2. EVA/Minerva 2015
Plenary
Prof. Gabriel Motzkin, Director, The Van Leer
Jerusalem Institute
James Snyder, Anne and Jerome Fisher Director The
Israel Museum, Jerusalem
Reuven Pinsky Prime Minister's Office
Keynote Speaker
Dr. Matthew Adams, Director
Albright Institute of Archaeological Research`
Paperless Archaeology
Dov Winer, Co-Chair EVA/Minerva 2015 Coordinator:
Israel Minerva Forum
Dr. Susan Hazan, Co-Chair EVA/Minerva 2015 The
Israel Museum, Jerusalem
5. The Hybrid Bricolage - Bridging Parametric Design with Craft
through Algorithmic Modularity
Tamara Efrat | Moran Mizrahi | Dr. Amit Zoran
EVA/Minerva 2015 -| Networking Sessions
6. DB Digital, Gil Toren, Archiving Concepts
The professionalism, the experience, the hospitability,
the reliability, the solutions, the calmness, the sound,
everything… That’s what DB is all about.
http://www.dbpost.co.il/
EVA/Minerva 2015 -| Networking Sessions
7. Gal Kol is a pool of professionals in
every respect: technical, professional,
artistic, and administrative
Recording and digitization studios - Israel Media Production
http://www.gal-kol.co.il/
EVA/Minerva 2015 -| Networking Sessions
8. http://www.hc-edt.com/
HC Editions Studio offers a one-stop-shop solution
with a goal at HC Editions is to create a final product
that captures the full breadth and depth of the work of art
EVA/Minerva 2015 -| Networking Sessions
9. City of Knowledge YOUTH PORTAL
https://www.portaldajuventude.prefeitura.sp.gov.br/
EVA/Minerva 2015 -| Networking Sessions
10. The Israel Genealogy
Research Association (IGRA)
The next generation of
genealogy in Israel is here!
http://genealogy.org.il/
EVA/Minerva 2015 -| Networking Sessions
13. Twilight over Berlin
Masterworks from the Nationalgalerie, 1905–1945
The beginning of the 20th century saw an
artistic flourishing in Germany embodied in
the works of the great Expressionists, and
later in that of the innovative artists of the
Weimar Republic.
The Nazi regime sought to put an end to
this artistic activity – branding it
“degenerate art” – and many of the artists
had to flee Germany, creating an avant-
garde exiled community whose influence
also reached pre-State Israel.
Marking 50 years of German-Israeli
diplomatic relations, the exhibition displays
masterpieces from the Nationalgalerie by
Kirchner, Nolde, Schmidt-Rottluff, Dix,
Kandinsky, Klee, and Beckmann, among
others.
15. we the people
New in Contemporary Art
A new exhibition of international
art exploring the collective’s role in
society, the empowering of the
individual, and the aggregation of
a communal “we.” Paintings,
sculpture, photography, and video
works touch on subjects such as
immigration, religion, and
nationality, allowing for historical
reflection and critical discussion.
The exhibition takes its name from
one of its central works, We the
People by Vietnamese artist Danh
Vo, a 1:1 reproduction of the
Statue of Liberty in 300 pieces ־
four of which are displayed here.
16. Dürer and Friends German Renaissance Prints
Prints by Albrecht Dürer (Nuremberg,
1471–1528), ranging from early to
mature works, are the focus of this
exhibition.
The artist’s brilliant originality,
consummate technique, and
intellectual scope made him one of
the most influential artists of the
German Renaissance.
18. Man Ray – Human Equations
After fleeing Paris for Hollywood in
the late 1940s, Man Ray created
“Shakespearean Equations,” a series
of paintings he considered to be the
pinnacle of his creative oeuvre.
These paintings were inspired by his
own innovative photographs of
three-dimensional mathematical
objects, and they are displayed for
the first time in Israel, together with
the photographs and the original
plaster, wood, papier-mache, and
string models from the Institut Henri
Poincare in Paris.
19. A Brief History of Humankind
from the Collections of The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
20. An odyssey into the evolution of humankind,
from prehistory to modern times. Inspired by
Yuval Noah Harari’s bestselling book, the
exhibition presents pivotal objects that
illuminate the unfolding of civilization – from
the first signs of the use of fire some 800,000
years ago and the first human-made tools,
through the earliest evidence of the
agricultural revolution, the invention of writing,
and the earliest coins, up to Albert Einstein’s
Special Theory of Relativity and the revolution
it caused in our worldview.
A Brief History of Humankind
from the Collections of The Israel Museum, Jerusalem