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Einat-Leader---Rust-Pit-Birds.jpg

31/12/2025 – 09/07/2025

House of Measures

The exhibition seeks to reflect the current atmosphere in a region that is constantly on the brink of ignition, set against a backdrop of trends of radicalization, degradation, and the devaluation of human life in Israeli reality.  

Einat-Leader---Rust-Pit-Birds.jpg

09/07/2025 – 31/12/2025

House of Measures

Einat Leader presents a miniature collection of jewelry, keepsakes, and architectural fragments that engage with the politics of memory and historical and contemporary themes of loss, repression, and blindness, through the intimate material language and the quiet resistance of handcrafted work.

09/07/2025 – 31/12/2025

Geula

David Goss’s painterly-sculptural installation, inspired by the museum’s geographic and symbolic location, activates the exhibition space as a layered associative field where references to religion, politics, and artistic legacies converge and clash, critically examining the tensions between utopian visions and dystopian reality in a site burdened with historical and ideological weight.

David-Goss---Geula-Neighbourhood.jpg
Ovidiu Anton - Exchanging Lemons in Lefkosia and Lefkoşa.jpg

09/07/2025 – 31/12/2025

Exchanging Lemons in Lefkosia and Lefkoşa

Ovidiu Anton’s poetic work employs the simple act of exchanging lemons across Nicosia’s longstanding dividing line to reflect on the absurdity of political separation, the weight of identity, and everyday life shaped by imposed borders.

03/01/2025 – 31/12/2025

Monuments

In a series of black-and-white photographs documenting Confederate monuments and the protests demanding their removal following the killing of George Floyd in 2020, Yoav Horesh captures a decisive moment in a controversial American history and its enduring impact on contemporary society.

The J. E. B. Stuart Monument
welcome

14/03/2024 - until all hostages return

Welcome Home / Come Home

This neon piece regularly flashes, causing the letters 'Wel' to disappear and reappear, while the phrase 'Come Home' persists as a poignant plea for the return of the hostages. This expression signifies their absent presence in the collective imagination.

PRESS
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