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Pavel Wolberg
Pavel Wolberg was born in Leningrad in 1966 and immigrated to
Israel in 1973. He studied photography at the Camera Obscura
School of Art, Tel Aviv, graduating in 1994, and a year later
started exhibiting his work. For several years he worked as field
photographer for the daily Haaretz, and currently works as
photographer for a European news agency. As a press photographer,
his works usually result from the coverage of a news event or some
other phenomenon. His images are extracted from current events,
from an intense, conflict ridden reality of catastrophes, from
which he shifts his gaze to the shoulders of the road during
twilight, to a depiction of night life, the club culture, and
various social and religious rituals, which are inevitably
regarded as pathological escapism in light of our
catastrophe-filled reality.
Wolberg zooms in with a wide angle lens to "point blank" (the
name of his exhibition at Tel Aviv Museum of Art in 2002),
producing a gaze that blurs the distinction between the forefront
of the occurrence and the photograph's fa?ade. The intrinsic
pictorial gazes, those that generate connections between the
figures within the frame, are gaping and perplexed, in fact
dissolving the potential for any connection whatsoever. These
gazes are also turned outward – at the world as formative and at
the photographer as one who perpetuates the absurd, violent,
helpless or mundane situations.
Wolberg is drawn to twilight and the flickering of nocturnal
light, but even in broad daylight he creates a kingdom of shadows
with his photographic tools. He shifts the focus from the noise at
the heart of the explosion to the silence at the margins of the
catastrophe; to the absurd beauty at the shadow of tragedy, to the
acrobatic virtuosity inherent in the body's movement at the
culmination of a cruel gesture, or to the embarrassed,
compassionate gazes accompanying hostility.
Leora Laor
Leora Laor was born in Israel in 1952. In the 1980s she engaged
in photography in the US and in Israel, and recently, after a
twenty year interval, she has returned to photography. In her work
Laor creates an illusive reality. She does not stage her
photographs, but opts to document realms of an innately-staged
reality – a theatrical stage and a dance class, or places such as
the Mea She'arim neighborhood and a park in Jerusalem, which,
following their photographic processing, are perceived as derived
from other times and as detached from the familiar surroundings.
The digital manipulations of light, color and texture reinforce
the sense of fantasy, placing the photographs on the borderline
between photography and painting, life and theater.
Some of the photographs in the various series are digital
manipulations of a frame isolated from a video sequence, without
the soundtrack which had accompanied the movement on film. In the
series "Wanderland", 2003 taken in Mea Shearim, where time stands
still, this process further enhances the freezing of time typical
of the medium of photography. The series "Images of Light" taken
in a Jerusalem park depicts an afternoon scene with pictorial
language and romantic notions. Excerpts from the pixelized images
taken from a distance are enlarged, generating the illusion of a
telescopic view. All these lend the figures an appearance of
fragility and loose footing in the space. The pastoral atmosphere
belongs exclusively to the background; the figures appear lost in
space. In Laor's theater photographs from 2005, time is already
metaphorical, and in the dance class photographs, intimacy is but
an illusion.
Igael Shemtov
Igael Shemtov was born in Israel in 1952. He studied at the
Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, Jerusalem (1977-1979) and at
the Pratt Institute, New York (1983-1985). Since 1979 he has
taught photography, and for six years headed the Photography
Department at Bezalel. He instructed and advised many classes of
photography students, and his influence on current photographic
practice in Israel is discernible, inter alia, through them.
Shemtov's photographic perception oscillates between landscape
photography and a documentation of a place, akin to landscape
reportage. He formulates local reality, which is typified, he
maintains, by a low, faint, fervent and sun-struck existential
monotony, with the syntax of high art. He applies a stylized
aesthetics to rocks, a puddle in a parking lot, a stream running
under a bridge, desert sands, the dust arising from a footpath,
thick vegetation, mountains on the horizon, and sometimes also to
the people passing through the landscape, cars on the side of the
road, a quarry in the background.
In his compositions Shemtov does not generate a hierarchy
between the various landscape elements; he does not juxtapose a
backyard, a travel route, a muddy puddle, and a spring, but rather
combines all the visible elements in situ to form an alert,
critical, albeit emphatic discussion about the identity of a place
and conventions of seeing, about an aesthetic that glorifies the
subject of photography, without beautifying reality.
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Pavel Wolberg
Contact Sheet #13

Pavel Wolberg
Contact Sheet #14

Leora Laor
nurse

Leora Laor
girls with bags and a sun
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