
Cool places to experience art in Jerusalem’s Old City
As tourists return to Israel, they’ll find new and renewed places to find and interact with craftspeople in and around the Cardo marketplace.

As tourists return to Israel, they’ll find new and renewed places to find and interact with craftspeople in and around the Cardo marketplace.

Jerusalem artist collected plastic litter from beaches and parks in several countries, fashioning it into an installation for the World Trade Center.

For three generations, the Karakashian family have run an Armenian pottery workshop in Jerusalem. Their story is a celebration of resilience and diversity in the heart of a divided city.

Alex Tubis’ oil paintings debuted in Season 2 of the hit show about the fictional artist Akiva Shtisel and his extended ultra-Orthodox family.

Mediterranean Biennale features works by 60 artists and art collectives from 17 countries under the theme ‘Living Together – Crossing Borders.’

This tiny religious and ethnic minority makes an outsized contribution to Israel in every field of endeavor.

Covid-19 prompts Safed gallery owner to offer a therapeutic, meditative and spiritual artistic experience to heal body, heart, mind and soul.

Public art in the White City ranges from the whimsical Ben-Gurion beach headstand to the Cyber Horse’s statement about the dark side of technology.

Walking the circular sculpture path, in person or virtually, allows visitors to explore the dialogue between material and natural beauty.

Sculptor Dan Reisner was so horrified by the footage of the police killing of George Floyd, that he immediately set out to memorialize it.

iPad app for hand-drawn animation ‘came from a feeling of how fun it would be if you could just kick back and make animations without a workspace.’

Israeli designer’s whimsical embellished glove photos on Instagram bring humorous attention to a nasty new litter problem.

Israeli art photographer Eyal Granit hangs his still-life pictures of produce in London’s Covent Garden Market and Jerusalem’s Machane Yehuda Market.

‘People thank us for making them happy once a week and making them feel they are not alone,’ says Yehuda Devir, co-creator of ‘One of Those Days.’

The auction includes Reuven Rubin’s ‘The Musicians of Safed,’ Nachum Gutman’s ‘Synagogue’ and Yochanan Simon’s paintings from the kibbutz period.