This beautiful volume is the fruit of almost 40 years of collecting
by Vivienne Silver-Brody, one of Israel's few photography collectors. She has
written and edited a book, which narrates the shared history of photography in
a land that in the last century has seen development alongside war and
destruction, and that remains divided and conflicted by the two peoples that
call it home.
The text is accompanied by some 200 exquisite photographs
from Silver-Brody’s collection, and includes a special section inspired by the
1983 volume published by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, Personal
Choice: A Celebration of Twentieth-Century Photographs. In this section,
Silver-Brody invited some 60 writers – photographers, scholars, artists,
curators, collectors, lovers of photography and others with a special
connection to the land – from different religions, national and political
tendencies, to choose a single photograph from her collection and to write a
short essay relating to it. The result is a fascinating selection of texts that
contributes to the overall narrative in the book.
This book could speak to a diversified readership; those interested in photography and its history or in the Middle East and Israel / Palestine, especially in light of the ongoing conflict and public debate surrounding it around the world, and in light of the unique voice that attempts to reach beyond politics and religion, and to present a photographic history of the Land of Israel as a shared place rather than as disputed territory.
Translated by Daphna Levy