12 December 2015

New Israel Fund: Your Saturday (12Dec15) night with NIF planned... in NYC

Source: mass emailing (I only included the events announcement.)


Dear Friends,
As you might have heard, HaaretzQ with the New Israel Fund -- our first-ever NYC conference with Haaretz newspaper -- is completely sold out! Even if you can't join us at the conference itself, we invite you to join us for an exciting event the evening before.
Please join us from 6-8pm this Saturday, Dec. 12th at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts (31 Mercer Street, Soho) for the opening of To Whom It May Concern -- an incredible exhibition featuring photographs from the Haaretz newspaper archives.  (Details below -- No RSVP necessary).
I hope to see you this weekend!
Warmly,
Stephanie

Stephanie Ives
Director, NY/Tri-State
New Israel Fund
Ronald Feldman Fine Arts
Brothers Ahmed and Mahmoud of Yatta Village, near Hebron, the second largest Palestinian city, collect metal scraps at the nearby landfill. They are wearing Israeli police shirts found in the trash. 
November 2012. Photo: Nir Kafri, Haaretz
    For Immediate Release: November 24, 2015
To Whom It May Concern:
Photographs from the Archives of Haaretz Newspaper
December 12, 2015 - January 30, 2016
... Haaretz ("The Land") arguably the most important liberal institution in a country that has moved inexorably to the right in the past decade. David Remnick, The New Yorker, 2011

Ronald Feldman Fine Arts will exhibit photographs from 2000 to 2015 from the archives of Haaretz, an influential Israeli news organization established in 1919 and published in English and Hebrew. The exhibition is coordinated by Haaretz and the New Israel Fund (NIF). Haaretz maintains the position that as long as the occupation of territories that are not part of Israel continues as well as the settlements of Israelis there, it will be extremely difficult to uphold democratic values, and the goal of Zionism may be thwarted. The New Israel Fund (NIF) helps Israel live up to its founders' vision of a state that ensures complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants. 


The exhibition, more than fifty digitized color photographs, each accompanied by explanatory text, is organized around five topics listed below in bold text that describe the tensions that have been a part of Israel's history since its establishment. 


The most dominant struggle - The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and Occupation - includes photographs of hot-spot boiling points as well as daily life played out against the backdrop of war. Photographs selected from a regular column, "The Twilight Zone," document the Israeli Occupation's impact on Palestinian lives. Haaretz is the only newspaper which consistently describes what life is like in the West Bank and Gaza. 


Tensions that exist within Israel include the conflict between State and Religion, recorded in photographs of demonstrations by tens of thousands of Ultra-Orthodox Jews related to religious practice. Other photographs show protests, which often turn violent, by Ethiopian Jews, Israeli Arabs, and African immigrants that document Attitudes towards "The Other." Tent cities and demonstrations by Holocaust survivors, one quarter living in poverty, reference the growing Economic Gap between the rich and poor. Referring to The Erosion of Law, a series of photographs, relating to the pressure of public conflicts on the judicial system, depicts important courtroom scenes, accompanied by text that provides the legal context of each case. 


In addition to the photographs, the exhibition also includes actual Haaretz front pages from 1995 to 2000, selected to focus on historic events, beginning with the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995, considered to be a turning point, after which began a path that led to extremism.


As a sweeping overview, the exhibition presents the dire reality and is testimony to the power of the press and the commitment of its photographers to record events as they occur.
***
Curator: Efrat Livny - Photographers: Tomer Appelbaum + David Bachar + Olivier Fitoussi + Gil Cohen-Magen + Michal Fattal + Ancho Gosh + Eliyahu Hershkovitz + Nir Kafri + Yaron Kaminsky + Dan Keinan + Miki Kratsman + Alex Levac + Tali Mayer + Ilya Melnikov + Moti Milrod + Lior Mizrahi + Noam Moshkovitz + Daniel Bar On + Ann Paq + Baz Ratner + Alon Ro + Emil Salman + Eyal Warshavsky + Pavel Wolberg + Avishag Shaar-Yashuv
***
For more information, go to http://bit.ly/1IBQgAd.
Reception on Saturday, December 12, 6-8. Gallery hours are Tuesday-Saturday, 10-6. Monday by appointment. The gallery is closed: December 24-January 3. For more information, contact Casey Dorobek (212) 226-3232 or Casey@feldmangallery.com.
RONALD FELDMAN FINE ARTS 
31 Mercer Street  |  New York, NY 10013  |  212-226-3232  | www.feldmangallery.com 



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