"The best of Brenner's
photographs represent a friction between past and present that all
Americans need to confront and resolve as best they can."
New York Times Book Review
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Barsky
family
Moscow, Russia, 1990
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on picture to enlarge
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Barsky
family
Sodom, Israel, 1991
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on picture to enlarge |
Photographer
Frederic Brenner has traveled for nearly two decades, photographing Jews
in more than forty countries and capturing the diversity of their experiences
in the Diaspora. Now, in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of Israel,
Brenner has produced an exquisitely crafted book of black and white photographs
of members of some fourteen recent immigrant families, all of whom he
had previously photographed in their native countries
in Yemen, Ethiopia, Russia, Yugoslavia, United States, France, England,
and India.
Viewing
the magnificent photographs in Exile at Home (Harry N. Abrams Publishers,
1998), we ponder the definitions of "exile" and "home."
Writes Frederic Brenner in the introduction to this work of art:
"1978
My journey started in Jerusalem in Mea She'arim.
Then, as if on a reverse journey from this diaspora in the heart of Israel,
I went to search for the multiple fragments of exile. 1997
Many contrasting, contradictory photographs, gleaned from forty different
countries, have deconstructed the emblematic image of the Jew that was
at the origin of my journey.
Photographer
Frederic Brenner has traveled for nearly two decades, photographing Jews
in more than forty countries and capturing the diversity of their experiences
in the Diaspora. Now, in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of Israel,
Brenner has produced an exquisitely crafted book of black and white photographs
of members of some fourteen recent immigrant families, all of whom he
had previously photographed in their native countries
in Yemen, Ethiopia, Russia, Yugoslavia, United States, France, England,
and India.
Viewing
the magnificent photographs in Exile at Home (Harry N. Abrams Publishers,
1998), we ponder the definitions of "exile" and "home."
Writes Frederic Brenner in the introduction to this work of art:
"1978 My journey started in Jerusalem
in Mea She'arim. Then, as if on a reverse journey from this diaspora in
the heart of Israel, I went to search for the multiple fragments of exile.
1997 Many contrasting, contradictory photographs,
gleaned from forty different countries, have deconstructed the emblematic
image of the Jew that was at the origin of my journey.
Tzabari
& Zendani families
Wadi Amlah, Yemen, 1985
Click
on picture to enlarge
|
Tzabari
& Zendani families
Kikar Rabin, Tel Aviv,
Israel, 1997
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on picture to enlarge |
To
return to Israel is to interrogate, to confront these images, these differences,
and to ask what unites and what divides the Jewish people. I have chosen
to address these questions to fourteen families I photographed between
1978 and 1997, whom I found again united and scattered throughout Israel.
Only after extensive fieldwork and many conversations did I determine
how to portray these families in their new homeland.
On the eve of the fiftieth anniversary of the creation of the State of
Israel, this photographic essay remains a book of questions, a mirror
that I interrogate as I attempt to understand what place to ascribe to
the exile within us, so that the promise may yet come true."
"Exile at Home" opens with two short essays by Israeli poet
Yehudah Amichai.
JHOM.com brings you an audio webcast interview
with photographer Brenner.
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From:
Exile at Home
(Harry N. Abrams Publishers, 1998) |
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