A group exhibition, with:
Liron Ben Zikri, Itamar Brand, Dana Gazit, Lior Helled Shomroni, Raffi Lavie, Noy Azouri, Alma Seroussi, Rita Zimmerman, Shahar Kornblit, Lilith Chamboon
Curator: Ido Cohen
Maya Gallery, Tel Aviv | Booklet
11/4/24-4/5/24
Photos: Daniel Hanoch
Commenting in the early 1960s on his decision to use pink in his paintings, artist Raffi Lavie said: “The pink followed white, which is an anti-color that I used because I grew tired of colors. I started using pink because I wanted a color that was outside the generally acceptable palette without being an anti-color.” This liminal positioning is what made pink the focus of a great many cultural, aesthetic and even moral debates throughout history.
The group exhibition SANSSOUCI (French for “carefree”), which opens in Maya Gallery on April 11 until May 4, is named after the pleasure palace built by King Frederick the Great of Prussia, whose sexual preference for men has been studied just as extensively as his military exploits. The Rococo art of Frederick’s time was awash with pink, a fact which angered its many critics and led them to compare the layering of paint on the canvas to the application of makeup. The exhibition, which features works by a variety of contemporary artists, is a tactile, sensual and freely associative journey through a small history of this ambiguous, subversive color.
full exhibition text follows
Download the Exhibition Booklet (HEB/ENG)
The Pink House Yuck \ Ido Cohen
In 1747, in the outskirts of Potsdam – now Germany – a palace was inaugurated by King Frederick II, or Frederick the Great, of Prussia. Named Sanssouci (“carefree” in French), it was created as the king’s pleasure palace and was built in the Rococo fashion so closely identified with the king that it later became known as the “Frederician Style”. This was where Frederick was free to realize his artistic ambitions without the pomp and circumstance of his official residence. Frederick supervised the design and construction of the palace and its gardens with the same determination and ruthlessness he exhibited on the battlefield.
On Drubin Street, in Rishon LeZion, stood a pink building whose banisters were designed as decorative ribbons hung between two pillars topped with white globes. When my brothers and I were young, whenever we passed this building on our way home we’d announce: “The pink house yuck.”
Frederick the Great was also a gifted flutist and even composed several pieces. Adolph von Menzel’s 1852 painting “Frederick the Great Playing the Flute at Sanssouci” depicts Frederick performing, along with a chamber ensemble, before a fashionable gathering of noble men and women. Another painting by Menzel, “King Frederick II's Roundtable at Sanssouci” from 1848, is likely a more accurate depiction of events, as women were not allowed in Sanssouci during Frederick’s lifetime. This painting shows Frederick among an exclusively male group of military men and intellectuals, including the diplomat and libertine Francesco Algarotti and the French philosopher and writer Voltaire.
When I was four years old, Yardena Arazi represented Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest with the song “Ben Adam”. I was a huge fan and would wear my mother’s dress while I danced to the song in our living room. Back then we lived on Kiryat Sefer Street in Rishon LeZion, and I had a neighbor called Shani. She was a “girlie-girl”, and together with my best friend Aya – a tomboy with short hair – we would make fun of her for liking pink.
In the television series Palm Royale, which takes place in the late 1960s, protagonist Maxine Simmons is determined to do whatever it takes to become a member of an exclusive and conservative high-society club in Palm Beach, Florida. Her feminist friend Linda, who believes that the pink-loving Maxine should dedicate her efforts to worthier causes, chastises her: “We are women fighting for our future!” Maxine responds: “I don’t have children. So, what matters to me, as a woman, is not the future. What matters to me is happiness and beauty, today.”
