You Give Me 54 Minutes, And I'll Give You My World
I just uploaded a recording of an hour-long interview I gave Israel’s Channel A radio. You can listen to the recorded radio show here.
Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?
I just uploaded a recording of an hour-long interview I gave Israel’s Channel A radio. You can listen to the recorded radio show here.
I was invited by Israel’s Channel A radio to be a guest on the program Writing for the Drawer hosted by Rona Gershon. It is an hour-long one-on-one chat following the recent publishing of my book named Almost Finished. The original broadcast date was Wednesday, September 5, 2007 – 13:05 (repeated Saturday September 15, 2007 – 18:05).
| Get a copy of my book: | Listen to the recorded interview: |
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| Music that was played during the show: | ||
| Artist | Song | Album |
| Dori Adar | Irrelevant Answer | Jewish Delights |
| Pink Martini | The Gardens of Sampson & Beasley | Hang on Little Tomato |
| Yafit Reuveny | Sweet Night Blindness | Sweet Night Blindness |
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I was very honored when the producers of the Machol Shalem Dance Festival asked me to create a video work exclusively for the event, and created a video installation consisting of seven different monitors, mixing 1940’s American instructional films, with electronic downtempo music as soundtrack.
The festival was held in the Gerard Behar Centre, Jerusalem, Israel and consisted of three evenings (November 14-16, 2006) of modern dance.
You can view the work in two versions -- just the videos:
and the actual installation set-up:
A successful colaboration between the Musrara School of Art and the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance has come to a conclusion. The group I took part in produced one video work, one video installation and one live act:
Psycho Ex-Girlfriend
Video installation work consisting of 2 different monitors, mixing parts of two female faces, with an answering machine message as a soundtrack.
Dancing In The Streets
Sham [There] -- Live
Video documenting a live performance made in cooperation with dance students from the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, consisting of 2 different videos projected onto three dancers. The videos consists of one Sesame Street muppets sketch (‘Here and there’ -- in Hebrew), and the dancers’ own family footage of their childhood.