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Exhibit Catalog Online catalog for the Kol Haot exhibit during the Jerusalem Biennale of 2021

48: Creative Quarantine

In order to make space for creation during the intense third lockdown during winter at the beginning of 2021, Kol Haot invited 48 artists to work in quarantine, for two days each, in this beautiful Jerusalem studio.

The artists came from widely varied locations, backgrounds and mediums. What connected them was a list from Pirkei Avot in the Mishna - the 48 ways to acquire Torah. These items are varied, allowing each artist to embark on a quick but meaningful journey that connected this teaching to their work, their lives, and these strange new circumstances.

Each artist was inspired by their "kinyan”, their item from the list, differently. But everyone shared a deep need for this moment of creation, leading to an array of work that brought us out of the cold (and snowy) isolation into a spring of color, art and inspiration.

What follows are the 48 artworks produced during these three months of artist isolations, along with their connection to the "kinyanim" or ways to acquire Torah.

The artwork is in a variety of media, presented here digitally. All photos by Yaal Herman.

It was an intense and energizing experience. My topic, clear thinking, is one of my greatest challenges. Having 48 hours to focus without the daily distractions was a gift.

- Linda Lieff Altabef, 13: בְּיִשּׁוּב By clear thinking

Pirkei Avot 6:6 - Greater is learning Torah than the priesthood and than royalty, for royalty is acquired by 30 stages, and the priesthood by 24, but the Torah by 48 things.

  1. By study
  2. Attentive listening
  3. Proper speech
  4. By an understanding heart
  5. By fear
  6. By awe
  7. By humility
  8. By joy
  9. By purity
  10. By attending to the sages
  11. By critical give and take with friends
  12. By fine argumentation with disciples
  13. By clear thinking
  14. By study of Scripture
  15. By study of mishnah
  16. By a minimum of trade
  17. By a minimum of preoccupation with worldly matters
  18. By a minimum of pleasure
  19. By a minimum of sleep
  20. By a minimum of chatter
  21. By a minimum of laughter
  22. By long-suffering
  23. By a good heart
  24. By faith in the sages
  25. By acceptance of suffering
  26. One who recognizes their place
  27. Who rejoices in their portion
  28. Who makes a fence about their words
  29. Who takes no credit for themself
  30. Who is loved
  31. Who loves God
  32. Who loves creatures
  33. Who loves righteous ways
  34. Who loves uprightness
  35. Who loves reproof
  36. Who keeps themselves far from honors
  37. Who does not let their heart become swelled on account of their learning
  38. Who does not delight in teaching
  39. Who shares in the bearing of a burden with their colleague
  40. Who judges with the scales weighted with favor
  41. Who leads them on to truth
  42. Who leads them on to peace
  43. Who composes their heart at study
  44. Who asks and answers, listens and adds
  45. Who learns in order to teach and learns in order to do
  46. Who makes their teacher wiser
  47. Who is exact in what they have learned
  48. And who says a thing in the name of they who said it.

1: By Study בתלמוד

Meryl Salpeter

It was hard to ground myself in any one aspect of learning and to really make something of it. But when I sat down in the studio, I realized that what inspired me was the experience in its entirety; being able to sit down and engage fully with your own self through the words of Tanach and Talmud.

2: Attentive listening בשמיעת האוזן

Sari Shavit

In his movement piece, Roman Koifman explored the difficult and endless process of editing one's speech, as referenced in the Hebrew word for his kinyan, 3: Proper Speech בעריכת שפתיים
Multidisciplinary artist Savyon was inspired by 4: By An Understanding Heart בבינת הלב to create a 70 page text in Hebrew that progresses visually on the page in a unique way.

"The kinyan that I worked on was 'the wisdom of the heart.' The wisdom of the heart is what everything is made of, especially artistic creations."

5: By Fear באימה

Devorah Roytenberg Charash

Devorah Roytenberg Charash wove a Talit using the klaf and leather straps from Tefillin as the traditional stripes. The installation is hung from the ceiling forming a wedding canopy that incorporates the words of the “Shma” overhead. Devorah states, “ When one stands under the wedding canopy one steps into a new stage in one’s life, one that connects us to our history and traditions and fills us with awe. Thus, this installation links us to the awe manifested in the words of our Torah.”

6: By Awe ביראה

Noga Harel

The series Ghost Flowers combines metal and embroidery work and is a tribute to the natural world, with all the awe and wonder that it brings to the human soul. The works emphasize the fragile and delicate qualities of nature, hidden until the viewer looks closely.

