August 5, 2024
Artists

Anti-Zionist artists withdraw work from San Francisco’s Contemporary Jewish Museum exhibition


A number of works have been withdrawn from the upcoming California Jewish Open exhibition at the Contemporary Jewish Museum (CJM) in San Francisco by artists opposing Israeli oppression of the Palestinians.

Contemporary Jewish Museum [Photo by Allan Ferguson / CC BY 2.0]

The anti-Zionist artists call themselves the California Jewish Artists for Palestine. As a group, the artists originally submitted works to the open call for the exhibition, intending “to make a statement … in a coordinated effort to bring visibility to anti-Zionist Jewish artists in California, with anticipation that their works would be rejected by museum curators.”

The ten artists, Micah Bazant, Jules Cowan, Rebekah Erev, Rebecca Maria Goldschmidt, Steph Kudisch, Kate Laster, Ava Sayaka Rosen, Sophia Sobko, Arielle Tonkin and Irina Zadov, submitted works “with pro-Palestinian messages,” according to KQED. 

Guest curator Elissa Strauss, in fact, chose five of the group’s works for the show. However, the museum failed to respond to the artists’ demands, “including transparency around funding and a commitment to BDS [Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions].” This failure “reaffirmed for artists the importance of adhering to and demanding PACBI (The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel) in the Arts.” This led to the withdrawal of the works.

The museum framed the exhibition, set to run from June 6 to October 20, as an opportunity for “Jewish-identifying artists in California to submit artworks in response to a central question: How are artists looking to the many aspects of Jewish culture, identity, and community to foster, reimagine, hold, or discover connection?” The resulting exhibition, asserted the CJM, would bring “together the work of forty-seven artists reflecting on their connection to Judaism, the world, and their own history.”

Logo for the California Jewish Open exhibition

The protesting artists, in their statement, called on all cultural workers worldwide to join the BDS movement and to “abstain from collaborating with institutions that continue to normalize genocide and Israeli Apartheid.”



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