Miri Nishri Explained

Miri Nishri
Native Name:מירי נשרי
Native Name Lang:Hebrew
Birth Date:November 28, 1950
Birth Place:Colombia
Citizenship:Israeli
Alma Mater:Ort Technicum, Giv'atayim, HaMidrasha College for the Arts, Ramat Hasharon,(today a part of Beit Berl)
Occupation:interdisciplinary artist
Years Active:1980–present
Website:www.mirinishri.com

Miri Nishri is an interdisciplinary Israeli artist.

Biography

Miri Nishri was born in Colombia in 1950. She immigrated to Israel with her family when she was seven years old. She studied construction engineering at Ort Technicum, and art at Hamidrasha College for Arts (today a part of Beit Berl College).

Artistic career

Nishri teaches art at the Tel Aviv Museum Workshops. She is the winner of the 1988 Oscar Handler Prize for artists and the 1996 Award of the Israeli Minister of Education & Culture.

Her works range between painting, photography, video art and installations, and were shown in exhibitions in galleries, museums and festivals around the world, including: Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel Museum, Haifa Museum of Art, Ramat Gan Museum of Israeli Art, "Luleå Summer Biennale" (Sweden), "Olympolis Project" (Greece), "Human Emotions Festival" (Rome, Italy), "Stuttgarter Filmwinter" (Germany) and Stenersen Museum (Oslo, Norway).

Her visual artworks are characterized by a strong sense of corporeality, and she tends to use coffee, among other materials, as paint. As she put it: "You could say that all my work is derived from the materials. I relate to physical materials no less than I do to literary materials, they are full of meanings and associations. For me, texture has always determined the subject.[1]

Her video-arts and installations usually deal with the construction, deconstruction and reconstruction of a self identity, while bringing up questions about the nature of the artist and art. The collage nature of her art, endlessly moving from one subject, identity or genre to another, expresses her torn identity as a fatherless immigrant, daughter of a traumatized Holocaust survivor. In her videos documentary materials are often merged with stage materials, and the boundaries between reality and fiction are often blurred.

Selected installations

Solo exhibitions

Artworks in The Israel Museum collection

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Last Transfer - an interview by Tally Cohen-Garbuz . Hebrew . 2 November 2006 .
  2. Ronni Sher, "Peaceful co-existence", Ha'ir, 30 October 1981
  3. from the catalog for the exhibition "Turning Point", shown at the Tel Aviv Museum, 1981. pg. 24