EXHIBITION

Akhshav

Stein Rose Fine Art, New York, New York, 04/23/2015 - 05/03/2015

721 5th Ave, New York

ABOUT

Stein Rose Fine Art is proud to present A khshav, a survey exhibition of Israeli contemporary painting, from April 23 to May 3, 2015 at a pop up location [526 West 26th Street #9E] in Chelsea.

 

Akhshav, which translates to “Now” in English, features Nivi Alroy, Shai Azoulay, Noa Charuvi, Maya Israel, Meital Katz-Minerbo, Alon Kedem and Elad Kopler, exploring a generous cross-section of young Israeli painters.

 

Drawing inspiration from orientalism, cubism, the primitive and the surreal, these artists grapple with tropes of rebirth, mythology, archaeology, decay, time, and transformation. Nivi Alroy piles objects into monolithic totems and subjects them to time-based processes, then etches and paints them in sediment-like layers to explore contemporary relic as debris. Shai Azoulay adopts a naïve aesthetic to illustrate the mythical dimension of everyday objects. Azoulay toes the line between figurative and abstract seeming elements, often appropriating ethnic patterns and ritual objects. Sponsored by visionary art patron and realtor-developer Francis Greenburger, Noa Charuvi's most recent paintings document the construction of 50 West. The daughter of an architect, and granddaughter of legendary Israeli painter Shmuel Charuvi, the artist channels her inheritance into a unique reimagining of structure and building materials, highlighted by abstract patterns of light, shadow and color. Maya Israel evokes simultaneous child and adult fantasies, blurring the line between innocence and angst. Israel's figures are solitary explorers, often of secondary importance to a surreal and fractured environment composed of dark forests, forbidding abysses, eerie trees, and misty rivers. Meital Katz-Minerbo uses layer upon layer of industrial lacquer to juxtapose iconic design objects with crystal structures, implying a timeless alchemy of emotions, memory and form. Alon Kedem revisits an inevitable fixture in the Israeli quotidian. Reinterpreting security scanners as conveyor belts for still lifes, Kedem flips the human and organic figure to occupy the horizontal format typically reserved for the inanimate. Kedem's paintings are charged with conceptual dissonance. Elad Koppler's frantic metropolises superimpose a multitude of architectural forms at colliding angles, describing humanity's ongoing struggle between utopia and dystopia.

 

Today, in an Israel where new media, installation and performance artists occupy center stage, this group of intrepid young upstarts has taken up the brush, determined to reinvent this most ancient and hallowed art form and perhaps themselves and their subjects along with it.

For More Information

APT ARTISTS ON VIEW

Shai Azoulay

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