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  • ID entity - Fragments of Life

In this series of images, I take you into my inner world of memories, conflicts and trapped emotions.
These photographs recreate and reinvent fragments of my own life as an adolescent growing up and exploring my sexuality and feelings in a traditional society.
For some of the images I return to the original Tel Aviv locations of those first encounters and revelations to try to recreate the intensity of those moments.

Selected Images from this project were published in my first photography book "Kobi Israel VIEWS" .

 
FRAGMENTS OF LIFE
(SIGNED LIMITED EDITION C-PRINTS AVAILABLE)
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1700   0901
     
 
2153   1745
     
 
0059   0333
     
 
0545   0700
     
 
0400   1959
     

   
2022   0000   0459

SCHWEPPES PHOTOGRAPHIG PRIZE 2003

5 November 2003 - 15 February 2004


"
1700" has been selected for exhibition at Schweppes Photographic Portrait Prize 2003. The show will be held at the National Portrait Gallery from 5 November 2003 - 5 February 2004 .

 

Time Out December 30-January 7 2004 clike here to see the review as an image

THE ASSOCIATION OF PHOTOGRAPHERS, LONDON, UK

"1700" Fiinalist at the AOP Open Exhibition 2003 & winner of the "Judges Choice" Award by Kylie Johnston (Photography Editor, Rotovision )

"...Kobi Israel's "1700" drew a rapturous response from Kylie Johnston, "…there's something dream-like and nostalgic about it. It's a very mouth-watering image."

Image magazine, August 2003

In June 2003, the leading US Gay lifestyle magazine "Genre", featured 1745 amongst its selection of the "...world's top photographers shining light on the cultural and political significance of "Gay Pride".

DESCUBRIMIENTOS; PHOTO ESPANAN 2002

INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY, JUNE-JULY 2002, MADRID, SPAIN

"Fragments of Life" has been selected amongst the 60 finalists in "Descubrimientos PHE02 , Madrid, Spain 2002. Being selected to participate on "Descubrimientos PHE02" involves showing part of the portfolio during the Festival's Nocturnal Projections,and the entire group of portfolios will be shown on the Festival's website throughout the year .

IOI04 - INTERNATIONAL OPEN IMAGE COMPETITION 2004 (IOI04)

HIGHLY COMMENDED AWARD (link)

"...your Fragments of Life series. Super strong portraiture - it's so fresh and feeling; there's no pretension in it - it's just honest and edgy and young and nostalgic and human ... I don't know - I like it very much. (I saw it in the Schweppes Photographic Portrait Prize 2003)"

Joerg, AK47 Magazine

"IT ONLY TAKES A SECOND TO DIE"

By Dr Lila Moore

In “Fragments of Life” all photographs are framed memories, temporarily relived, staged and captured. Each photograph was given a catalogue number issuing from the time of day or night associated with the depiction. The formal arrangement of image and number produces a collection of time zones integrating specific points in time, movement, space and experience.

The photographs transcend the artist’s personal stories and create infinite moments allowing us to reflect on the diversity and potency of rather banal and temporal events. The addition of a number allocating time to each image brings into play a chain of associations. In photograph number 0000, for example, the picture is associated with the midnight hour. We see a young man in a transitory stage, his sexual identity divided, blurred and alternating before our very eyes. What ever we may think of his sexual identity we are made aware by the given time zone that changes relating to his identity are imminent.

Midnight signifies a new day or a new year. It is both the beginning and the end of an era. In symbolic terms, midnight is also darkness turning gradually into light, death and birth, and the fine line separating life from death. “It takes a second to die from a gun shot”, says Kobi Israel, reflecting on his experience as a soldier, and that second between life and death, the second before change and transformation take place, is what he aims to capture in this series of photographs.

The use of body language in still 0000 is also indicative given that the young man’s gesture can be associated with descriptions of the crucifix. Hence, introducing the themes of voluntary transformation, the death of the old identity and the resurrection of the true self. The portrayal suggests that sacrifice is inevitable and accepted by the young man with total surrender.

There is a striking contrast between the young man’s lit body and environment, and the darkness of the night, which engulfs his head like an aura filled with expectations. The poetic treatment of the midnight hour paints the scene with unspoiled beauty, so it seems that lights emanating from neighbouring houses are transforming into stars.

A different state of transition is captured in still 0545. A man’s figure is silhouetted against the background of a white curtain flooded by the light of a new day. Night and day are divided by the sharp contrast of a dark interior and a brightly lit curtain. The man is positioned between night and day; darkness and light, facing the new day through the window though his body still partially immersed in the darkness of the room.

It is a moment full of anticipation though an air of sadness lingers in the vacuum of the room. It is a time of separation; the man is leaving behind the dark safety of the night and facing the new day with fresh hopes. The darkness may be filled with fear and sadness but it is also a source of pure potential and shelter. The light, however, is uncompromising, exposing one’s worries and imperfections without mercy.

Within a second the perfect arrangement captured at 0545 is no longer in existence but the special condition is entrapped within the interplay of shadow and light.

Each photograph is a fragment of life encapsulating the various layers of a single event, which is about to unfold. Each second is a crucial point in time leading to change. The artist‘s personal memories and intense range of emotions translate into a series of expressive images as he explores and recreates his identity.

Copyright Dr Lila Moore’

 

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(C) All images contained in this site are copyrighted and may only be used with the written permission of the photographer .
Unauthorized use is subject to severe civil and criminal penalties under applicable laws.