Shay Zilberman | True to Original

Curator: Tal Bechler
Feb. 14, 2015 - Apr. 11, 2015

In recent years, the media of choice of Shay Zilberman, an Israeli graduate of the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, have been hand-made collage and etching. On the paper surface he interweaves figures and fictional scenes, whose protagonists he culls from diverse, feverishly collected sources: travel albums, architecture and landscape books, encyclopedias, and contemporary and old magazines.
Zilberman has no use for Internet search engines as sources for his images. Instead, he insists on searching for them only in printed media and readymade photographs. The boundaries of his search corpus are thus outlined as an alternative expression of current reality’s excess of images. In the past, Zilberman used materials he found in photo lab dumpsters as the basis for graffiti images he sprayed around urban spaces. The templates he cut for this series of sprayed images may be seen as precursors of the collage technique he currently employs. The work exhibited at the Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art portrays a disconcerting, fictional natural landscape with fantastic hybrid creatures, such as bird-people, recalling the illuminated manuscript of the Birds’ Head Haggadah (c. 1300).

 

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