It is hot,
and getting hotter,
but
always cool at night in Tower of David.
שבת שלום
Jerusalem, Israel – what is really happening
The Festival of Light in Jerusalem 2016
was one of the best photo ops of the year.
However, the biggest problem as always,
how to get down to a reasonable number of photos to share.
For the eighth year, the Old City streets
were illuminated with lights,
with works of international artists
projected on to buildings, like
these two scenes on the Christian Information Center.
The week long, nighttime festival
began on May 25th, Lag B’Omer.
A sparkling wine reception near the Tower of David
treated invited guests
to food and roasted marshmallows.
As night fell,
Italian Colored Origami covered
the Armenian Patriarchate Street,
where a bit further visitors encountered,
the Illuminated Orchestra,
live musicians were lit up.
In the Old City,
girls were still collecting firewood for their
Lag B’Omer medurot, bonfires.
While in the Cardo, the Hebrew names of the ten sefirot,
the kabbalistic term for God’s emanations,
were linked in a pattern
called the Tree of Life.
In the covered Cardo,
viewers were attracted by the French Crystallized,
shaped as a bismuth crystal.
As with all the Jerusalem Old City festivals,
I love to follow the colored lights
out of the Jewish Quarter
and along those streets I usually avoid.
The streets of the Arab markets even shuttered at night
are fascinating and photo worthy.
For the first time at a night festival,
I did not get lost in Muristan Square,
and end up wandering through the Muslim Quarter.
Instead, I found the popular
Lamps of Muristan,
Spin,
and French Green Marvelous Opulence.
Green plastic shopping bags folded to look like veggies,
was a stop-and-think-about-it piece of art.
Tens of thousands of people attended the nights of the festival.
On the Olive Tree Lawn,
what looked like a giant Lag B’Omer medura, bonfire,
was the Large Fire Tornado.
From the Netherlands,
this huge fire was fueled by 36 industrial fans.
Thousands of videos were taken of the
main attraction at the Jaffa Gate, festival starting point,
color and movement of Water Fountains.
Designed by Latvian artists, every ten minutes
the spectacular show repeated itself.
At the Damascus Gate,
Globoscope Stories of Damascus Gate
required a video again.
But there were new sights this year.
At the historic Central Post Office building, Do’Ar Na,
was lit to look like the iconic old British post boxes.
The interactive music of spectators across Jaffa Road
banging on old mail boxes that made this presentation unique.
Oh, and that Eiffel Tower mentioned last week
near the Generali Building
was for the Jerusalem Light Festival,
not the Prime Minister of France.
Not everyone reached the end of the pink route,
but the projection Love Jerusalem
on the new FOZ building was a winner.
For me, doing most of the five routes
with a friend and not alone was new and great fun.
30 stops on 5 colored routes,
going back more than once,
these were some of my favorites.
Every year is different
and each year I seem to need more videos.
Check out:
Water Fountains, with Mayor Nir Barkat speaking at opening event.
Urban Poetry at Batei HaMachseh Square
and my favorite video this year,
and Love Jerusalem.
Spring in Jerusalem, Israel.
It is hot, then it is cold.
Yesterday it rained.
You never know what will happen next.
During Jerusalem Design Week
you have no idea what you will see next.
When I have the opportunity I love to see what is new
at the old Hansen House.
The opening event for Design Week
held in the courtyard,
was called a Kugel Party.
At first, even the guests had trouble figuring that out.
There were pink signs in Yiddish,
burnt Yerushalmi kugel with a pickle,
an Oriental noodle sent upstairs to the second floor
in glass jars with a pulley system.
The third kind of kugel was a Belgian waffle,
the one with longest line,
not fast food, but slowly crafted by Bezalel artists.
Inside were a variety of exhibits,
this one brought back memories of hours titrating in a lab,
with a theme of yellow and blue for the men and women of Jerusalem.
Contemporary art exhibits using the media of
photography, paint and light and shape and form,
displayed in different rooms inside the Hansen House.
Animals were outside in the garden,
with colors, shapes and forms.
I am sure Dr. Hansen would never have envisioned them.
Design Week is spread out in 7 locations.
A much more serious exhibit is at
the LA Mayer Museum of Islamic Art.
Sign from Iran is a collection of
60 art poster masterpieces
by 27 Iranian graphic artists
over a 40-year period.
Israeli graphic artist Yossi Lemel
who initiated the project was at the opening.
Contemporary Iran is not usually seen around here.
So many strange and unusual happenings this week,
maybe it was the full moon.
The only thing related to politics
that I will mention
is an Eiffel Tower model constructed during the visit of
the French Prime Minister Manuel Valls.
I was going to photo shop out the man on the crane,
but then I realized that he was securing the tower
so that it would not fall down in the extremely high winds.
Just a bit from this week worthy of a selfie.
There is also a Book Festival, Russian Festival,
MusaraMix Seam Art Festival,
the annual Israel Festival
and my favorite, the Light Festival.
Tonight, starting as soon as the sun sets and going all night long
are the huge bonfires of Lag B’Omer
Spring festival season,
never know what you will see next happening
on the real Jerusalem, Israel streets.