Jewish Artist: Michal Rovner’s disturbing world

The disturbing world of Michal Rovner

At the junction of Minimal Art and Anti-Form, the Israeli Jewish artist Michal Rovner creates strange images where the real remains nevertheless the artist’s very material and vocabulary. She uses them under various constructions. Her work is characterized by a Kafkaesque setting in space.

The audible becomes visible. Bodies detach themselves from immense spaces and sometimes these spaces themselves seem to be engulfed in abysses.
Winding her neck to the fluidity of the art world, Michal Rover shows how the end has taken the beginning of speed.

Between inhalation and exhalation the world embraces and extends its own limits, like a path on the edge of a field that the creator hastily clears.

Curves emerge from the jungle of possibilities. Remain pure wakes in place of the reality of the world as art.

Nevertheless, art is not for the creator the result of acts of destruction.
The elimination of the thundering light becomes the attempt to dislodge the entrails buried in everyday life. Unlike a Meredith Sparks, Michal River does not refuse the mirror effect. But she reappropriates them with frenzy, even fetishism, by eliminating the shine and the artifice so that light and darkness end up getting along.

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