over half a million in 1933 was annihilated in the
Holocaust, with just 30,000 surviving by 1945.
"His paintings evoke haunting, even oppressive notions of
rootlessness and detachment connected with the horrors and
atrocities of the 20th century or with the diaspora," said Udo
Kittelman, director of the New National Gallery.
Born into a Polish-Jewish family that emigrated to Tel Aviv in
1936, Gershuni is one of Israel's most renowned artists, with
work in New York's Museum of Modern Art and the Tate Britain.
Crawling on paper-covered floors and painting with his hands, he
invests physically and emotionally in his art - and unlocking
its power often calls for a gaze that is equally intense.
The Jewish star of David, the Nazis' swastika and Islam's star
and crescent appear side by side amid colorful flower-like
forms, phallic symbols and Hebrew script.
Created using thick glass paint and industrial varnish, the
vibrant colors of his political and religious motifs appear
almost luminous.
Standing in the center of the exhibition are Gershuni's "Jewish
Ceramics", boldly branded with thick black swastikas. Bright,
blood-red fingerprints stain the rim of a serving plate
inscribed with Hebrew and a yellow star of David.
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A wall installation reading "Who's Zionist and Who Isn't" in Hebrew
bears particular significance this year as Israel has faced
considerable criticism due to tensions in Gaza.
"The world according to this work is divided between Zionists and
anti-Zionists," said Ory Dessau, the co-curator. "Gershuni in this
work is very demanding and categorical. He forces the reader to
choose a side."
Although Gershuni's works are politically charged, Dessau sees the
retrospective as an opportunity for the international community to
get a different perspective on Israel.
"I believe Gershuni can help people understand Israel, and Tel Aviv,
as a source of cultural production, and not just political
conflict," he said.
Lior Wilenzik, one of a growing number of young Israelis flocking to
Berlin's vibrant art scene, expressed similar hopes: "Germans and
Israelis can now come together in the world of art - not just in
politics. Gershuni has opened the gate."
(Reporting by Helen Cahill; Editing by Stephen Brown and John
Stonestreet)
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