You may well call this overwhelmed porcelain installation by Itamar Gilboa (1973) the Night Watch of the LAM museum. This is the artwork you don’t want to and can’t miss.
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You may well call this overwhelmed porcelain installation by Itamar Gilboa (1973) the Night Watch of the LAM museum. This is the artwork you don’t want to and can’t miss.
When the Israeli artist Itamar Gilboa lives in Amsterdam for a while, his body changes. He decides to keep track of what he eats and drinks for a year. He translates that food diary into thousands of porcelain objects. Every sugar cube is represented in it, says the artist.
After that year, Itamar Gilboa is shocked. Did he really consume so much food and drink? What about 111 liters of red wine? And 123 liters of diet cola? The artist finds it painful.
You can marvel at what you eat and drink in a year, but you can also look at the installation in a completely different way. For example, take a look at the products you immediately recognize: some brands are so strong that you recognize them by the shape of the jar or bottle.
Would you dare to share your food diary with thousands of people? It’s quite intimate to share what you eat and drink. The artwork Food Chain Project by Itamar Gilboa is also a self-portrait of a man in a time. A self-portrait without a face. What would your self-portrait in food and drink look like?
The LAM museum’s art collection is inspired by food, drink and shopping. Each artwork shines a different light on these ordinary concepts and activities. A visit to the museum will transform your perspective on the things you encounter every day.
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They say everyone has a soulmate, someone with whom you have a deep connection. We think art also has the power to connect. Our connections not only run deep but also taste great.
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Keukenhof 14
2161 AN Lisse
Postbus 224
2170 AE Sassenheim
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