Nahum Tevet (born in 1946) lives and works in Tel Aviv. Tevet is a conceptual artist influenced by the traditions of minimalism and Bauhaus. He creates intricate sculptures and installations that are based on shapes from everyday life, and arranged in a complicated structure that looks different from every angle. In his works, Tevet creates a physical experience and examines the relationship between the work of art and the viewer. Tevet served as a professor at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, where he established and managed the master’s program and the continuing education program. For more than 40 years his works have been exhibited in solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries including the House of Art, České Budějovice, Czech Republic (2018); Kristof De Clercq Gallery, Gent, Belgium (2018); Museum Sztuki, Lodz, Poland (2017); Lodz Biennale, Poland (2010); Museum of Contemporary Art of Rome, Italy (2008); The Israel Museum, Jerusalem (2007). In addition, he participated in many group exhibitions, his works are part of important collections and he won multiple prestigious awards.

Nahum Tevet Portrait.

MIII JAFFA: Hi Nahum, how are you these days?

N.T: All right, having fun in the studio.

MIII JAFFA: Can you tell us something about your work from M III collection we see here?

N.T: I consider this work as a very important one in my artistic biography. While working on it more ideas formed and that led to a large series of installations, a series that was presented entirely at the Israel Museum in 2007 (curator Sarit Shapira RIP).
Up until this work, all of my floor sculptures from the 1980’s began with a central element, from which a strong rotational-spiral motion developed, that “threw and scattered” elements in the space. And here, for the first time, there is no single center, there are many separate occurrences that occur simultaneously, almost competing with each other. This is also my first work that leans on a grid, in a given space, and filling it.
Another novelty in this work, is the density and the intensive use of partition-like elements, walls that delimit. Sections in the work, which I think of as “CUT” like in the cinema, sequences that are cut, erased and hidden. You cannot see the work as a whole or surround it with your gaze. The sections are constructions of objects I have built manually, some of them have sensuality and intimacy that invites you to get closer, almost to touch, and a gap is created between seeing up close to seeing from a far. The scale is also uneven, and it seems to me that there is a sense of rationale that is appealing to read and understand, and a tension between rationality and coincidence, a mix of traditions of modernist abstraction and narrative imagery, like methods that a virus enters them and they go wrong.
Another thing that is innovative in this work, is that there is no screw or glue that holds things together, it is the opposite of previous sculptures that had levitation, that did not consider gravity, here there is a kind of acceptance, almost surrender. Things are just lying on the floor next to each other, on each other, or leaning, a small blow and everything collapses, with all the references to the traditions of modernist sculpture, with the clean whiteness and functionality from the Bauhaus and the kibbutz.
I started this work in 1995, I had a feeling I had exhausted the previous series of sculptures (“Painting Lessons”) and was figuring out how to proceed. I closed the doors of the studio and did not show anyone anything for almost two years, and the work grew slowly, organically, it did not develop from a plan, or from preparation drawings, it was a principle for me, one thing just led to another.
David Neuman came to the studio, with Sarit Shapira RIP, when the work was almost finished, and after a week he called and ordered the work to an exhibition called “Painting: the extended field” an exhibition with a list of “Hollywood” participants, Paul McCarthy, Luc Tuymans, Jessica Stockholder, Imi Knoebel and others, a great exhibition. He purchased the work for the collection from the exhibition.

MIII JAFFA: In the context of these days, do you experience it differently?

N.T: Since the 1980s, my work has had a kind of defiance to photography, to the image of a single snapshot “showing” a statue. Even then, and certainly in the 1990s, I was busy creating a physical experience, physical-sensory, almost tactile experience as a course of reading the work, and the time it took to experience my works was important to me. Today I see this resistance is even more relevant, as we see art and experience everything through screens.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on now?

