The painter Joseph Zaritsky (1891-1985) always wanted his paintings to be hung not in the Israel art section of museums, but in the international section. For him there was no "Israeli art" and "international art," but modern art, and he saw himself as part of both.
Recently, the curator of contemporary international art at the Israel Museum, Suzanne Landau, invited the Jerusalem artist Zvi Goldstein to exhibit some of his new work alongside a selection of international works, thus highlighting the need for a dialogue between contemporary art being created in Israel and abroad.
The erection of sculptures in public spaces began nearly 30 years ago. In Jerusalem this was done on a large scale with the placing of international sculptures. Side by side with works by Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Jean Miro, Max Bill, Jean Arp, and Niki de St. Phalle were those by Dov Feigin, Israel Hadany, Yigael Tumarkin, Michael Gross and Dani Karavan. Later on, many Israel sculptors had their works displayed in Tel Aviv, exposing a wider public to contemporary Israeli sculpture. Among these were the works of younger Israeli sculptors such as Dvora Dominey, Yuval Rimon, Isaak Golombek, Zadok Ben-David, Ilan Averbuch, Sigal Primor, Motti Mizrachi and Gideon Gechtman. Simultaneously, museums specialising in exhibiting sculptures were founded: the Open-Air Museum at Tefen and the Herzliya Museum.
Similarly, comprehensive exhibitions of sculptures were mounted at the major museums: "80 Years of Sculpture" at the Israel Museum (1984), "A Century of Modern Sculpture" from the international collection of Patsy and Raymond Nasher of Dallas, at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art (1989), as well as exhibits in places far from the main towns, where the surrounding nature and landscape allowed the erection of site-specific sculptures, such as Tel Hai in the Upper Galilee (since 1980), Mitzpe Ramon in the Negev (1962) and the Sculpture Biennale in Ein Hod (1990). These exhibits drew large and varied crowds.
The involvement in landscape painting in the 1930s and 1940s was to a great extent a reflection of the wish to give a local content to art in Israel. Many artists attempted to give expression in their work to the special quality of light which characterizes the country. In the 1950s, the focus shifted to abstraction, part of which had its origin in figurative painting. The initial expression, if such a thing existed, came mainly through colour and through the way it was applied to the canvas. Few painters dealt with social or political themes, and if they did they were only part of a wide range of subject matters.
Against this background, the work of Tel Aviv artist David Reeb (b. 1952) stands out starkly in that he chose politics and social comment as the central theme of his work. If at the outset it appeared that Reeb wished to change political processes, after a short while he stressed in interviews that he no longer believed in the power of art to change politics.
Reeb bases his paintings on newspaper photographs on the Israel-Arab conflict. One also finds in his work a general critique of society. A motif used in advertising Camel cigarettes is connected to an advertisement for Time cigarettes. This configuration of motifs juxtaposes a local brand of cigarettes, with its English brand name which is also the title of the well-known weekly news magazine and an American brand which uses as its logo an animal expressly identified with this region, thus creating a paradoxical situation in which the local item appears to be western, and the western one, eastern. For Reeb, the camel motif also carries with it artistic connotations connected to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
Reebs use of the abstracted logo, or geometric forms resembling a logo, relates perhaps to the fact that a large percentage of the source of visual images which we accumulate through viewing television, reading newspapers, visiting supermarkets and so on, form a conglomeration of commercial, visual images which compete with personal images of "High Art" which are produced by local and international artists. "Lets Have Another War" is the title of a large wall ensemblage of several paintings, for Documenta X in Kassel, Germany, 1997. This monochrome work is also based on photographs relating to the Arab-Israel conflict.
In the 1980s, Tsibi Geva (b. 1951) painted names of Arab and Jewish cities in Israel. Thereafter, the artists political message was conveyed in images such as the backgammon board, a widely-popular game in this region and a particular favourite among Arabs, and a series on the kaffiyeh (Arab head-dress), which he has been painting for more than five years. The two series like the series based on floor tiles that preceded them are stylized and deal with the subject matter on the level of abstract painting and pattern.
For Geva, "the obsessive repetition of this symbol [the kaffiyeh] simultaneously provides meaning and yet renders it meaningless because it is only a decorative pattern. For me, this is a kind of attempt to understand and converse. As time passes, I try less to represent knowledge in my work; I simply make things. The meaning only emerges in retrospect."