Vardi Kahana

Vardi Kahana
Born Tel Aviv, Israel
Nationality Israeli
Education The Faculty of Arts: HaMidrasha. Beit Berl
Known for photography
Movement Israeli art, Photojournalism
Website vardikahana.com

Vardi Kahana is an Israeli photographer.

Biography

Vardi Kahana was born in Tel Aviv in 1959. She grew up in religious family and attended Zeitlin school. She studied art in The Faculty of Arts: HaMidrasha of Academic College in Beit Berl, but did not graduate. Vardi Kahana began her career in photography at the beginning of the 1980s in reportage in magazine "Monitin", and within a short period of time she settled into magazine photography. In the framework of her job, she has photographed a variety of Israeli figures over the years, gradually turning her work into an integral part of the catalogue of images in which Israeli society lives.

In 1983 she joined Hadashot newspaper and worked in it till 1993, when the newspaper was closed. In 1995 she began working for "7 days" newspaper, which is part of Yedioth Ahronoth holding.[1]

Exhibitions

In recent years she has exhibited her works at many solo shows around the world, including The Public Library in Amsterdam, Fotomuseum Antwerp, Jewish Museum of Belgium, Pecci Museum, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Academy of Arts, Berlin, Jewish Museum Munich, Haifa Museum of Art, Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco. Also recently, major retrospectives of her work have been shown in The Art Gallery at Yad Labanim Ramat HaSharon and "The Artists House" in Rehovot.

Solo Exhibitions

Works

Her most famous photograph, from 10 February 1983, depicts a demonstration of Peace Now movement in Jerusalem, on which Emil Grunzweig appears few minutes before his assassination.[5] Kahane's works are in the collection of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem and other important collections

Recently, Vardi Kahana became the curator of “Local Testimony” - Middle East regional exhibition of photojournalism, runs concurrently with the annual “World Press Photo” exhibition.

Books

Awards

External links

References

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