Sigalit Landau (b. 1969, Jerusalem) is an interdisciplinary artist who works with installation, video, photography, and sculpture. Landau graduated from the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem in...
Sigalit Landau (b. 1969, Jerusalem) is an interdisciplinary artist who works with installation, video, photography, and sculpture. Landau graduated from the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem in 1994. After several years in Europe and in the United-States, she returned to Tel Aviv where she currently lives and works. She has had many solo exhibitions in major institutions around the world such as the MoMA, Museum of Modern Art, New York City, The Museum der Moderne, Salzburg, Koffler Centre of Fine Arts, Toronto, Maison Hermes in Ginza, Tokyo, Kunsthalle Budapest, MACBA, Barcelona, the Documenta X, Kassel and more. She represented Israel in the Venice Biennial in 1997 and 2011 and her works are part of major collections such as the MoMa, The Brooklyn Museum Centre George Pompidou, Julia Stoschek Collection, Museum der Moderne Salzburg, The Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Israel Museum, The Jewish Museum, Magasin 3 Stock- holm, MACBA, Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona and others.
From 2004 the artist begins her series Salt Years. In the desert landscape of the Dead Sea, she plunges various inanimate objects in the waters whose salinity crystallise them. She explores this process with an array of objects such as Shoes (Adam, 2018; Unborn, 2016), coats, dresses but also nooses, crutches and musical instruments (Flute 3, 2020; Wave, 2020). Hints at the absence of a person to whom they belong while becoming living beings. Transformed by the salt which changes their color to a glimmering white and thickens their surfaces with layers of salt, the objects lose all relation to their original purpose and become symbols of this loss. On the backdrop of the Dead Sea where Israel, Palestine and Jordan share a border, these objects are acting as an ‘archeology of the now’, transmuted into analogies of hope, love, and a future coexistence between the three bordering countries. Sigalit Landau’s interest in the body is also present in the Neon heaters, which are part of the series she created using small heaters that were used throughout the 20th century in Israel. The heaters, when connected to electricity create a yearning for warmth as well as casting reddish auras in the surrounding area. Landau introduces a textual aspect to her work by replacing the heating elements with hand crafted neon words bringing notions of intimacy and domesticity, such as “home-sick” in bright pink, red, orange and blue. Drawing has always been a part of the artist’s language and constitutes a pillar of her practice. Landau implements and experiments with a variety of techniques, from Indian ink (Blood Moon, 2015; Dimdumim, 2015), to markers and acrylic paint (Pot Girl, 2018), from charcoal and watercolors (A Split Night III, 2020) to dyes on canvas (Midnight Sun, 2015). Balancing the monochromatic aspect of Landau’s sculptural work after the consistently white Salt Years, she began to develop in 2020 her series Masks. These oval sculptures, such as Untitled 7 and Untitled 14, of identical shape and size allow Landau to further develop her practice by exploring new materials, specifically plaster of Paris and burlap, on which she applies pigments. A technique requiring rapidity whilst putting emphasis on the intensity of gesture with a performative aspect.