Galleries > Dvir gallery

Dvir gallery




Dvir Gallery, Nahum street


Dvir Gallery at Nitzana street
About
For over twenty years, Dvir Gallery - specializing in contemporary art - has been exhibiting, promoting and representing Israeli artists in and outside of Israel.



Over a decade ago the gallery exceeded its local boundaries and began to exhibit and represent international art: Adel Abdessemed, Mircea Cantor, ,Claire Fontaine, Douglas Gordon, Jonathan Monk, Nedko Solakov, and Lawrence Weiner are among the artists represented in Israel by Dvir Gallery and who create exclusive projects for its space.



In 2009, the gallery opened two additional spaces, Hangar 2 (Jaffa Port) and Nitzana 11 (Tel Aviv).


Opening hours
Tuesday-Thursday 11:00 - 18:00, Friday, Saturday 10:00 - 13:00

Adress
11 Nahum st. Tel Aviv 63503 Israel

Phone
03-6043003

Web site - http://www.dvirgallery.com/


Shows in the gallery


Mircea Cantor: Shooting (11/09/2010 - 23/10/2010)

 


MACHINE GUN IN THE MIRROR STAGE


 


In Mircea Cantor’s ‘Tracking Happiness’, dancers pace the sand in a circle, sweeping repeatedly the trace of each other’s steps. In its conflation of first cause and last effect, made identical in spite of the distance separating them, the film recalls Vladimir Nabokov’s observation in ‘Speak, Memory’ that the future might just be “the obsolete in reverse”. The choreographed procession in the film takes place at the phantasmal center of history that Nabokov’s phrase invites us to imagine, where the obsolete becomes itself – time past – to one side, while unfolding as the new to the other, only to be recuperated as obsolescence, as a unsettling rehearsal for a postponed conclusion. Cantor’s film takes the conventional timeline of historiography and makes it round: a loop, where the gesture is equivalent with its passage and simultaneous with its erasure, and where the tragedy equals the farce. A circular poetics, which can be understood as a space for biographies to be endlessly refashioned, or for disjunctive selves to be posited against the idea – still haunting mindsets, institutions and those political discourses predicated on apocalyptic scenarios – that time flows towards a definitive clarification of its purpose, or that the present proceeds inevitably from the past and adheres to the future as its necessary confirmation.


             This remarkable video could serve as an introduction to ‘Shooting’, Cantor’s exhibition project at Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv. Here the artist assembles an arsenal of spatial and temporal definitions, of distant realities that function as each other’s distorted reflection, obliquely defining a confrontational position. This hinges on the use of two recurrent props, the gun and the mirror, and on situating the discourse within an ambivalent scene to be ‘shot’ – photographed – and surveyed, so that dissent can be promptly stifled. A diffuse Panopticon is looking everywhere, from everywhere, armed with the instruments of both documentation and repression. It institutes its existence and efficacy via both, it is located at the blind spot and at the vanishing point; it could be said to be looking at itself, to be ensuring its permanent self-reflection. Our whole world seems organized to accommodate and guarantee this purpose: political life, in the variety of its manifestations and levels, should never interfere with this gratifying exchange, and should never block the picture.  


The gun and the mirror compose in Cantor’s exhibition something of a disjointed, but nonetheless functional, camera, and interlock to take aim at the correspondences between selves, tasks and borders. The artist sets into motion categorical processes by which power defines itself as power, and business as business in another significant piece: political and economic strength seem designed to delight in their conceptual stability and instrumental effortlessness. The neon with ‘Geschäft ist Geschäft’, legible only in mirror installed on the opposite wall, sees itself in bits of broken mirror (which might indicate a previous, shattered identity) mixed with horse manure, suggesting the random glints of a diamond mine. Somewhere in the disorienting reflections, at the point where a single ‘image’ is recomposed, exchange value is extracted from a repulsive combination of elements. The exhibition imagines how life, work and worth might be defined and confined from the other side, from the perspective of an obfuscated adversary. The amounts of tragedy and irony that go into the conceptual mix are perfectly equivalent, so what had appeared as a dispirited observation is in fact an appeal to imagination: an invitation to take poetic action.