N.T: I started a series of works, slightly different from previous works. I used to have a series of sculptures called “Painting Lessons” that considered the relationship between painting and sculpture. My Recent works return to this consideration.
I start with combinations of painted plywood surfaces on the floor, representations of painting formulas that have gotten off the wall. These paintings serve as a stage on which I place objects, for example a bench, chair, boat, etc. Later on, it all climbs from the floor to the wall. Then the objects “stand” on the wall and create a situation as if the floor has folded into the wall. This process has appeared in different ways in previous works as well, but here it’s right at the heart of the matter, I love such adventures, when it’s not clear where it all leads.

MIII JAFFA: Thoughts about the future?

N.T: I am surprised at how many more directions you can take my ongoing project, I have a lot of ideas and I get into things that are new to me and work with enthusiasm and joy. In this sense, canceled exhibitions abroad give me some time to breath, and awaken thoughts on working in a studio when the “system” is paralyzed. This is actually the purest time to “make art”.

Nahum Tevet, Untitled, 1995-6 (detail).
Nahum Tevet, Untitled, 1995-6 (detail).
Nahum Tevet, Untitled, 1995-6 (detail).
Nahum Tevet, Untitled, 1995-6 (detail).
Nahum Tevet, Untitled, 1995-6 (detail).

Jan Tichy (born in 1974) lives and works in Chicago. He is a graduate of the Advanced Studies program at Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, and holds an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he also lectures today. Tichy works in a variety of mediums, video, sculpture, architecture and photography. His work consists of a minimalist language through which he explores hidden structures, social issues and hidden political forces. Tichy has exhibited solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries including the Fridman Gallery, New York (2020); Galerie Kornfeld, Berlin, Germany (2019); Berman Museum of Art, Collegeville, PA (2017); Santa Barbara Museum of Art, California (2016); Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, IL (2016); Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, IL (2012). In addition, he participated in many group exhibitions, his works are part of important collections and he won multiple prestigious awards.

Jan Tichy Portrait. Photo: Hynek Alt.

MIII JAFFA: Hi Jan, how are you doing these days?

J.T: Like most artists-educators, I am in the middle of a strange semester, teaching hybrid classes at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Online art education is a demanding platform that challenges the traditional ideas of accessibility and offers new solutions that I believe will be relevant the day after.

MIII JAFFA: Can you tell us something about your work from M III collection we see here?

J.T: Dimona (2006) is a paper cut out model of the nuclear facility activated by time based projection and accompanied by takeaway posters with the cut out layout offered to the audience to build their own nuclear reactor.
The installation comes from a body of works exploring the powers of inaccessible places, the other sites were Dahania, 2006 also in Magasin III collection, a model of Yasser Arafat International Airport and Facility 1391, 2007, a paper model of IDF secret prison.

MIII JAFFA: In the context of these days, do you experience it differently?

J.T: When I was making these objects, I was interested in working through the constraints of inaccessibility that these sites present to local democracy. In the process I never left the studio, collecting all the accessible information online and imagining the missing parts. Today this approach to the world has been imposed to a certain degree on all of us.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on right now?

J.T: Last week I opened from a long distance a solo exhibition in Dessau, Germany created during my summer residency in the Bauhaus Master Houses. Currently I am working with a group of young artists in Dallas, TX to share their stories of migration.

MIII JAFFA: Thoughts about the future?

J.T: The imposed separation is pushing us to find alternative ways of communication and I feel that as artists we have always been able to re-imagine the way we connect with our audiences.

Jan Tichy, Dimona, 2006.
Jan Tichy, Dimona cutout, 2006.
Jan Tichy, Hortus Magister, 2020.

Miri Segal is a new media artist. She lives and works in Tel Aviv, studied at the San Francisco Institute of Art and holds a Phd. in Mathematics from the Hebrew University. Now she is a lecturer at Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design and at the Faculty of the Arts -Hamidrasha at Beit Berl College. Segal has exhibited solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries such as Museum Kanal – Centre Pompidou, Belgium; Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art, Israel; The Negev Museum of Art, Israel; as well as group exhibitions at Petach Tikva Museum of Art, Israel; Museum Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Italy; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel; Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taiwan.
She won multiple awards, including The Mifal Hapais, Lottery Committee of the Arts award; The Israeli Fund for Video Art and Experimental Cinema and Artis grants.

Miri Segal. photo: Or Even Tov.

