Yocheved Weinfeld
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Yocheved (Juki) Weinfeld is an artist, museum educator and developer of interactive exhibitions for children. She studied at the
Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv University (TAU) ( he, אוּנִיבֶרְסִיטַת תֵּל אָבִיב, ''Universitat Tel Aviv'') is a public research university in Tel Aviv, Israel. With over 30,000 students, it is the largest university in the country. Locate ...
and the State Art Teacher's College (Israel); at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and at the Michaelis School of Art at the
University of Cape Town The University of Cape Town (UCT) ( af, Universiteit van Kaapstad, xh, Yunibesithi ya yaseKapa) is a public research university in Cape Town, South Africa. Established in 1829 as the South African College, it was granted full university statu ...
in South Africa). Weinfeld taught art at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the State Art Teacher's College, the
Bezalel Academy of Art and Design Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design ( he, בצלאל, אקדמיה לאמנות ועיצוב) is a public college of design and art located in Jerusalem. Established in 1906 by Jewish painter and sculptor Boris Schatz, Bezalel is Israel's oldes ...
and at the Michaelis School of Art, University of Cape Town. She also developed and designed educational exhibitions for children at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem (Israel), the
Jewish Museum A Jewish museum is a museum which focuses upon Jews and may refer seek to explore and share the Jewish experience in a given area. List of Jewish museums Notable Jewish museums include: *Albania ** Solomon Museum, Berat *Australia ** Jewish Mu ...
in New York, and at the Jewish Children's Learning Lab (now known as the Children's Galleries for Jewish Culture) in New York which she co-founded in 1995. Weinfeld is considered one of the first Israeli artists to explore her heritage as a Jewish woman using contemporary means. She exhibited her work in numerous one-woman shows in Israel since the 1970s (e.g., the Israel Museum, Bograshov Gallery, Gordon Gallery, Debel Gallery, Mabat Gallery). She also participated in many international group exhibitions in museums and galleries around the world. Her works are included in the collections of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the
Hamburg Kunsthalle The Hamburger Kunsthalle is the art museum of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, Germany. It is one of the largest art museums in the country. The museum consists of three connected buildings, dating from 1869 (main building), 1921 (Kuppelsaa ...
in Germany, the Tel Aviv Museum, the
Haifa Museum The Haifa Museum of Art ( he, מוזיאון חיפה לאמנות, ar, متحف حيفا للفنون), established in 1951, is located in a historic building built in the 1930s in Wadi Nisnas, downtown Haifa. Ranking as Israel's third largest ...
and in various private collections. Weinfeld lives and works in New York City.


Biography

Yocheved (Juki) Weinfeld (née Ewa Ernst) was born in 1947 in the Silesian city of Legnica (Poland), and lived in Wroclaw, also in
Silesia Silesia (, also , ) is a historical region of Central Europe that lies mostly within Poland, with small parts in the Czech Republic and Germany. Its area is approximately , and the population is estimated at around 8,000,000. Silesia is split ...
. Before World War II, her father Natan Ernst (b. 1909) was a prosperous manufacturer of men's shirts in Przemyśl, Poland and her mother, Klara, had just graduated from the local vocational high school. Natan's Parents were shot by the Nazis and he spent the war in hiding. Klara obtained false documents and, posing as an Aryan, served as a housekeeper for a German SS officer stationed in Poland. They met and married after the war. In 1957 the Ernst family emigrated to Israel, and after a few months in Tel-Aviv settled in Givatayim, a town near Tel-Aviv. While Ewa, now Yocheved, was considered an overall gifted child, her exceptional talents in drawing, acting and writing received particular attention. At the age of 16 she was taken on as a student by the prominent Israeli artist and teacher,
Raffi Lavie Raffi Lavie educator and music/art critic. Lavie's work is a cross between graffiti and abstract expressionism. Biography Rafael (Raffi) Lavi was born in Tel Aviv, Mandate Palestine. He began teaching at HaMidrasha – Faculty of the Arts 1966. ...
, and before she was 20, her works were being shown alongside her mentor's in exhibitions staged by the avant-garde group 10+. In 1979 she married David Weinfeld, then a Doctoral student at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and an Orthodox Jew. In 1977 the marriage ended in divorce. In 1980, Weinfeld married Steven Kasher and moved to New York. In 1985 she gave birth to their daughter Talia Kasher. In 1993 the couple divorced.


