In collaboration with Jeff Bliumis
A PAINTING FOR A FAMILY DINNER 2008-ongoing
2008-2021, Series of 51 photographs, documentation, C-print, 24 x 24 inches each, Edition of 3
A Painting For A Family Dinner is a broad socially engaged artistic initiative, developed in different cultural contexts and continents. It started in Bat-Yam, Israel in 2008. It was continued in the Bronx, New York, US 2012, Beijing, China 2013, Lecce, Italy 2013 and Tokyo, Japan 2021.
For A Painting For A Family Dinner project, we placed a call for participation in the media and via social networking sites to local residents:
"Husband and wife artist team is offering a painting in exchange for an invitation to a family dinner. Please, email or call for more info..."
When families responded to the call for participation, we visited as many homes as we could. Participation was based on a first-come-first-served basis. There were no guidelines for our interactions, and we were open to any discussions that occurred. We created a painting for each occasion in advance. Each painting was a still life with fruits and "Thank You for Your Dinner!" written in the middle. At the end of each dinner, all participants were seated on a family couch, with the painting hung above the couch, for a family portrait--to be taken by a local photographer. The painting stayed with the family.
The project is not about a painting or a dinner, but about the displacement of the familial/familiar by virtue of artistic initiative. The project was embedded in the real life of the community and depended on the participation of local residents. The process was inclusive and welcoming for everyone in the neighborhood(s) and community(s). The artists and the families were equal and active co-creators of the project. Many members of the local cultural scene were involved in the research, creation, production, and dissemination of the project in its different stages.
Altogether, we had dinners with 51 families and here is our journey…
Tokyo, Japan / July 2021 Tokyo, Japan, we met with families via zoom, according to the present situation
Partner organization: Tokyo Biennial / Photography by Aya Morimoto