Roee Rosen Explained

Roee Rosen
Birth Place:Rehovot, Israel
Nationality:Israeli, American
Training:Tel Aviv University, School of Visual Arts, Hunter College

Roee Rosen (born 1963) is an Israeli multidisciplinary artist, writer and filmmaker.

Biography

Roee Rosen (born 1963 in Rehovot) studied philosophy and comparative literature studies in Tel Aviv University until 1984 and graduated with BFA from School of Visual Arts, New York in 1989. Rosen received MFA from Hunter College in New York in 1991.

He is a professor at HaMidrasha – Faculty of the Arts, Beit Berl College in Kfar-Saba and at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem.

His work has been described by Hila Peleg for Documenta 14 (2017) as creating " ... an artistic universe that treacherously undermines the normative implications of identities and identifications through fictionalization, irony, and revision. In untold variations, he typically links current Israeli and world politics with mythical and political references to European and Jewish history. Using a vast array of fictional characters and iconographic motifs and codes, Rosen frequently refers to, and transforms, not only the canon of the historical avant-garde and transgressive traditions from the Marquis de Sade to Georges Bataille, but also popular media, political propaganda, and classic children's fairy tales."[1]

Fictive characters

As part of his art, Rosen invented non existing artists. His first virtual artist was Justine Frank (1900–1943), a Jewish-Belgian surrealist painter who also authored the pornographic novel "Sweet Sweat." In both art and writings Frank combined explicit erotic imagery with Jewish tropes and magical elements, thus assuming a highly polemic and disturbing position. She later worked in Palestine despite appearing to be antagonistic to Zionism and refusing to speak Hebrew. The fabrication of the project entailed a book combining Frank's own novel with her biography and a theoretical essay, entitled Sweet Sweat (Sternberg Press, 2009). A retrospective of Frank's works was first shown in 2004. In the short film "Two Women and a Man" (2005), Roee Rose himself appears in drag as Joanna Führer-Hasfari, a scholar of Frank's work, and uses this guise to attack himself for appropriating Frank's legacy.

Rosen's second major fictional artist is Maxim Komar-Myshkin (1978–2011), a pseudonym for Russian emigrant poet and painter Efim Poplavsky, born in 1978 and immigrated to Israel in 2003. Komar-Myshkin established the "Buried Alive" collective, a group of Ex-Soviet artists who disavowed the culture surrounding them, describing themselves as "Russian cultural zombies." The project thus entailed fabricating the work of the collective as well as that of Poplavsky. Komar-Myshkin, according to the story, suffered acute paranoia and believed he is persecuted by Vladimir Putin. In his major work, the album "Vladimir's Night." he takes his revenge on the Russian president. Produced in secrecy and supposedly discovered after the artist's death, it describes still objects assuming life so as to murder Vladimir. The second part of the book offers annotation by yet another fictive character, Rosa Chabanova, a hybrid of fiction, political writings and theory.[2]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Several retrospective screenings programs were dedicated to Roee Rosen's cinematic production, amongst them at the FICUNAM International Film Festival, Mexico City (2018), MUMOK, Vienna (2014), La Roche Sur Yon International Film Festival (2013), and the Oberhausen International Short Film Festival (2012).

Rosen also held numerous one person exhibitions in Rosenfeld Gallery in Tel Aviv, The Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art,[11] and other venues.

Group exhibitions

Documenta 14, 2017 in Athens and Kassel. Vos désirs sont les nôtres, Le Friche, Marseille (2018). AV Festival in Newcastle upon Tyne, 2016[12] "Gender in art" in Museum of Contemporary Art in Kraków,[13] Monday Begins on Saturday, The First Edition of the Bergen Assembly, Bergen, Norway. Taipei Biennial, Taiwan, 2012, "Animism" at Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin,[14] "Host & Guest," the Tel Aviv Museum of Art,[15] "Cargo-Cult" in Bat Yam Museum of Art.[16] Manifesta 7, 2007, Trento, Italy.

Films

Films by Rosen include:

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Roee Rosen . en . . 2018-07-07.
  2. Web site: Vladimir's Night Maxim Komar-Myshkin / Roee Rosen . 2018-06-28.
  3. Web site: Roee Rosen, The Mosquito-Mouse and Other Hybrids, Kunsthal Charlottenborg.
  4. Web site: Roee Rosen, Exorcisms exhibition announcement, e-Flux (last accessed: May 23, 2020).
  5. Web site: Roee Rosen – Histoires dans la pénombre, Centre Pompidou.
  6. Web site: Roee Rosen: A Group Exhibition . 30 March 2016.
  7. News: The many faces of Roee Rosen. The Jerusalem Post | Jpost.com .
  8. Web site: iniva - Roee Rosen: Vile, Evil Veil . www.iniva.org . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120223163225/http://www.iniva.org/press/2012/roee_rosen_vile_evil_veil . 2012-02-23.
  9. Web site: Simon. Joshua. 20 May 2011. The Dynamic Dead by Roee Rosen (review), Domus. Domus.
  10. Schuster. Aaron. 2009-05-05. Justine Frank, Extra City Centre for Contemporary Art. Frieze. 123.
  11. Web site: Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art - Roee Rosen . www.herzliyamuseum.co.il . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160411070500/http://www.herzliyamuseum.co.il/english/january2003/jan03/roee_rosen . 2016-04-11.
  12. Web site: Top Ten Movies | Casino Flicks. 18 January 2021.
  13. Web site: Gender in Art – MOCAK.
  14. Web site: The exhibition "Animism" . 2018-06-28.
  15. Web site: Host & Guest . 2018-06-28.
  16. Web site: Cargo Cult: Artists from the Ex-Eastern Bloc . 2018-06-28.
  17. Web site: May 4, 2022 . Film's page of Kafka for Kids on the site of the Rotterdam Film Festival .