Showing posts with label Shachaf Yaron's art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shachaf Yaron's art. Show all posts

Thursday, December 31, 2009

WHcreation | an online gallery

WHcreation gallery is a collaboration between ME and my partner Limor Weisberg. We both designed the website and curated the exhibition. It started as a small dream of creating a free online platform for artists and designers from anywhere in the world, a space for a multimedia artistic discussion, originating from different cultural backgrounds. It is now a gallery we are very proud of, we are overwhelmed by the enthusiastic reactions of artists and galleries.


WHcreation is an online non-profit contemporary art gallery. Exhibiting painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, video art, performance, installation, design, architecture, commix, illustration, animation, graphic art, and sound.

The first exhibition "WHat is authentic?" is now available online:  http://www.whcreation.org/

The next exhibition “WHat is your gender?” will be available online in February 2010






Tuesday, December 29, 2009

MY ART |  from the photo series "KING SIZE" 2009

Love is as strong as death | Song of songs (shir hashirim)

Cemeteries are libraries of people.

A life of a person is his novel and the gravestone is its cover.

The photo series reflects couple’s burial settings. The “king size” grave embodies a statement on their relationship: the gravestone choice, the decoration, saving the spot for the day that will come and what is left for the future of the one staying behind.

Through the research, I found a rich diversity of “king size beds” (couple’s graves): one large gravestone or separated, with or without head board, with pillows, plants, artificial flowers, marble, stone, sculpture and more.

The series aims to reflect the decoration of the couple’s burial ceremony, to evoke thoughts and quandary about the enigma behind the banal details, the extraordinary, the revealed and hidden. The photographic process went through reduction from the whole to detail, from reality to abstract, from material to spirit.

The photographs were taken in “ordinary” cemeteries, old and new in the suburbs in center Israel: Hod Hasharon, Ramat Hasharon, Ramot Hashavim, Bat Yam, and Raanana.

these are a selected few from the photo series.