Art

In 1969 Weinfled exhibited her early paintings in a one-woman show in Mabat Gallery in Tel-Aviv. The paintings explored containments of biomorphic shapes (such as flesh) within geometric boundaries. The exhibition was met with disdain by most of the local art critics. Over the next three years Weinfeld experimented with other juxtapositions of stylistic contrasts. Those were exhibited in numerous group shows, and eventually in 1972 in a one-woman show at the Bar-Kochba Gallery in Tel-Aviv. The exhibition met with mixed reviews. Reuven Berman wrote in The Jerusalem Post: "… Paintings based on internal stylistic and conceptual contrasts that break down fundamentally into a reasoned, studied, restrained approach on the one hand, and a spontaneous, gestural, painterly approach on the other… But the contrasts are lively and the show as a whole bears evidence of intellectual alertness…" In 1973 following her mother's death and the
Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War, also known as the Ramadan War, the October War, the 1973 Arab–Israeli War, or the Fourth Arab–Israeli War, was an armed conflict fought from October 6 to 25, 1973 between Israel and a coalition of Arab states led by E ...
, in an attempt to relinquish her facile drawings, and out of need to express her reaction to the scarred flesh and the scarred society, Weinfeld started experimenting with stitches on paper in lieu of pencil lines, and sometimes next to them. Some of those "drawings" were perceived as erotic and feminine, if not feminist. Stitching paper and canvas gave way to a renewed interest in flesh and body. In 1974, in a one-woman show at the Debel Gallery in Jerusalem, Weinfeld —again interested in paradox– exhibited, among other works, a series of photographs of stitched hands and faces. These works that were in fact stitched photographs re-photographed, led way to works that became increasingly less concerned with esthetics or style and more conceptual in nature. The scarred, stitched "drawings" along with the stitched body parts, caused some critics to place Weinfeld's art within the Body-Art movement, and within it as feminist in nature. In 1975, following her interest in synaesthesia and the definition of art as "an expression of what cannot be expressed otherwise," Weinfeld explored the capability of visual art to transmit tactile physical bodily sensations, such as the sensation of hunger, or pain in the roots of hair. She juxtaposed scientific and descriptive text with objects that strove to transmit bodily sensations visually. Unfortunately, with the exception of Yigal Zalmona (
Maariv ''Maariv'' or ''Maʿariv'' (, ), also known as ''Arvit'' (, ), is a Jewish prayer service held in the evening or night. It consists primarily of the evening ''Shema'' and '' Amidah''. The service will often begin with two verses from Psalms ...
, 3.21.75), most critics missed the point, and saw the topics as unworthy of artistic endeavor. In 1976, after reading the Code of Jewish Law (Shulhan Arukh), texts which she found fascinating and evocative, Weinfeld created a performance as part of her exhibition at the Debel Gallery. During the performance the artist explored visual, mythical images of prohibitions and rituals related to cleanliness and mourning, prompted by those texts. She acted out her own interpretation of the proscribed rituals. The content of the performance was, by virtue of the topic and the female artist's prism, feminine, but not Feminist, in nature. In an artistic environment that shunned the mention of the Holocaust and Jewish religious topics, it was one of the first times that an artist used Jewish ancient and modern heritage as an inspiration for what was considered at the time an avant-garde work of art. In his article about the exhibition in
Art News ''ARTnews'' is an American visual-arts magazine, based in New York City. It covers art from ancient to contemporary times. ARTnews is the oldest and most widely distributed art magazine in the world. It has a readership of 180,000 in 124 countri ...
, ("Whimsey and poetry; traumas and taboos" September, 1976), Meir Ronnen wrote: "One left the gallery questioning many aspects of our Judeo-Christian cultural heritage – a heritage of pain, suffering, superstition and a mystic belief in man's ability to rise above the physical in purification rites." Despite the fact that the original video documentation of the performance was lost, and only still photographs remain, the performance is often cited in studies, journals and books as a seminal work in Israeli art. In 1979 Weinfeld's interest turned to primary images in memory and the ways they change and reoccur in subsequent memories. In her one-person show at the Israel Museum she exhibited ten large complex works, each based on a childhood memory represented by a text. Each work consisted of posed photographs of herself, three-dimensional objects and painted surfaces. Stephanie Rachum, the exhibition's curator wrote in the catalogue: "The deliberate disregard for the aesthetic aspect coupled with the stress on the ideational process which exist in Weinfeld's work is part of her Conceptual art background. --- This lack of transposing imbues the objects with vitality, energy and potency. --- Often the spectator feels that he has a 'direct line' to the sources that motivated or instigated the image." In the fall of 1979 Weinfeld moved to NY where she continued her work on complex memory pieces in the work "You look so typically Jewish" and in the series "Stories for Little Children", exhibited at the Gordon Gallery in Tel-Aviv in 1981. The following year, Weinfeld experimented with posing figures painted in diverse styles in realistic scenes. The works, titled "Sentences" were exhibited at the Gordon Gallery in Tel-Aviv in 1982. In 1991 Weinfeld exhibited two series of works, "Mother's Clichés," and "For the initiated history consists of just a few words." The exhibition, at the Bograshov Gallery in Tel-Aviv was curated by Ariella Azoulay Armon who wrote an essay in the accompanying catalogue.Ariella Azoulay-Armon:"Mental Images have no Materiality" Catalog: Yocheved Weinfeld,Bograshov Gallery, 1991


