Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:
Light to the Nations at The Center for Digital Art, Holon (IL), 2023
Light to the Nations at The Center for Digital Art, Holon (IL), 2023
Yael Bartana
Or la Goyim (Light to the Nations), 2023
neon
162 x 66 cm
The neon 'Or la Goim' [Light to the Nations] refers to a bigger body of works of the same title, presented, among other as part og the German Pavilion at...
The neon 'Or la Goim' [Light to the Nations] refers to a bigger body of works of the same title, presented, among other as part og the German Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2024.
Light to the Nations is a work created by Yael Bartana which combines different media such as sculpture, VR, and video animation, as well as a learning center.
It is a proposal about the attempts, dystopic and utopic, to save humanity in the face of a global catastrophe, whether man-made or caused by nature, which would extinguish any possibility of life on Earth. The work is influenced by post-apocalyptic science-fiction literature and a critique of today's accelerated technological progress, and the economic and political forces involved in it. The title Light to the Nations, taken from the Bible, points towards possibilities of redemption in the Jewish context but indicates a more universal message.
At the heart of the work is the creation of a generation ship: a mothership that will lead humanity towards other planets, and in doing so exercise the cabalistic concept of Tikkun Olam (lit. 'the repair of the world'). This vessel is designed to host in its first phase a community of 98 souls in a journey that will take thousands of years and will travel far beyond our solar system. The ship’s dimensions allow for a growing population so that future generations will be able to build a new community if not a nation. However, its goal is unknown: whether to inhabit a faraway planet, return to and populate Earth once it recovers, or travel endlessly, ever evolving, aboard this spaceship. The generation ship is seen as a project of the Jewish-Israeli nation which will serve as a spearhead in repairing the world, an example for all nations to follow (hence, ‘light to the nations’). It therefore proposes a redemptive idea for repairing the world and uses the political imagination as a platform for future possibilities, an act Yael Bartana terms pre-enactment. Through the generation ship, the artist creates, in the words of Fredric Jameson, an ‘archeology of the future’ which will enable us to comprehend our present state and create a prophetic climate for things to come.
Light to the Nations is a work created by Yael Bartana which combines different media such as sculpture, VR, and video animation, as well as a learning center.
It is a proposal about the attempts, dystopic and utopic, to save humanity in the face of a global catastrophe, whether man-made or caused by nature, which would extinguish any possibility of life on Earth. The work is influenced by post-apocalyptic science-fiction literature and a critique of today's accelerated technological progress, and the economic and political forces involved in it. The title Light to the Nations, taken from the Bible, points towards possibilities of redemption in the Jewish context but indicates a more universal message.
At the heart of the work is the creation of a generation ship: a mothership that will lead humanity towards other planets, and in doing so exercise the cabalistic concept of Tikkun Olam (lit. 'the repair of the world'). This vessel is designed to host in its first phase a community of 98 souls in a journey that will take thousands of years and will travel far beyond our solar system. The ship’s dimensions allow for a growing population so that future generations will be able to build a new community if not a nation. However, its goal is unknown: whether to inhabit a faraway planet, return to and populate Earth once it recovers, or travel endlessly, ever evolving, aboard this spaceship. The generation ship is seen as a project of the Jewish-Israeli nation which will serve as a spearhead in repairing the world, an example for all nations to follow (hence, ‘light to the nations’). It therefore proposes a redemptive idea for repairing the world and uses the political imagination as a platform for future possibilities, an act Yael Bartana terms pre-enactment. Through the generation ship, the artist creates, in the words of Fredric Jameson, an ‘archeology of the future’ which will enable us to comprehend our present state and create a prophetic climate for things to come.
Exhibitions
2023. Yael Bartana, Light to the Nations, Center for Digital Art, Holon, ILJoin our mailing list
Subscribe to receive newsletters on our artists, exhibitions, fairs, events, and more.
* denotes required fields
You can withdraw your consent at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the newsletter. The newsletter is sent in accordance with our Privacy Policy, which outlines how we process your data.