MIII JAFFA: Hi Miri, how are you doing these days?

M.S: Personally, I’m fine. I’m worried about the economic collapse that so many workers are experiencing, wondering what will happen to the cultural field and the new anti-democratic means that have entered our lives to stay.

MIII JAFFA: Tell us something about the work from the collection we see here.

M.S: It’s a work from 2002, it’s made up of two identical sculptures or objects-made-ready to use. The sculptures are urinals that are designed for female urination while standing, by attaching them to the body. They are based on a smaller model of Duchamp’s famous urinal adapted to female urination. In addition to the sculptures, there is an “instruction” video projected on a tiny screen, where you see me using one of the sculptures and peeing through it. 

MIII JAFFA: Did you experience it differently in these days?

M.S: Honestly, I don’t, it’s a work from almost twenty years ago and I couldn’t think of it in the Corona context, but it’s related to other works I’ve been working on recently.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on right now?

M.S: I am working on several works, some physical and some virtual. Regarding the work from the collection – “Made-Ready”, recently, during the Corona, I worked on a few adaptive reenactments of iconic works of art for the Zoom platform. One of them was Dan Graham’s “Performer / Audience / Mirror”. My work is called “Up-Close”. I was interested in reproducing Graham’s work on Zoom;  It is easy to recreate a situation on Zoom that is very similar to the original performance, but, on the other hand, Graham’s gaze makes the viewer a subject and a participant through eye contact, this component is absent in Zoom, and I think characterizes the new time we are in – a kind of a panopticon where everyone sees, but the possibility of having direct eye contact is gradually disappearing.
Currently, my work “Necrofleur” from 2003 is exhibited at Dvir Gallery, it is also a tribute to Duchamp’s “Fountain”, but this tribute goes through Bruce Nauman’s photography – “Self Portrait as a Fountain” (1966). This work is displayed at Dvir Gallery alongside a text work that is drawn on the gallery space “Last Lust” (2020).

MIII JAFFA: Thoughts on the future?

M.S: The subject of the future, where we are going as a society, concerns me very much. I hope to be able to put my thoughts and feelings about it in my following works.

Miri Segal, Made-Ready, 2002, detail from video.
Miri Segal, Made-Ready, 2002, detail.
Miri Segal, Made-Ready, 2002, detail.
Miri Segal, Necrofleur, 2003.
Miri Segal, Last Lust, 2020.

David Adika is a photographer. He Lives and works in Tel Aviv, studied his BFA in Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, and his MFA in Art and Photography in collaboration with the Hebrew University. Now he is the head of the Photography Department in Bezalel.
Adika has exhibited solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries such as Braverman Gallery, Tel Aviv; Galerie Klubovna, Brno, Czech Republic; MAMbo, Museo Morandi, Bologna, Italy; The Open Museum of Photography, Tel-Hai, Israel; Latvian National Museum Of Art, Riga; and The Open Lens Gallery at The Gershman Y, Philadelphia; as well as group exhibitions at Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel; Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Kristinehamns Konstmuseum, Sweden; Petach-Tikava museum of Contemporary Art.
He won multiple awards, including the Israel Ministry of Culture award and the Jack Nailor Award for Cinematography from the Haifa Film Festival award.

David Adika Selfie.

MIII JAFFA: Hi David how are you doing these days?

D.A: On these strange days I’m well overall – I am an essential worker from home :-)
At the Bezalel Academy of Art – in Jerusalem, we teach from home. In between, and in the Zoom routine, I make sure to maintain my mental and physical well-being.
The dynamism of things – and the sharp transition from the routine and many predetermined plans – to a different existential state which is unclear, requires seclusion, social isolation – and different habits, manages to undermine old insights – and encourage deep and superficial existential reflections.

MIII JAFFA: Tell us something about the works from the collection we see here.

