Single channel, HD video, Colour, Ten sound channels
Everyday Ceremonies is a development of Ickowicz’s concern with questions of local space, conflict, culture, and history. The video project was filmed between the East Jerusalem neighborhoods of Wadi Joz and Sheikh Jarrah, and though the specific location remains unidentified, its landscape characteristics would be familiar to local viewers.
The local residents are seen crossing across the static camera’s field in a seemingly “no-man’s land”. Through the places and sounds which are outside the viewer’s access, outside the frame, the work is charged with a socio-political context. Viewers are invited to observe the work on two levels; that of an encounter with a familiar landscape and the enigmatic action unfolding within it. The full meaning of their journey is revealed by the concealed destination: the local office of Interior and Labor Affairs. The simple act of walking back and forth thus speaks to their complicated situation in relation to nation, religion, geography and authority.
The work consists of 80 minutes running time, during which no specific action is repeated, and the camera’s perspective remains static. However, the motivating impulse behind the work is based on the loop, in the sense that the figures’ journey is repetitive and in effect endless. The long running time of the piece purposefully subverts the exhibition convention of the loop and maintains the long, real-life duration of these daily events.

Gaston Zvi Ickowicz is a visual artist working with video and photography. His works focus on the interaction between people and landscape in a socio-political context. Ickowicz graduated in Photography Studies at Musrara School of Photography with honors in 2000 and Advanced Studies in Art and Photography in the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in 2009.
He has had solo and group shows in The Jewish Historical Museum,Amsterdam,2017; CCA, the Center for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv, 2016; Hezi Cohen Gallery, Tel Aviv, 2015; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 2011; the MACRO, Rome 2013; the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, 2013; International Photography Biennale, Amsterdam, 2012; Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York, 2008 and more.
Ickowicz has received numerous awards and prizes, including the Gerard Levi Young Photographer’s Prize from the Israel Museum in 2008 and the Young Artist Award from the Israeli Ministry of Culture in 2010. Ickowicz currently lives and works in Tel Aviv.
Last update 25th April, 2017.