Dazzling nights in the Old City (TIMES OF ISRAEL) By DANI BRONSTEIN 06/08/12)
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/the-lights-are-out-in-jerusalems-old-city/
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The five brightest installations to see in the Jerusalem Festival of
Light
The Jerusalem Festival of Light is in its fourth year, and what makes
it continue to work is its location in the Old City, bringing
tourists and all kinds of locals out to enjoy the thoughtfully
crafted light sculptures, viewed while walking through the usually
darkened cobblestoned streets and alleyways.
Here’s our favorite five from the festival:
1) Yoav Homsky’s Zinorot tree is located immediately outside the
Western Wall plaza, at the entrance of the Southern Wall section of
the temple mount. The bare tree, comprised of only lighted branches
without leaves, can be heard and seen from all of the roofs of the
Old City. The tree’s musical accompaniment progresses from a very
simple beat to more complex music as the tree begins to light up just
at the center of specific branches, until the whole area glows from
the tree’s burnt orange luminescence. (Located next to the Western
Wall security car and bus drop-off point, this is the most easily
wheelchair accessible sculpture of the festival.)
2) Those who are more ready and able to walk the festival’s orange
trail through the Armenian and Jewish Quarters will encounter the
Earth Harp. Created by William Close and Scott Passaglia, the harp’s
cables are strung up to a roof and Close plays a novel cacophony of
strings, consistently dramatic in both major and minor that accompany
CLEAR, Malki Shem-Tov’s three-dimensional projections on the building
next-door. Close has played the harp in some fairly awe-inspiring
places, from mountain peaks to the Seattle Space Needle and the
Coliseum in Rome, but commented that in terms of amazing places,
Jerusalem “is up there for sure.”
3) Mayumana’s Currents is a great option for those who don’t want to
walk around the festival’s many mapped trails. As one of only two
events with an entrance fee at the festival, (NIS 80 per ticket or a
discounted NIS 55 for Orange cellphone customers), Currents combines
guitar solos, tap dancing and chanting by the Mayumana team of ten
dancer-acrobat-percussionists, offering 45 minutes of orchestrated
madness.
4) If you’re not interested in dedicating yourself to a full Festival
of Light extravaganza, head to Jaffa Gate to see the Cupola
(impressive even during the day), a 25-meter-high dome by Luminarie
De Cagna, an Italian family lighting company. The dome of the Cupola
resembles a building from the Italian Renaissance, and is made from
LED lights, chained into curtains of light that are mounted onto a
wooden structure. You can see the Cupola from the sidewalk of the
Mamilla Mall below, but it’s even more impressive up close.
5) As long as you’re in the Old City, give some consideration to the
mix of religions, and visit the only installation that isn’t actually
light-related. Cathedral, by Raoul Kurvitz of Estonia, is a church-
based building made of discarded windows and window frames, not
electricity related per se, but offering plenty of light, both
spiritual and actual, in its panes of glass. (© 2012 THE TIMES OF
ISRAEL 06/08/12)
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