Frederick the Great was likewise childless, a fact that didn’t help dispel rumors of his homosexuality. While it’s hard to say whether he was homosexual in the same way we perceive that identity nowadays, we do know that Frederick often invited men into his bed and expressed his desire for them in the erotic poems he wrote. One of them, "La Jouissance" (“The Pleasure”), was dedicated to the diplomat Algarotti, who was also known as “Swan of Padua”. However, evidence of the “Greek love” Frederick shared with other men didn’t detract from his reputation among his courtiers and subjects as a great military leader and statesman – namely, it did not diminish his masculinity in their eyes. This is in contrast to his childhood, in which Frederick was often humiliated by his father, Frederick William I, for his inclination towards music and literature, his fragility and the amount of time he spent with female family members. In 1730 his father even had Hans Hermann von Katte, a low-ranking officer in the Prussian army who was likely Frederick’s lover, executed before Frederick’s very eyes for the crime of helping Frederick attempt to escape his father to Britain.
After we moved, a vanity with a mirror and a built-in lamp appeared on Mom’s side of the bedroom. It was very exciting. Whenever my mother put on makeup, I wished she would turn on the lamp so it would look like a makeup scene in a movie. She almost never did, and I was a little disappointed. I also liked to help her pick out earrings.
In 1750, François Boucher painted “Pompadour at Her Toilette”, one of many portraits painted of Louis the XV’s mistress, Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, famously known as Madame de Pompadour. This portrait depicts Pompadour as she uses the brosse à rouge in her dainty hands to apply pink rouge to her cheeks. Pompadour’s fondness for the color pink made it especially popular during her time, and French Rococo painters often used pink in their work. Their critics saw this as a sign of artistic stagnation rife with cosmetic beautification, misdirection and deception. The layering of paint on the canvas was likened to the application of makeup.
Such was the spirit of a rant made by painter Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre in a 1772 letter to the comte d’Angiviller, in which he wrote that young French painters “come back from Italy [painting] with color and vigor, which they lose little by little, driven by the need to please a nation that wants everything colored pink." [1] Critics were likewise deterred by the androgyny of the painted figures, and warned of a “feminization” of art. They asserted that the art was feminine not only because “it was made for ostentatious women (whether royal mistresses or meddlesome socialites) and their unmanly cronies but also because it was like them: coquettish, false, shallow, excessively adorned, and painted.” [2]
The taste of Bazooka bubble gum never lasted long. When I was young, I loved the excitement and anticipation that preceded the removal of the shiny wrapper, followed by the touch of the hard, synthetic pink candy. How on earth do you chew that? And then I’d stuff my mouth with more and more and more gum just to feel the explosion of taste, until all at once it disappeared and I was left with a headache from chewing too aggressively.
Pompadour and Frederick the Great had a mutual friend – the aforementioned Voltaire, whom Frederick admired for a long time and corresponded with at length. In 1750, Voltaire even accepted Frederick’s invitation to come and stay at Sanssouci (Volatire would be shamefully banished from the palace three years later). In his satirical novel “Candide: or, The Optimist”, published in 1759, Voltaire viciously attacks the optimistic philosophy of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, who claimed that our world is “the best of all possible worlds”, or that “all is for the best” – even the syphilis which Candide’s optimistic mentor Pangloss contracted, indirectly, from Christopher Columbus. One might say that Leibniz was simply trying to view the world through “rose-colored glasses”.
In the tenth grade I bought a fuchsia-colored polo shirt. It had become suddenly trendy and acceptable for straight men to wear pink. To me, the shirt meant something different: It gave me the freedom to wear something gay without raising suspicion.
In the early 1960s, Israeli painter Raffi Lavie commented on his first use of pink: “The pink followed white, which is an anti-color that I used because I grew tired of colors. I started using pink because I wanted a color that was outside the generally acceptable palette without being an anti-color.” [3]. This liminal positioning is what made pink the focus of so many cultural, aesthetic and even moral debates throughout history.