Glass Artist YARON MAYER and his creation for 7: בַּעֲנָוָה With humility
"I wanted the viewer to experience the various aspects of isolation as they walked through the exhibit, so they would not only see the artwork created in quarantine but also have a quarantine of their own - among art" -- Eli Kaplan Wildmann, Curator and Exhibit Designer

8: With Joy בשמחה - Avigail Fried

In preparing for this project I reviewed various sources found in Jewish liturgy and heritage relating to "Simcha" – happiness, joy. Psalms 100 implores us to "Worship God with happiness." R. Nachman, teaches that "It's a great commandment to be happy," and more. In art (mainly through paintings) I tried to discover if indeed one can express joy via art. Is it possible to convey an emotion such as happiness through art and thereby determine if there is such a thing as a "happy painting?"

9: With Purity בטהרה

Chani Goodman Winkler

In looking for the moment of purity in her own life, the artist found it where she meets it from up close - in the water, in the moment of ritual purification. "The ability to shed everything, any outward details, is what allows us to disappear in the water."

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10: By Attending To The Sages בשימוש חכמים - Judith Anis

It is told of two workers who were bringing water to their masters every day. One worker had a new bucket, and the other had an old and cracked one. Each day they would walk the same way from the well to their masters’ houses. One would arrive with all the water he had drawn, and the other with his bucket only half full. He felt bad and apologized to his master, who took him to the road and asked him what he sees. The worker said, “Flowers and weeds on the side that I was walking on.” His employer answered with a question: “If I fix your bucket, will we continue to enjoy the flowers on the side of the road?”

11. By critical give and take with friends בדיקדוק חברים

Agustin Jais

The videoclip is the result of a "dikduk b'chavrutah" with artist Orly Noa Rabinyan, as suggested by the text of the Mishnah, where we explored the musical, poetical and political teachings of the text in relation to a personal moment: the nights at the Mercaz Klitah, after a day of being educated in a religious Zionist framework, when everything was quiet and the voice of the Muezzin coming from East Jerusalem could be heard.

The song is a mashup of layers: Orly's recitation of the Mishnah, the Adhan sung by Yusuf Islam, members of my family attempting to read the Pirkei Avot, and the base of a famous Argentine hip-hop track. Plus a silent MC: the phrase-by-phrase translation of the Mishnah into a poem that reflects on the experience at the Mercaz Klita (Immigrant Absorption Center).

The imperative of dikduk chaverim becomes a quest for cross-pollination, a chavrutah with non-equal others.

After going through the full exhibit, visitors reached a curtained-off area. Curator Eli Kaplan Wildmann had recreated the desk that our 48 artists had sat at during their Creative Quarantine.

Art supplies were on the table, along with four blank canvasses containing the four kinyanim that hadn't been created by any of the artists.

Visitors were invited to add to the creation while having their own isolated moment.

13. With Clarity בישוב דעת

Linda Lieff Altabef created a series titled Clarity based on her kinyan. The universal symbol of clarity is the circle. Nature is itself circular. A marriage consists of three circles: the feminine, the masculine, and the divine. This union brings holiness into the world.

Linda designed a pattern of three circles in both positive and negative space as a linocut print with a limited color palette of black and white. As she printed her circular images in repetition, the rhythm of her printing method became a kind of meditation.

18. With A Minimum Of Pleasure במיעוט תענוג

Miryam Adler

Pleasure is giving oneself fully to the material, preferring it over the spirit and soul. Consumerist culture creates a sense of lack, of need, that can never be fulfilled because it becomes a loud cycle of need for more and more. In opposition to this noise, I wanted to create the silence of looking. The pools of light on the floor and the walls, as they changed throughout the day in their barely perceptible dance, became my “here and now” during the quarantine project. The focused look and the attempt to find the light’s appearance and disappearance was my blessed and welcome disconnection from the noise of the internet, the sponsored content, the stores - I remembered that we actually need very little. And that little will actually bring us insight.

Video Work Below - Length 1:02:23

19. With A Minimum Of Sleep במיעוט שינה

Tamar Meir

20. With A Minimum Of Chatter במיעוט שיחה - Rona Shpiller

20. With A Minimum Of Chatter במיעוט שיחה

Hadar Ben Eliahu

21. With A Minimum Of Laughter במיעוט שחוק

Shlomit Naim Naor

At the beginning of the pandemic the artist learned that she had breast cancer. Learning about cancer through the lens of this project allowed her to bring some humor to the corona-cancer experience, and to illustrate the period of finding out about the diagnosis.

