Shai Zakai

Shai Zakai is a photographer, artist, and ecological activist known for her artworks involving water reclamation.[1][2]

Shai Zakai
Born1957 (age 6364)
NationalityIsraeli
Alma materHadassah Academic College
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Known forPhotography

Life

Zakai was born in Tel Aviv in 1957. She studied at Hadassah College, Jerusalem and at Hebrew University.[3]

Work

Zakai's best-known piece of art is Concrete Creek, a three-year project started in 1999 that documented the cleanup of a concrete-polluted creek in the Valley of Elah. The piece includes video and photo documentary of the cleanup, as well as a sculpture created from the cleaned-up waste.[4][5][6]

Zakai founded the Israeli Forum for Ecological Art in 1999 to encourage the development of ecological art in Israel and the world.[7][8]

References

  1. Mark Cheetham (15 February 2018). Landscape into Eco Art: Articulations of Nature Since the '60s. Penn State University Press. pp. 237–. ISBN 978-0-271-08140-3.
  2. Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art; EcoArts (14 September 2007). Weather report: art and climate change. Boulder Museum of Contemporary Arts. ISBN 978-0-9799007-0-9.
  3. Ariʼel. Cultural and Scientific Relations Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 1994.
  4. "Jewish Enviro-Artists Have the Whole World in Their Hands". The Forward. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  5. "Artist Statement: Concrete Creek 1999 – 2002 – Shai Zakai". Green Museum. 2010.
  6. Alix W. Hopkins (2005). Groundswell: Stories of Saving Places, Finding Community. Trust for Public Land. ISBN 978-1-932807-04-2.
  7. Karin Kloosterman (7 March 2009). "Nature's Social Worker, Ecological Artist Shai Zakai".
  8. Dana Gilerman (1 April 2005). "Jean d'Arc of the Ela Valley". Haaretz.


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