Patio Sculpture
Anodized Aluminum & Stainless Steel)Outdoor patio sculpture for a house in Jerusalem.
The incipient idea for this project was to develop a sculpture built of three modules representing the children of the family. The theme text ,the Priestly Blessing ,is powerful, significant and moving. The design motif is explosion of typography in space:
the deconstructed letters of the three priestly blessing look like hieroglyphs with no apparent meaning. The words suddenly pop up when the viewer juxtaposes the reflection of the right side with the cutouts of the left.
This is a powerful revelation.
Ruth and Ted Mirvis, New York / Jerusalem
Home Sculpture
(Stainless Steel)Thanks to Ruth and Ted’s generosity , smaller versions of the patio sculpture were produced .
Home Sculpture
(Stainless Steel)A corollary of the Bircat Cohanim sculpture
A corollary of the Bircat Cohanim sculpture
A contemporary interpretation of a traditional Sephardic Torah necessarily represents a contrast. It echoes the inherent link between “From Zion shall go forth the Torah” to the modern city of Jerusalem.
Much in the same way, this project casts the aesthetics of my work over the past 30 years into the traditional elements of the Torah Case as a study in transformation and contrasts.
This case, in a special version was subsequently ordered for the permanent collection of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.
Fasja Lovaton Family, Mexico City
Inspired by the topology of the Moebius curve.
Lisi Teller,Los Angeles
Sculpture / Edition of Six
A design of a Hamsa sculpture for a yacht necessarily should evoke navigation and movement.
The astrolabe with the mathematical positioning of its rings around the three space axes was then a natural source of inspiration.
The sculpture assembles astrolabe segments and an abstraction of a hamsa, exploring geometric minimalism, positive- negative, deconstruction - composition and motion that continuously modulates the work in space.
Roberto Moritz, Brazil / Switzerland