Please upgrade your browser

For the best experience, you should upgrade your browser. Visit our accessibility page to view a list of supported browsers along with links to download the latest version.

Student Showcase Archive

Noga Inbar

MA work

MA work

  • Still from It's Lovely Isn't It

    Still from It's Lovely Isn't It
    Video

  • Still from It's Lovely Isn't It

    Still from It's Lovely Isn't It
    Video

  • Still from It's Lovely Isn't It

    Still from It's Lovely Isn't It
    Video

  • Still from It's Lovely Isn't It

    Still from It's Lovely Isn't It
    Video

  • Still from It's Lovely Isn't It

    Still from It's Lovely Isn't It
    Video

Some fish change sex. Bass and bream change from one sex to another...

…If you catch one turbot and not the other, the one that’s left will go to the bottom of the sea and it will never come up again. Some fish are like swans. They marry for life.

It’s lovely, isn’t it?

Noga Inbar and Louise Ashcroft explore the transformative power of a multitude of masks, which they insert into real situations as catalysts for action and conversation. The resulting work incorporates video, objects, images and text.

Ashcroft and Inbar’s collaboration is an extension of a larger group project involving eight artists from the RCA Sculpture programme. For the degree show the group have created a collective context in the form of an architectural structure situated in the outdoor yard within which their individual and collaborative works are integrated. This physical structure develops the social structure and opens it up to other peers and the public through a programme of music and discussion events held within their temporary house space.

Info

Info

  • Noga Inbar profile image
  • MA Degree

    School

    School of Humanities

    Programme

    MA Sculpture, 2013

  • Some fish change sex. Bass and bream change from one sex to another...

    …If you catch one turbot and not the other, the one that’s left will go to the bottom of the sea and it will never come up again. Some fish are like swans. They marry for life.

    It’s lovely, isn’t it?

    Noga Inbar and Louise Ashcroft explore the transformative power of a multitude of masks, which they insert into real situations as catalysts for action and conversation. The resulting work incorporates video, objects, images and text.

    Ashcroft and Inbar’s collaboration is an extension of a larger group project involving eight artists from the RCA Sculpture programme. For the degree show the group have created a collective context in the form of an architectural structure situated in the outdoor yard within which their individual and collaborative works are integrated. This physical structure develops the social structure and opens it up to other peers and the public through a programme of music and discussion events held within their temporary house space.

  • Degrees

  • BA, Fine Art, NABA Arts and Design Academy, Milan, 2007
  • Exhibitions

  • I Dream of Eugenia, Solo show, Spaceship Gallery, Tel Aviv, 2010; Search Engine, The Centre for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv, 2012; Large Masonite, Sommer Gallery, Tel Aviv, 2012; Haifa-Jerusalem-Tel Aviv, Haifa Museum, Haifa, Israel, 2012
  • Awards

  • Lissone Museum Young Artist Award, Young Artist, 2008