D.A: These are six works, six photographs – which are part of a wider series, called “Untitled, Non Place”. As a photographer, and as a wanderer – I work in two parallel paths, through the mind and logical search – using intuition and emotion. When I sort photos into the series “Untitled, Non Place”, I carefully choose photos taken in different parts of the world – trying to embody “contradicting values” within the photo – as I understand them.
Two of the works have recently become posters by Magasin III whom has advertised them throughout Stockholm. I am very excited, and really looking forward to the day I visit the city, for the first time in my life! I had a plan to visit in Stockholm this summer, I hope that will still happen soon.

MIII JAFFA: In the context of these days, do you experience it differently?

D.A: It is interesting to think about these works again – and in the specific context of the era and the Corona, because immediately, I experience – like everyone else – a temporary lack of freedom to travel and fly – the photographs speak directly to a wandering experience which is not limited in time or location. The globality of this event turns concepts upside down, for example; Place, time, specificity.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on right now?

D.A: Right now my exhibition: “Black Market” is on display at the Braverman Gallery’s new residence in Tel Aviv-Jaffa. The exhibition opened about two or three weeks before we had to go into quarantine and isolate. I have been working on this exhibition for a long time, and I am waiting for them to open the gallery again – to exhaust the full length of the exhbition and to come full circle with the content being raised through the works in the exhibition.
I think these days – I’m mostly building new thoughts – for new artworks.
Other than that, I keep a running log, parts of which I upload to my Instagram account: @dadika.

MIII JAFFA: Thoughts on the future?

D.A: I refrain from thinking about the future – especially in these days, because all my thoughts seem to be leaning to dramatic and hysterical directions. I think there is a lot of confusion right now – which exists alongside a lot of seemingly scientific data, supposedly factual information – a lot of data, a lot of statistics, a lot of graphs and curves, reports that are delivered in percentages – this, should give reliable and accurate status report. In actuality, the picture, as it is seen by me, is abstract.
I’m at a point where I prefer not to make plans – I prefer to observe and take a relative part in the game. Already, it seems we are returning to routine – or at least attempts to return. So, I focus my thoughts on the near future – and think positively and optimistically.

David Adika, Untitled (No Name, No Place), 2008. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
David Adika, Untitled (No Name, No Place), 2008. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
David Adika, Untitled (No Name, No Place), 2008. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
David Adika, Untitled (No Name, No Place), 2008. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
David Adika, Untitled (No Name, No Place), 2008. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
David Adika, Untitled (No Name, No Place), 2008. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.

Maya Attoun is a multidisciplinary artist, encompassing a variety of media including murals, drawings, prints, sculptural objects, ready-made and sound art. She lives and works in Tel Aviv, and holds a BFA and MFA from Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design. Today she lectures in Bezalel and in Shenkar College of Engineering and Design.
Attoun has exhibited solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries such as the Jewish Museum, London; Marie-Laure Flisch Gallery, Rome; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv, as well as group exhibitions at the Center of Contemporary Art, Switzerland; Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Sperchsaal Gallery, Berlin; Magasin III, Stockholm, among others. 
She won multiple awards, including the Israel Ministry of Culture and Sports award for the arts; Mifal Hapais, Lottery Committee of the Arts; and ARTIS grant.

Maya Attoun Portrait. Photo: Mia Gourvitch.

MIII JAFFA: Hi Maya How are you doing these days?

M.A: Hi, I suppose I’m fine.

MIII JAFFA: Tell us something about the work from Magasin III collection we see here.

M.A: The drawing is a self-portrait with a skull. The lightnings over the head of the figure are inspired by the internal system of blood vessels in the brain.
The work deals with the breaking of boundaries between the interior and exterior, or more precisely between the interior of the body and the interior of the home. It is part of an extensive search for wild landscapes in the domestic environment, and the possibility of a new body, a mutation of the home and body.

MIII JAFFA: Do you experience this artwork differently in these days?

M.A: The work is part of a thought about the interplay between the interior and exterior, and about home as the last wild place that is actually left, when the outside environment is disciplined and regiment. On the one hand, the isolation experience of these days is a direct continuation of this thought. On the other hand, this thought takes into account the act of isolation, turning our back to the exterior, as a subversive, anti-establishment action. But in these days, the act of going outside is portrayed as a subversive, anti-establishment action that also endangers the self.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on right now?

