Friday, May 22, 2015

Dror Burstein / White City, Black City (May 2015, YNET [Hebrew])


It is very easy to live somewhere and to assume that what one sees is what had always been. Especially in a place which allegedly lacks apparent history like Tel Aviv (in opposed for example to Jerusalem). 
Sharon Rotbard's book White City, Black City, looks at the white paint  of Tel Aviv's buildings not for its esthetics but as a layer that covers and conceals. 
You may compare this book to the scratch of a nail on the white wall. It is spine-tingling as it may sound. What is exposed is a Pandora box of expropriation, expulsion, blackening of a city, urbicide, matricide;
 Jaffa disappears from Nahum Gutman's drawings; propaganda pop songs about Jaffa's "Big Zone" in Jaffa; architectural conservation projects; a museum which is half an Arabic house, half a modernist glass box; the "empty" dunes that enable imagining a clean start; open lawns once a Jewish-Arabic neighborhood; slowly is revealed a mosaic of the stories that so many Tel Avivians would not want to see and is so interesting to know.
It is hard to imagine a home in Tel Aviv in which this book is not to be found, even if its mere existence would shake a bit its walls.


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