Doing Good | Bezalel-led Emergency Initiatives
עושים/ות משהו טוב | יוזמות בשעת חירום
أعمال خيرية | مبادرات طلابية من بتسلئيل للمساعدة في وضع الطوارئ
Noah Hysler Rubin is a cultural geographer and a town planner, a graduate of the Hebrew University. Her research deals with spatial aspects of political, social and cultural encounters and the effect of these on the modern discipline of town planning. In her PhD, which was written in Jerusalem and in London, she analyzed the planning theory and practice of Patrick Geddes in comparative context, examining his work in Britain, India and Palestine. Aside from teaching planning history and theory at Bezalel, she also practices planning, mainly on projects of urban conservation and currently runs the Jerusalem Digital Archives project in collaboration with the Jerusalem Development Authority. Dr Hysler Rubin's current interests include the genesis of urban planning in Israel/Palestine, the planning of divided Jerusalem, post-colonial planning critique, and values and criteria for conservation and digital heritage.
08-6756445
02-6256832
Elissa Rosenberg is a landscape architect and associate professor in the Graduate Program in Urban Design, and also an associate professor (emerita) at the University of Virginia, where she taught from 1989 – 2007 and served as Chair of the Landscape Architecture Department. Since relocating to Israel, she has taught at the Technion and Tel Aviv University. Her teaching and research focus on landscape as a cultural practice and a model for contemporary urbanism, tying together the separate discourses of urbanism, ecology and landscape design. She teaches studios and courses on urban landscapes and post-industrial landscapes in the undergraduate and graduate programs. Her research lies at the intersection of contemporary landscape architecture and urban design with a focus on cultural landscapes, post-industrial landscapes, green infrastructure and mobility. Her recent publications have focused on Israeli landscapes, include Tel Aviv’s seaside urbanism, and the kibbutz as a laboratory for Israeli landscape modernism.
03-5221931
Galya Rosenfeld’s work is at the intersection of design, fashion, craft and art. She accesses a diverse range of materials through her practice, mixing traditional techniques with those she has develops. In her work, she searches for internal logic of form and material alongside self-reflexive commentary about her fields of activity.
Rosenfeld's work has been exhibited around the world, including the The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, The Tel-Aviv Museum of Art, the Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco and The Jewish Museum, New York. Her pieces have been accepted into the permanent collection of The Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, commissioned for the permanent collection of The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Jewish Museum Berlin and gifted by Shimon Peres, the late President of the State of Israel, to The Deutscher Bundestag, Berlin. Rosenfeld was selected to participate in the Art in Embassies program by the US Department of State. Rosenfeld earned her master's degree in the Interdisciplinary Program in the Arts, Tel Aviv University and is a graduate of Bezalel’s Department of Jewelry and Fashion and has been teaching in the department since 2006.
03-6962844
Pagination