M.A: The isolation caught me at the height of my work on the exhibition “Solar Mountains and Broken Hearts”, that was scheduled for the end of May in Magasin III Jaffa. It took me few days to lower the work rate until it almost stopped.
I occupy my-self with short actions, drawings and photographs in the domestic space. Especially by playing with the sentence CULTIVATING DOING NOTHING IMPORTANT that wonders about the nothing. What is important and what isn’t and especially about this possibility that we are given, which is sometimes unbearable, to experience every day in full.

MIII JAFFA: Thoughts about the future?

M.A: As the days go by in quarantine, I’m coming to the realization that reality as we have come to know is constantly changing and requires us to rethink the future. It is a frightening experience of change, that breaks down any sense of social, economic and mental stability. There is currently a huge gap between the past and the future, so I try hard not to think beyond the next day, and not to draw conclusions too quickly about the future.

Maya Attoun, Inner Beauty, 2007. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
Maya Attoun, CULTIVATING DOING NOTHING IMPORTANT, 2020.
Maya Attoun, CULTIVATING DOING NOTHING IMPORTANT, 2020.

Alexandra Zuckerman is a drawer and painter. She lives and works in Tel Aviv, and holds a BFA from Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, and studied at Stadelschule in Frankfurt am Main. Zuckerman has exhibited solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries such as Sabot Gallery, Romania; Iaspis Open House, Sweden; Center of Contemporary Art, Latvia; Open Space, Art Cologne; Noga Gallery, Tel Aviv; Iaspis Open House, Stockholm, as well as group exhibitions at the Riis Galleri, Sweden; 427 Gallery, Latvia; MK Search Art, Italy, among others. 
She won multiple awards, including  the Excellence in the Arts award from Bezalel Fine Arts Department, Jerusalem and the America-Israel Cultural Foundation Scholarship.

Alexandra Zuckerman in her studio, 2020. Photo: Iris Rivkind Ben Zour.

MIII JAFFA: Hi Alexandra how are you doing these days?

A.Z: Hi, I feel a bit like in the movie “Groundhog Day” with Bill Murray, waking up every day to the same day, doing what needs to be done and trying to rest in between. There aren’t many brakes, but there is also something pleasant about intensive time with the family, full of love.

MIII JAFFA: Tell us something about the works from the collection we see here.

A.Z: Both works were exhibited in a solo exhibition “What the moon saw?” at Noga Gallery in Tel Aviv 2013, and are part of a large body of work made with the same drawing technique.
In the work “Two Mountains with Cave” is a still landscape with a cave and bare trees. The black opening of the cave is in the center of the painting, and the landscape around it opens in the shape of a symmetrical butterfly. The other hole in the drawing is the moon that appears on the right, the moon is the white of the paper, meaning it’s a void. Although the landscape seems imaginary you can recognize the slope park in Jaffa, I used to live just above it, with it’s empty hills and bare trees in winter.
In the second work “Storm” you see houses and trees flying in a storm, like Dorothy’s home in Kansas. The motif of home reoccurs in my works, many times the outside in the drawings is through the interior (through a window or doorway), in the case of this drawing the outside is out of control. I had another version of the same drawing, as if framed in a room and the scene of the storm is seen through the door. In this drawing there is something wilder and more disturbing, a sense of danger.

MIII JAFFA: Did you experience them differently in the context of these days?

A.Z: Only in the last year and a half have I been working in a studio outside of my home. For many years the work was done on a table, several tables or on the walls inside my home. I loved spending a lot of time with the works and was busy drawing most of the time. I loved that there was no separation, the images as if rolled into each other, my physical home and the environment in which I lived and created in were part of the world of images.
Something in this quarantine state exists in the works, and almost in all of them appears a home. A kind of a confused indoor and outdoor experience. Like a reflection of each other. In the current situation, I think about this relationship because everything becomes indoor somehow.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on now?