 


 


Text by: Mihnea Mircan







Di Goldene Keyt (10/04/2010 - 22/05/2010)

Tribute exhibition to Abraham Sutzkever, 1913-2010
לפרטים נוספים


Miroslaw Balka: AUSLÖSCHUNG (01/04/2010 - 15/05/2010)

Solo show for Miroslaw Balka
לפרטים נוספים


Orna Bromberg (23/03/2010 - 24/04/2010)

Solo show for Orna Bromberg
לפרטים נוספים


Yudith Levin: White Phosphorus (20/02/2010 - 27/03/2010)

Solo show of Yudith Levin
לפרטים נוספים


Moshe Mirsky: New Works (11/02/2010 - 13/02/2010)

Solo show of Moshe Mirsky
לפרטים נוספים


Jonathan Monk: And Darkness Fell (07/01/2010 - 13/02/2010)

Solo exhibition of Jonathan Monk
לפרטים נוספים


Lawrence Weiner (19/12/2009 - 13/02/2010)

לפרטים נוספים


Perhaps the Heart (17/12/2009 - 31/01/2010)

Participating artists: Francis Aly, Juliao Sarmento, Lawrence Weiner
לפרטים נוספים


Foreigners Everywhere (15/12/2009 - 02/01/2010)

The exhibition opens with the collaboration of the British Council and the French Institute
לפרטים נוספים


Michael Gross (31/10/2009 - 12/12/2009)

Solo show for Michael Gross
לפרטים נוספים


Just Drawings (with and without stories) (15/10/2009 - 21/11/2009)

Nedko Solakov's solo show
לפרטים נוספים


Beginning (29/09/2009 - 12/12/2009)

Michal Budny's (Poland) solo show
לפרטים נוספים


Rings of Saturn (10/09/2009 - 24/10/2009)

Group exhibition
לפרטים נוספים


Douglas Gordon (10/09/2009 - 10/10/2009)

Works from the series Self Portrait of You + Me
לפרטים נוספים


Douglas Gordon (08/09/2009 - 24/10/2009)

Douglas Gordon's solo exhibition at Dvir Gallery's new space
לפרטים נוספים


It Won't Stop Until We Talk (18/06/2009 - 29/08/2009)

''It Won't Stop Until We Talk'' is the slogan of the organization The Parents Circle – Family Forum. An organization of Israelis and Palestinians who lost their loved ones as a result of the conflict.
לפרטים נוספים


Lichtzwang - group show (16/04/2009 - 13/06/2009)

לפרטים נוספים


if everything would have happened, the way it was (28/02/2009 - 04/04/2009)

Ariel Schlesinger's second solo show
לפרטים נוספים


Eli Petel - Nine in the Dark (17/01/2009 - 21/02/2009)

לפרטים נוספים


Asleep (27/11/2008 - 08/01/2009)

Claire Fontaine


Group Show (23/10/2008 - 22/11/2008)

Between October 23rd, 2008 and November 22nd, 2008
לפרטים נוספים


''Baken -/ Sammler'' (04/09/2008 - 11/10/2008)

Opening event: 18/09/2008 at 20:00


Lawrence Weiner, Douglas Gordon, Adel Abdessemed - (24/05/2008 - 28/06/2008)

A joint exhibition based on the friendship of the three artists
לפרטים נוספים


Barak Ravitz - Missing Man Formation (10/04/2008 - 17/05/2008)

First solo show at the gallery for the young artist Barak Ravitz
לפרטים נוספים


Pavel Wolberg (21/02/2008 - 29/03/2008)

An exhibition of Wolberg's phtographs celebrating the publication of a monograph of his work
לפרטים נוספים


Contemporary Polish art (13/10/2007 - 17/11/2007)

לפרטים נוספים


Group exhibition (01/09/2007 - 06/10/2007)

By Michael Gross, Eli Petel, Pierre Bismuth, Nelly Agassi, Miri Segal, Pavel Wolberg, Moti Mizrachi, Naama Tsabar, Ariel Schlesinger
לפרטים נוספים






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