Her written piece in Hebrew finds a parallel between each of the 48 "kinyanim" and an element of the experience of a battle with breast cancer. The drawings below are inspired by students she was teaching at the time, who were obsessed with superheroes. The artist drew her own vision of herself as a superhero, "Chad-Shad" - OneBreast.

22. By Long Suffering בארך אפיים

Gilat Chakesky

23. With A Good Heart בלב טוב - Judith Yehudit Appleton

The artist worked in drawing in a way that brought her back to elementary school, where she had enjoyed education with a good heart. This is how she acquired the Torah - Hebrew, Jewish Studies, and art. This quarantine project allowed her an associative journey back to those days. Very few of her acquaintances enjoyed their studies, and many lost their passion for creation due to harsh criticism.

24. By Faith In The Sages באמונת חכמים

Talya Peri

The two works complete each other, with one inspired by decorative frames that include images of revered rabbi’s graves but showing the frame as empty. Next to it we see a tzadik, a righteous person, drawn with the same reflective paint that can be found in the empty frame.

25. By Acceptance Of Suffering בקבלת היסורין

Avishai Huri

26. One who recognizes their place - המכיר את מקומו

Lenore Mizrachi-Cohen

This artwork contains DNA strands made up of Hebrew and Arabic calligraphy. We all carry our legacy within us, encoded in our DNA.

As a Syrian Jew I feel that these two languages are both an integral part of who I am. Like a tapestry viewed up close, our lives each have a thread of meaning but as we're living through them, it can be hard to see the full picture. Through understanding our histories, we can better understand ourselves.

27. Who rejoices in their portion - השמח בחלקו

Eran Levy

28. Who makes a fence about their words - העושה סיג לדבריו

Danielle Weil

This spoken word piece was written during Kol Haot's Creative Quarantine project and performed at the Incubator Theater's Poetry Slam.

Video: Rotem Feldner

Courtesy of Poetry Slam Israel

29. Who takes no credit for themself - אינו מחזיק טובה לעצמו

Matan Cohen

In this comic, the great rabbi openly admits to the kind person on the street - "You are the true righteous one".

Neta Pulvermacher's movement piece and installation explore Number 31, Who Loves God - אוהב את המקום

33. Who loves righteous ways - אוהב את הצדקות - Matt Berkowitz

34. Who Loves Uprightness - אוהב את המישרים

Eliana Bayer-Gamulka

"A line is a dot that went for a walk" -Paul Klee

In reacting to this kinyan, I went for a walk among lines and surfaces. In the drawings I created during the quarantine, different surfaces emerged - flat areas, lines, and openings into new worlds.
These all came together into this book, which can be opened to create a single long line or can be kept closed. In looking at the different pages, the viewer will go for a walk themselves, and will look at loving uprightness.
35. Who Loves Reproof - אוהב את התוכחות - Eli Kaplan Wildmann
This series of seven drawings are illustrations for Omer cards, which we began counting right after the quarantine project, on Pessach, with the reading of “The Prophecy of the Dry Bones”. The images progress in parallel to the process of prophetic rebuke - repentance, return to Israel, working the land, and finally, bringing the first fruits to the Temple on Shavuot. Prophecies of admonition, and with these cards, the counting of the Omer itself, lead to growth and new life.

36. Who keeps themselves far from honors - מתרחק מן הכבוד

Dana Naim Hafouta

38. Who doesn't delight in teaching - ואינו שמח בהוראה

Mor Gal

'Who does not delight in teaching' was the artist's feeling throughout the past year. She is an art teacher, and had been teaching on zoom since the beginning of the year without any physical contact with her students, unable to dive deep into the creative process with them, and without knowing them well enough. "In the beginning, I was creative and I saw it as a challenge, but as time went on the lack of human connection with the students changed my teaching to technical and tired. The act of teaching had turned into a dry, lifeless desert."

39. Who shares in the bearing of a burden with their colleague - נושא בעול עם חברו

Heddy Breuer Abramowitz

The artist focused on Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020) and women soldiers in Israel.
RBG shared the legal burdens of the nation but took on a greater personal burden by retaining her seat – despite illness –to maintain the court's progressive balance.
Women soldiers who choose combat duties drill carrying a fellow on a stretcher. These are the daughters and sisters doing their parts, beyond the expected. Others are carefree without the weight of this kind of responsibility.

