'This Place': Israel Through The Eyes Of 12 Renowned Photographers

Frederic Brenner, The Weinfeld Family, 2009   Frederic Brenner explores Israel as a place of radical otherness, where longing, belonging, and exclusion constantly permeate through lived experience. His meticulous research is visualized as individual and societal moments that pinpoint the condition of contemporary Israel.

Frederic Brenner, The Asian Levi Family, 2010

Josef Koudelka, A-Ram, East Jerusalem, 2010   Josef Koudelka makes the wall of separation the central character of his epic body of photographic work. His graphic, panoramic photographs convey the sense of this archaic landscape, the impact of the wall upon it, and the painful reality of the wall’s dividing route.

Josef Koudelka, Al 'Eizariya (Bethany) East Jerusalem, 2010

Gilles Peress, Al Bustan, a Neighborhood in the Village of Silwan, East Jerusalem, 2011   Gilles Peress makes an astute observation of the psychological "temperature" of Israel and the West Bank. His photographs, taken on the streets, represent their inhabitants as embodiments of the extremities of perspectives that shape Israel.

Gilles Peress, Bethlehem Checkpoint on the Israeli Side, 2011

Martin Kollar, Field Trip, Israel, 2009-2011   Martin Kollar captures contradictions and incongruities that visualize the threat of impending violence embedded in the routine normalcy of everyday life in Israel. His work features a series of photographs rich with subtle drama and visual strangeness.

Martin Kollar, Field Trip, Israel, 2009-2011

Rosalind Solomon, Jerusalem, Memorial Day, 2011   Rosalind Solomon creates a compassionate and personal evocation of Israel’s ethnic diversity through her portraits and generates a powerful aura of the relationships and lives that she encountered on her journeys through Israel.

Rosalind Solomon, Tel Aviv, 2011

Fazal Sheikh, From the Desert Bloom series, 2011   Fazal Sheikh will show a grid of 48 aerial photographs, each taken from above the traces of disappeared Bedouin villages, their size and location practically invisible from ground level. He narrates a powerful story about a community, their land, and their exclusion.

Fazal Sheikh, From the Desert Bloom series, 2011

Thomas Struth, Basilica of the Annunciation, Nazareth 2014   Thomas Struth creates substantial, individuated experiences of Israel with his large-scale color photographs. The selection of works for this exhibition includes landscapes, cityscapes, industrial and religious architectural interiors, and a family portrait.  

Thomas Struth, Z-Pinch Plasma Lab, Weizmann Institute, Rehovot 2011

Stephen Shore, St. Sabas Monastery, Judean Desert, 2009   Stephen Shore will present a selection of color works (captured with his signature 8-by-10-inch negative camera) that offer clear and astutely observed facets of contemporary Israel and visual manifestations of its divisions and histories.

Stephen Shore, Nabi Musa, 2010

Wendy Ewald, A Picture at Home, 2013   Wendy Ewald initiated 14 participatory photography projects in Israel and the West Bank with community groups including schools, a women’s group, market stall owners, and high-tech workers. Her work conveys a range of voices and the distinct character of each community.

Wendy Ewald, Green Olives, 2013

Nick Waplington   Nick Waplington created an archive of over 1,300 photographs that represent the people and sites of Jewish settlements on the West Bank. These well-researched and faithful depictions combine landscapes and portrait imagery to create a detailed insight into this practice.

Nick Waplington

Jungjin Lee, Unnamed Road 003, 2011   Jungjin Lee immerses the viewer in the weighty layers of history that she experienced in the landscapes of Israel. Lee’s handmade prints trace the embedded sadness and poignancy of the many abandoned and de-humanized places that she encountered.

Jungjin Lee, Unnamed Road 002, 2011