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Arts And Culture
Metrotainment: Instruments of change
Nitzan, Ofer and Eyal Ein-Habar team up for the first national competition for young wind instrument players.
By MAXIM REIDER
Creating Dialogue
In the interest of integrating art into the broader social context, the Israeli Center for Digital Art in Holon considers it vital to collaborate on the local, national and international level.
By GRAHAM LAWSON
Taking poetic license
Metulla Poetry Festival guest Lior Sternberg has been inspired by the capital.
By BARRY DAVIS
A stage for culture
An informal jam session in Acre that blossomed into a series of live concerts in its own venue is livening up the formerly sleepy town.
By BARBARA BAMBERGER
Fine art for the masses
Now in its fifth year, Fresh Paint providesa venue for galleries to promote their featured artists.
By CARL HOFFMAN
Attraction retraction
How to choose your photos for Internet dating sites.
By TAMAR CASPI SHNALL
The voice of A-Shams
Makbula Nassar is not afraid to air her views on anything, including Zionism, polygamy and homosexuality.
By ARIEL ZILBER
A ‘rebbe’ with soul
Musicians Burger, Levi to combine contemporary rock music with religious and ethnic motifs.
By MAURICE PICOW
A Zionist reeducation
Since making aliya from France in 2009, Sam Pinto has already been instrumental in setting up Darca.
By AVIVA BAR-AM
Art inside and out
The real beauty of Ein Hod, a rare artists’ village, lies in its people and their creations.
By ITSIK MAROM
Satchmo, streimel and all that jazz
Keren Friedman, Jazzraelites ensemble give Jewish, Israeli folk music a magical contemporary twist.
By MAURICE PICOW
Sax appeal
Since returning here after his staggering success in the US, Eli Degibri’s star has continued to rise.
By BARRY DAVIS
Borderline views
Opinion is divided regarding regime change in the Golan Heights Druse town of Majdal Shams.
By ARIEL ZILBER
Neighborhood Watch: Southern comforts
A new green neighborhood is shaping up in the Barnea quarter of Ashkelon.
By JOHN BENZAQUEN
Grapevine: Chinese whispers
IT’S CUSTOMARY for visiting royalty to stay at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem.
By GREER FAY CASHMAN
Starcatcher: Astrology for the week of March 16
TIP FOR THE WEEK: Although your patience is wearing thin, you still must bide your time and check out all your options.
By MARALLYN BEN MOSHE
Dear Bibi: Don’t mention the war
One need not look very far to establish the lack of bona fides on the part of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
By AKIN AJAYI
Protecting Tel Aviv
The White City is preparing for the possibility of missile attacks.
By SAM SOKOL
Weighty matters
The Anselm Kiefer exhibition that inaugurated the Tel Aviv Museum of Art’s new wing is still the best show in town.
By GRAHAM LAWSON
Looking to the east
One year after the earthquake that destroyed entire villages, a photo exhibition at Tel Aviv’s Azrieli Center incorporates a series of ‘then and now’ pictures showing the devastation and the rebuilding.
By BARRY DAVIS
Ramat Hasharon's 'Adloyedet'
The central city is combining its 90th birthday with a mega Purim extravaganza.
By CARL HOFFMAN
Metrotainment: Shooting from both hips
Digi Dekel uses a unique photographic technique to portray the dichotomy of his life as he straddles the spirit of his birthplace, Romania, and Israel, where he has lived since the age of six.
By BARRY DAVIS
Kiss and tell
Tel Aviv’s StorySlam is based on New York City’s The Moth, a popular event founded by best-selling author and poet George Dawes Green. The most recent installment, held on Valentine’s Day, was themed Man vs Love.
By ELIEZER SHERMAN
Picking up the pieces
Once a common form of decoration in the ancient Mediterranean, mosaic is now flourishing again in Israel with a whole new take on a traditional art form.
By ABIGAIL KLEIN LEICHMAN
Screening jazz greats
Dave Brubeck’s son discusses a documentary about his nonagenarian father that will be shown at the Epos Festival.
By BARRY DAVIS
Sun Ra to shine in Tel Aviv
At 87, Marshall Allen is keeping the Sun Ra legacy alive and kicking
By BARRY DAVIS
Grapevine: On a positive note
Funding for Musicians of Tomorrow is low, but their opportunities - including performing on a luxury liner - make them rich in another way.
By GREER FAY CASHMAN
Sweet winter music from Ireland and Canada
The pairing of a Quebecois fiddler and a western-Irish uilleann-piper at the Jacob's Ladder Winter Weekend is an intriguing prospect.
By BARRY DAVIS
Keeping them on their toes
The Zurich Ballet’s new production ‘Winds in the Void,’ to be performed in Tel Aviv next week, is based on air.
By BARRY DAVIS
Battling received ideas
Assembled during the summer social movement, Dror Karta’s ‘Warship Worship’ exhibition is his own protest against the definitions of sculpture and commercialism.
By HOLLY WOODHOUSE
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