Drag artist Ru Paul often notes that “Drag doesn't change who you are, it actually reveals who you are”. Is it possible that those who criticized Boucher and the rest of the Rococo painters were, in fact, scared of the truth revealed by these pink shades? By their power as a symbol of disenchantment, rather than of childish delusions? After all, pink allows one to be both natural and artificial, highbrow and lowbrow, sweet and promiscuous, optimistic and sarcastic – in other words, to contain multitudes. The pinks which washed over the art in Frederick’s time were also reminiscent of his life: Of the objects which filled his palaces, of his ruthlessness, of the honesty of his romantic choices.
Artists bios
Liron Ben Zikri | BFA, Multidisciplinary Art School, Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art, Ramat-Gan (2018). She has exhibited in group exhibitions, including within the framework of the "Balcont" art space (2018-2020), of which she was one of the founders, and with the "Xoshen" artists group. As of 2022, she is a member of “Studio Parcet 43" in Tel Aviv and a tattooist.
Itamar Brand | BFA, Department of Fine Arts, Bezalel, Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem (2023). He has participated in group exhibitions, including at Koresh Gallery, Jerusalem (2024) and Nulobaz Gallery, Tel Aviv (2023).
Dana Gazit | BFA, Department of Fine Arts, Bezalel, Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem (2023). Creator of the musical project "Pink Witch". Her works have been screened and exhibited at many independent festivals and alternative cultural events in Jerusalem and throughout the country.
Lior Helled Shomroni | BFA, Department of Fine Arts, Bezalel, Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem (2022). Participated in an exchange students program at the Beaux-Arts in Paris in 2021.
Raffi Lavie (1937 – 2007) | One of the most prominent and influential artists in the history of Israeli art. Lavie's work from the late 1960s to the early 1980s was placed at the heart of curator Sarah Breitberg Semel’s seminal “Want of Matter” thesis, as embodying a local aesthetic characterized by the use of "meager" materials, "childish" gestures such as scribbles and doodles and a detachment from lyricism and traditional pictorial values.
Noy Azouri | BFA, Multidisciplinary Art School, Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art, Ramat-Gan (2023). Participated in residency programs in Nara and Karuizawa, Japan (2024).
Alma Seroussi | Lives and works in Valencia, Spain. She holds a multidisciplinary Bachelor of Arts degree from Tel Aviv University (2013) and a BFA from the Polytechnic University of Valencia (2019). Seroussi has had several solo exhibitions, including in 2023 at Librería Bangarang in Valencia and 2020 at Ca Revolta in Valencia, and participated in group exhibitions.
Rita Zimmerman | American-born artist Rita Zimmerman has had a love affair with paint for nearly fifty years. After living in Colorado Springs for 25 years, in 2012 she moved to Northern Israel, where she lives and works in her studio. She received her MFA from the University of Cincinnati on a full-merit scholarship. Her work has been exhibited in solo exhibitions at the Espace Meyer Zafra Gallery in the Marais in Paris, and at the Stil Und Bruch Gallery in Berlin, and her paintings were acquired by the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center collection, the El Pomar Foundation collection, and to private collections. In 2022 her exhibition Menachem Begin: 22 Portraits was exhibited at the Menachem Begin Heritage Center in Jerusalem.
Shahar Kornblit | Graduate of the Hamidrasha Faculty of Arts, Beit Berl College (2004). He has held solo exhibitions at London Gordon House, Rishon LeZion (2021, curator: Dalia Danon), Yair Gallery, Tel Aviv (2013 and 2019, curator: Yair Shulevitz), Gal-On Gallery, Tel Aviv (2012, curator: Yehudit Matzkel) and Shai Arieh Gallery, Tel Aviv (2011).
Lilith Chambon | BA, the Department of Textile Design, Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art, Ramat-Gan. Chambon Graduated the Master Class program at Hatahana School of Figurative Painting and Drawing, Tel Aviv. She held a solo exhibition at Maya Gallery in 2021 and participated in group exhibitions at the Petach Tikva Museum of Art, WIZO Haifa, Alfred Gallery and Litvak Gallery in Tel Aviv.