Gallery

Image:2. 1969 Mabat Gallery. Private Collection.jpg, 1969, Mabat Gallery. Oil and pencil on linen. Private Collection Image:3. 1973 Stitch with Feather.jpg, 1973, Stitch with Feather. Thread, acrylic, pencil on linen. Private Collection Image:4. 1974 Stitched faces.jpg, 1974, Stitched Faces. One Person Show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Stitched and rephotographed photographs. Collection: Haifa Museum of Art Image:5. 1974 Stitched Hands.Collection Haifa Museum of Art.jpg, 1974, Stitched Hands. One Person Show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Stitched and rephotographed photographs. Collection: Tel-Aviv Museum of Art Image:7. 1974. 2. Collection Gordon Gallery.jpg, 1974,One Person Show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Mixed media on paper. Collection: Gordon Gallery Image:8. 1974.Collection Gordon Gallery.JPG, 1974,One Person Show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Mixed media on paper. Collection: Gordon Gallery Image:9. 1975 from the Pains Exhibition at Debel. Pain in the eyes.jpg, 1975,"Pains" at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Pain in the Eyes. Mixed media. Collection: Haifa Museum of Art Image:11. 1976 Performance at Debel (1).jpg, 1976, Documentation of a Performance during a one-person show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Photographs. Image:12. Stitched faces.jpg, 1976, Stitched Faces. One Person Show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Stitched and rephotographed photographs. Collection: Gordon Gallery Image:13. 1976.Family lines. Exhibited at Debel.jpg, 1976, Family Line. One Person Show at Debel Gallery in Jerusalem. Photographs, acrylic, pencil on paper Image:15. 1979. -8 Exhibited in a one person show at the israel Museum. Collection The Israel Museum.jpg, 1979,Visual Images #8. Text: "In the concentration camps where all the Jews were dirty and hungry there were also beautiful women whom the Germans loved. So the women would beat Jews and get food. Now they are being punished. Their heads were shaven." One Person Show at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Mixed media. Collection: Israel Museum, Jerusalem Image:14. 1979, -7 Exhibited in a one person show at the Israel Museum, Private collection.jpg, 1979, Visual Images #7 (Mukkat Etz). Text: "Kazia and I are standing on the wooden veranda. Kazia sends me to buy cigarettes. Afterwards she gives me a puff and says, there was a girl in our village who played with a wooden stick between her legs and then blood came out I bleed from there every month. If a girl is pregnant a yellow juice comes out." Mixed media. One Person Show at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Private Collection Image:16. 1980-81 Stories for Little Children.Electric Chair.jpg, 1980-81,Stories for Little Children. Text: "Don't worry they killed him on an electric chair it's the easiest death." One Person Show at the Gordon Gallery in Tel-Aviv. Artist's Collection Image:17. 1980-81. Stories for Little Children. Eat, eat.jpg, 1980-81, Stories for Little Children. Text: "Eat eat in the war they even ate potato peels." One Person show at the Gordon Gallery in Tel-Aviv. Mixed media. Artist's Collection Image:20. Weinfeld 1983-84. 1.jpg, 1983-84,Oil on linen. Collection of the Artist Image:22. Weinfeld 1988.jpg, 1988,Series: Mother's Cliches. Text: "You Will Always be my Baby." Mixed media. 1991, Bograshov Gallery, Tel-Aviv. Artist's Collection Image:23. 1990 History Knife.jpg, 1990, Series: "For the initiated it seems history consists of just a few words". Mixed media. 1991, Bograshov Gallery, Tel-Aviv. Private Collection File:25. 1993-94.Bunny.jpg, 1993-94, Series: "What is What isn't. Bunny" Mixed media. Artist's Collection.


References


External links


A biography from the Legacy Project (includes list of her works)Short biography from the Israel Museum, Jerusalem
{{DEFAULTSORT:Weinfeld, Yocheved 1947 births Living people 20th-century Israeli women artists 21st-century Israeli women artists Israeli women painters Tel Aviv University alumni Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni People from Legnica Museum educators