Jonathan Cohen's photos
The Violin Maker's Sign – Aharon Chelouche Street, Neve Tzedek Neighbourhood, Tel Aviv, Israel
Old Meets New – Aharon Chelouche Street, Neve Tzedek Neighbourhood, Tel Aviv, Israel
Aharon Chelouche was a landowner, jeweler, and moneychanger. During the end of the 19th century, he was a major figure in Jaffa’s Jewish community. He also known as the founder of Neve Tzedek neighborhood, now part of Tel Aviv, Israel.
Jacob's Eye – Eyn Ya’akov Street, Neve Tzedek Neighbourhood, Tel Aviv, Israel
Neve Tzedek is a neighborhood located in southwestern Tel Aviv, Israel. Literally, Neve Tzedek means Abode of Justice, but it is also one of the names for God (Jeremiah 50:7). Neve Tzedek was the first Jewish neighborhood to be built outside the old city of the ancient port of Jaffa. Originally a Mizrahi Jewish and Yemenite Jewish neighbourhood, for years, the neighborhood prospered as Tel Aviv, the first modern Hebrew city, grew up around it.
At the beginning of the 1900s, some artists and writers made Neve Tzedek their residence. Most notably, future Nobel prize laureate Shmuel Yosef Agnon, as well as Hebrew artist Nachum Gutman, used Neve Tzedek as both a home and a sanctuary for art. Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook was the first Rabbi of Neve Tzedek; he even maintained a Yeshiva there. During his time in Neve Tzedek he became very close friends with many of the writers, especially Agnon. Years of neglect and disrepair followed, but since the early 1980s, Neve Tzedek has become one of Tel Aviv’s latest fashionable and expensive districts, with a village-like atmosphere.
Modern Tel Aviv – Viewed from the Parking Lot of the Trade Tower Building, HaMered Street, Tel Aviv, Israel
The Opera Tower – Retsif Herbert Samuel at Allenby Street, Tel Aviv, Israel
Completed in 1993, one of Tel Aviv’s most famous buildings is the 23-story Opera Tower. The Tower is situated at the corner of Allenby, Herbert Samuel and HaYarkon Streets. The building houses residential apartments, a shopping mall, a cinema, a fitness centre, a restaurant and a private swimming pool for the tower’s residents at the base of the building. The Opera Tower is built on the same place that the old Tel Aviv Opera House stood on and the exterior shape of the base building is identical to the one of the old Opera House.
A Lone Windsurfer – Trumpledor Beach, Tel Aviv, Israel
"Beyond the Limit" – Along the Promenade, Trumpledor Beach, Tel Aviv, Israel
Zadok Ben-David (born 1949) is an Israeli artist working in London. Born in Beihan, Yemen, his family immigrated to Israel when he was an infant. He studied at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design from 1971 to 1973. He continued his studies at University of Reading and the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London. He graduated in advanced sculpture from St. Martin’s School of Art and taught at the same institution from 1977-1982. His iconic sculpture "Beyond the Limit" is made of concrete, metal and pigment. It dates from 1989.
Tzvi Harel's "House on the Boardwalk," Take #2 – Retsif Herbert Samuel at Trumpledor Street, Tel Aviv, Israel
Tel Aviv University Prof. Tzvi Harel, the good-natured architect who designed this post-modernist gravity-defying seaside apartment house, says that he is "proud of being insulted about it. I believe humor and criticism in architecture is very important." The four-story building was never meant to be more than imaginary. Harel sketched it for a 1980s newspaper column on the renaissance of Tel Aviv culture and art. Local entrepreneur Avraham Piltz loved the oddball design and brought it to life, though he died before the house was completed in the mid-1990s. "The idea was that since it was on the shore of Tel Aviv, which in those days was quite neglected, you could be an exhibitionist and expose yourself playfully in front of the sea," Harel says, pointing out that every room in each of the seven apartments has a sea view.
Tzvi Harel's "House on the Boardwalk," Take #1 – Retsif Herbert Samuel at Trumpledor Street, Tel Aviv, Israel
Tel Aviv University Prof. Tzvi Harel, the good-natured architect who designed this post-modernist gravity-defying seaside apartment house, says that he is "proud of being insulted about it. I believe humor and criticism in architecture is very important." The four-story building was never meant to be more than imaginary. Harel sketched it for a 1980s newspaper column on the renaissance of Tel Aviv culture and art. Local entrepreneur Avraham Piltz loved the oddball design and brought it to life, though he died before the house was completed in the mid-1990s. "The idea was that since it was on the shore of Tel Aviv, which in those days was quite neglected, you could be an exhibitionist and expose yourself playfully in front of the sea," Harel says, pointing out that every room in each of the seven apartments has a sea view.
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