A.Z: I’m working on a whole new series of works, in this series I completely give up the image or inclination to a narrative that characterized my earlier works. The works are drawings of patterns of embroidery that repeat themselves, and they are drawn on a grid that I draw manually. I am interested in the abstraction created through these images and the movement they create. The work on the drawings is very slow and it takes several weeks to create each drawing. Despite the considerable time required to complete them the experience of looking at them creates space and quiet.

MIII JAFFA: Thoughts on the future?

A.Z: I was scheduled to open a solo exhibition at Noga Gallery in May, I was waiting for it for a long time. Now that everything is postponed,all things are given a different meaning. I just hope this crisis will be behind us soon and that we will feel free and protected again.

Alexandra Zuckerman, Two Mountains with Cave, 2012. Photo: Tessa Oleartchik. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
Alexandra Zuckerman, Storm, 2013. Photo: Tessa Oleartchik. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.
Alexandra Zuckerman, Flower Field X, 2018-19.

Eitan Ben-Moshe, is a multidisciplinary artist, that creates sculptures, installations and digital media. He lives and works in Tel Aviv, and holds a BFA from Kalisher Art School, and MFA Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design. Today he lectures in Bezalel and in Shenkar College of Engineering and Design.
Ben-Moshe has exhibited solo exhibitions at prestigious museums and galleries such as Alon Segev Gallery, Tel Aviv; Xero, Kline & Coma Gallery, London; Deptford X festival, London; Frieze Art Fair, London, as well as group exhibitions at the Tel Aviv Museum, Tel Aviv; Triumph Gallery, Moscow; Dittrich & Schlechtriem gallery, Berlin; Zuzeum Art Center, Riga; The University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University; Kunstfort bij Vijfhuizen Museum, Amsterdam; Petach-Tikva museum, Petach-Tikva; among others. 
He won multiple awards, including the Formosa Festival of International Filmmaker Awards (FFIFA & WOFFF), The Ministry of Education and Culture prize and Rabinovich foundation artist scholarship.

Eitan Ben-Moshe Portrait.

MIII JAFFA: Hi Eitan, how are you doing these days?

E.B: Ranging from feelings of cosmic tranquility to existential anxiety.

MIII JAFFA: Tell us something about the work from the Magasin III’s collection we see here.

E.B: White Shoes was exhibited in 2017 in an exhibition called Albino Heart at Alon Segev Gallery. The whole series dealt with various situations of collision that froze in time, and a kind of a new world forming during this process. The works are composed of multitude of layers laid out in aluminum boxes, containing various elements made of glass, objects that I have collected and 3D prints. Among the layers are different types of LED lighting that shines through the different layers, reflecting through the transparent objects and blocked by others.
White Shoes has to do with the scenery I see a lot in the neighborhood I live in (Shapira). As someone who likes to peek through the windows of strangers, I have been gazing into the windows of small street level apartments of refugees living in the neighborhood. Often the place is poor and simple, but almost always some bright new pair of shoes is visibly placed. One such pair, white, remained in my memory. I searched a lot in the shops at the central bus station, for the couple that appears in the work. I wanted an unidentified pair with no particular brand or style. As with most of the works I’ve done, I prefer it wouldn’t be possible to identify a particular time and place. The concreteness should be internal to the work and not external.

MIII JAFFA: In the context of these days, do you experience the work differently?

E.B: The fragility of our existence and our social and human structures has been exposed. This is certainly essential to this work, and to the series as a whole. In these days it is extremely present, so much it is intolerable.

MIII JAFFA: What are you working on right now?

E.B: Well, everything turned around a bit because I was supposed to finish works for an exhibition next month at an art space called Blake & Vargas in Berlin. At the moment everything is frozen, so I am working on all kinds of new ideas and some things that I have postponed for a long time. This week I mostly sat down with an After Effect editor for a higher quality version of a video from 2016 / FLYBLACKS. So here is the previous full-length version: FLYBLACKS
I believe it is in the spirit of these days as well.

MIII JAFFA: Any thoughts about the future?

E.B: Keeping them to myself for now :)

Eitan Ben-Moshe, White Shoes, 2017, Mixed Media. Photo: Elad Sarig. Collection Magasin III Museum for Contemporary Art.