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Amos Gitai - After, 1973.

Amos Gitai

ARCHITECTURE OF MEMORY


We go into a church, the Église des Prêcheurs*

Not being French, I thought that it’s the Église des Pêcheurs**

The church is close to the Rhône

François Hébel has told me

That it was built in the fifteenth century

But that it was secularised at the time of the French Revolution.

So we’re in a secularised church

But the architectural style still calls for a ceremonial visit,

A ceremony of movement, a choreography.


How can an architect, a filmmaker or a contemporary artist integrate this demand for juxtaposition? I’m speaking as the son of Munio Gitai

Weinraub, a modernist architect of the Bauhaus

Who studied and worked

With Mies van der Rohe and Hannes Meyer,

And the son of Efratia Gitai Margalit, who went to Vienna to meet Sigmund

Freud. Two secular intellectuals, then, who advised me to approach

religion judiciously.


So we go into a church

Which is no longer a church, but an exhibition space (that is why we love revolutions)

I’ll be presenting to you my photographic and cinematic work in this shell.

Within these walls, my images will move about

So the viewer can perceive this procession of fragments,

Still and moving images side by side, emerging from different memory strata.


Images which I captured at the Yom Kippur war while being wounded

39 years ago, images which I took from the rescue helicopter,

A photo of Munio at the Bauhaus in Dessau and a studies certificate signed by Mies van der Rohe.

At the same period, a picture of my mother Efratia,

Then a Field Diary filmed in the occupied territories of the West Bank and

Gaza during the first Lebanon War.

Photos and fragments of a place, a hill in the Eastern Mediterranean

Where I was born,

The Carmel.


This work is dedicated to the relationships between an architectural

structure and the stratification of the archeology of memory.


Amos Gitai


Video editing with the help of Isabelle Ingold, Ben Gitai, Marie-José

Sanselme and Laurent Truchot.

Amos Gitai

Courtesy of Agav Films@Dan Bronfeld & Agav Films@Juliette Binoche.


Amos Gitai

Born in 1950 in Haifa, Israel.

Lives and works in Haifa and Paris.


Amos Gitai holds a degree in Architecture from Technion in Haifa and a PhD in Architecture from the University of California, Berkeley. He was wounded in action during the Yom Kippur war in 1973. Intrigued by directing, he made his first film, House, in 1980 and since then his many features and documentaries have brought him widespread international recognition and awards at all the major festivals. Four of his films have competed at Cannes (Kadosh, Kippur, Kedma, Free Zone) and four others at the Mostra in Venice between 1999 and 2010 (Berlin Jérusalem, Eden, Alila, Terre promise). He directed La Guerre des fils de lumière contre les fils des ténèbres (The War of the Children of Light against the Children of Darkness) at the Avignon Festival in 2009, then at the Odéon in Paris in 2010. He has also created video installations, including News from Home, News from House in Berlin’s Kunstwerke in 2006, Citations in Bordeaux in 2009, Traces in Palais de Tokyo in Paris 2010 and in Dessau’s Bauhaus in 2012. There have been many retrospectives devoted to his work, in London (British Film Institute, 1989), Paris (Centre Pompidou, 2003), São Paulo (2004), Berlin (2006), New York (MoMA, 2009), and in Moscow, Tokyo, and Jerusalem. He received

the Rossellini Prize in 2005 and 2007 and the Leopard of Honour at Locarno’s festival in 2008, published Mont Carmel (Mount Carmel), Gallimard (2003), Genèses (Genesis) (2009), and his letters to his mother Efratia Gitai in 2011.

Eglise des Frères Prêcheurs

> 26 August

8 p.m to midnight

8 €


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