The Schneller Case
Curator: Tamar Manor-Friedman
Opening: Saturday, 7 May 2016
Closing: Saturday, 27 August 2016
Participating artists: Einat Amir, Tali Amitai-Tabib, Joshua Borkovsky, Pesi Girsch,
Shlomo Serry, Zvi Tolkovsky, Ktura Manor and Rotem Manor, Karine ShabtaiAn unplanned visit to the former military base at the Schneller Compound gave rise
to the exhibition “The Schneller Case”. Here, on the margins of Mea She’arim,
billboards announcing the construction of a luxury residential quarter concealed
the renowned historic Syrian Orphanage. Since its establishment in 1860 by German
Protestant missionary Johann Ludwig Schneller, the place has undergone numerous
transformations: from a small missionary station to a vast educational enterprise,
in the heart of a flourishing German-Arab neighborhood; from a Mandatory British
military headquarters to the IDF Jerusalem District HQ. When Camp Schneller was
evacuated in 2008, eight of its historical buildings were listed for conservation,
but most of them remain sealed and deserted, primarily the monumental orphanage.
Soon thereafter, the building was squatted by homeless people, and valuable elements
were looted or destroyed.Nine artists were commissioned to conduct their own “salvage excavations” in this historic
mound. Each in his/her own personal language, the artists depict impressions of their
on-site visits and the fruits of their research. Some are drawn to the fragments while
others perform acts of resuscitation and rectification, conjuring up scenarios and characters
both real and fictive. Deserted rooms, graffiti, broken objects, and a game of basketball in the
former chapel—the artists’ gazes depart from an immediate scene of disaster, sailing off to
engage in conceptual matters prevalent in contemporary artistic discourse: memory and
repression, culture and chaos, beauty and decay.A chance encounter thus offered not only fertile ground for curatorial and artistic expression;
it also issued a call for keen thought and critical reflection. In the ever-changing, disrupted
urban sphere, the exhibition introduces an open proposal for observation and response,
a real-time experiment as yet unfinished. The exhibition integrates archival photographs
with contemporary artworks in the mediums of photography, video, installation, and painting.After Agnus Dei from rotem manor on Vimeo.
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Second gallery talk about the exhibition The Schneller Case
with the curator and the artists Pesi Girsch and Tali Amitai-Tabib (in Hebrew)
Sat., 4.6.16 at 12:00pm
First gallery talk about the exhibition The Schneller Case
with the curator Tamar Manor- Friedman and artists Shlomo Seri, Ktura Manor and Rotem Manor (in Hebrew)
Friday, 20.5.16 at 12pm
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This exhibition is accompanied by aCatalogue