
Anan Tzuckerman
Jungle Cat, 2005
Cibachrome print
95.5 x 120 cm
2/5+ap
From The Project of Eliezer Blum. Anan Tzuckerman's works incorporate exaggerated, troubling images of hallucinations and visions, fantasies and anxieties. Presented to the viewer with an immaculate finish, they criticize...
From The Project of Eliezer Blum.
Anan Tzuckerman's works incorporate exaggerated, troubling images of hallucinations and visions, fantasies and anxieties. Presented to the viewer with an immaculate finish, they criticize the body culture of a consumerist world.
The photographs shown here are part of two series: "Eliezer Blum's Project" and "The Rewarding Cave." In each of the three works, the artist plays a protagonist wallowing through life's filth, creating a strong, sensationalistic, pathetic and theatrical image laden with troubling grotesque symbolism.
Plato's Allegory of the Cave, Odysseus returning to Ithaca, the grotesques paintings uncovered in Nero's pleasure villa, Freud's traumwerk and the cave as metaphor for the uterus - all come to mind when viewing these works. The blunt spectacularity, the image flickering from the dark - the "void," the "pit," the "tomb" or the "cave" - are all understood as parables of contemporary culture's pathologies. Text from the Haifa museum catalogue.
Anan Tzuckerman's works incorporate exaggerated, troubling images of hallucinations and visions, fantasies and anxieties. Presented to the viewer with an immaculate finish, they criticize the body culture of a consumerist world.
The photographs shown here are part of two series: "Eliezer Blum's Project" and "The Rewarding Cave." In each of the three works, the artist plays a protagonist wallowing through life's filth, creating a strong, sensationalistic, pathetic and theatrical image laden with troubling grotesque symbolism.
Plato's Allegory of the Cave, Odysseus returning to Ithaca, the grotesques paintings uncovered in Nero's pleasure villa, Freud's traumwerk and the cave as metaphor for the uterus - all come to mind when viewing these works. The blunt spectacularity, the image flickering from the dark - the "void," the "pit," the "tomb" or the "cave" - are all understood as parables of contemporary culture's pathologies. Text from the Haifa museum catalogue.
Provenance
Acquired directly from the ArtistGivon Gallery, Tel-Aviv
Exhibitions
Haifa Museum of Art | Wild Exaggeration - The Grotesque Body in Contemporary Art | July 2009 - January 2010.Bezalel, Jerusalem | Graduate exhibition | July 2005.
Kav 16 Gallery, Tel-Aviv | The Eliezer Blum Project | 2007.
Gallery 5, The Left Banl Gallery, Tel-Aviv | Big Spender | 2009.