40. Who judges with the scales weighted with favor - מכריעו לכף זכות

Basmat Hazan

42. Who Leads Them On To Peace מעמידו על האמת - Noga Dekalo

43. Who composes their heart at study - מתישב ליבו בתלמודו - Michelle Brint

44. Who asks and answers, listens and adds - שואל ומשיב שומע ומוסיף

Leroy Bar-Natan

The image of the horse sculpture at Ice Square in Ramla, with their stern expressions, is engraved in the artist’s mind - because his grandmother lives there to this day, his father played there before there were horses, and the artist would play among the rusty metal sculpture, and the unfinished artwork is waiting for the next generation to bring its own questions and search for answers.

45. Who learns in order to teach and learns in order to do - הלומד על מנת ללמד והלומד על מנת לעשות

Yelena Kvetny

They who learn to teach - this idea is presented with a circular image, full of symmetry and reflection, that allows for learning and growth but may be closed to external influences and inspiration.

Who learns in order to do - here we see an infinite horizon, lines radiating outwards that remind us of the experience and wisdom of the character in the painting, as he walks and learns.

46. Who Makes Their Teacher Wiser - המחכים את רבו - Avigayil Rosenbaum

This kinyan expresses a spiral balance, a mutual back and forth, between the teacher and the student. These pieces show the new space created by that relationship, with the Torah expanding and growing. In both pieces there is a mountain, inspired by the Rujm el-Hiri, located near the artist’s home - a mountain that reveals treasures to those digging and exploring. Just like archeological treasures, whose value increases throughout the generations, the teachings of a rabbi increase in value as they are passed on.

47. Who is exact in what they have learned - המכון את שמועתו

Yuval Zehavi

Translation Of Video Text

It’s a place where one really has to spend a few days

in order to understand its significance.

And it requires a lot of preparation in advance

for acquiring as much knowledge as possible.

And then when you arrive,

and you see it in your own eyes,

it hits you.

When tourists come visit Temple Mount, there’s an element of climbing.

In fact, it doesn’t look like a mountain, but it is,

and you need to climb it.

And for many people not only is it a matter of physical climbing,

but it is also a spiritual elevation to a higher place.

It just depends on who climbs it.

For example, the Christian tourist who would arrive

would climb up the mountain, pass the wooden bridge, enter,

and because she is a tourist she would probably be offered

some kind of garment to cover her legs or shoulders.

The Christian tourist would tour around all places that are mentioned in The New Testament.

Where Jesus was as a child; where he turned tables; or rebelled against the Priests.

You can actually walk around with The New Testament in your hand,

read the stories and point to where they occurred according to the tradition.

And the Orthodox Jewish tourist would do a whole different tour,

that is based on a 2,000-years-old evolution of Jewish laws,

and the decrees of these days’ Rabbis.

In The Temple there were restricted areas which were allowed only for the Priests and the High Priest.

And the specific location of The Temple is still uncertain,

therefore one might not know where the common man is allowed to go or get near to.

So there are Rabbis that forbid visiting the mountain altogether,

others forbid climbing up to the higher part,

where The Dome of the Rock is,

yet allow visiting only the lower part where Al-Aqsa Mosque is.

They allow coming near the higher area but only from the northern side.

In that case, it requires encircling the mountain and getting closer only through the northern area.

And even that is based on a Jewish rule the was used by Priests when The Temple still existed.

Regarding the Muslims who visit the mountain,

on the one hand, there is the Muslim girl who studies in a school here,

that her everyday life is here.

There is a school for girls in the western area of the mountain.

On the other hand, there is the Muslim tourist,

who comes from Turkey or from any other Muslim country

or from within the state of Israel or the land of Israel,

and his experience would be very different

because he is allowed to go into the mosque or into The Dome of the Rock

and pray.

And there is a fourth experience,

an unreligious one,

an unspiritual one,

of the secular tourists,

which in this kind of tour,

the conversation would probably be about the archaeology and the architecture of The Temple Mount,

or about the political and security implications caused by this delicate situation.

48. Who says a thing in the name of they who said it האומר דבר בשם אומרו - Yonatan Brenner

48. Who says a thing in the name of they who said it האומר דבר בשם אומרו

Hadara Rachel Steinberg

Credits:

Yaal Herman