WarCraft
Nevet Yitzhak
04-06/2019 |
Koffler Gallery, Canada
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, Installation View, Koffler Gallery, 2020. Image Credit: Toni Hafkenscheid
Informed by extended research and scholarship, the video and sound installations of Yitzhak combine archival, photographic and found materials transformed through digital animation, editing and sound treatment. With a critical examination of complex geo-political concerns and the fraught relationships between global powers and the Middle East, her practice raises questions about cultural heritage, suppressed histories, collective forgetfulness, and identity. Living in Israel as a Jewish artist of Kurdish, Syrian and Yemenite heritage, Yitzhak creates work that responds to her context, expressing her minoritized position within Israeli society and her dissent from its current politics.
In her three-channel video installation, WarCraft (2014), Yitzhak makes a poignant statement against war and aggression. The artist looks to the Afghan war rug, a unique product of the region’s traumatic history of conflict and foreign military presence, as a departure point in exploring the significance and potential of this unconventional medium to protest violence and occupation.
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