The sixth edition of the artistic presentation was originally due to open last November but was put on hold following the terrorist attacks in the South.
In London's central sites, in front of a raging crowd and vandalism attempts: an artistic installation on the October 7th massacre, calling to bring the hostages home, was set up this week.
Blinken's address noted the countless works of art and cultural property stolen by Nazis which still have not been returned to their owners.
This week's art roundup includes 20th-century artwork at the Haifa Museum of Art, public art exhibits across Tel Aviv, and, in a first, an Israeli's art was flown to the moon.
All the paintings portray amorphous images of different sizes, executed in a technique of engraving in tar, sometimes mixed with acrylic or ink.
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.