sculpture Jerusalem mayor
Teddy Kollek was the driving spirit behind the establishment of the Israel Museum, one of the leading art and archaeology museums in the world. The museum houses works dating from prehistory to the present day in its
Archaeology,
Fine Arts, and
Jewish Art and Life Wings and features extensive holdings of biblical and
Land of Israel archaeology. the museum has built up a collection of nearly 500,000 objects, representing a broad sample of world material culture. In 1968, the museum bought 1,000 items from the collection created by the late Moshe Dayan, including pieces which were acquired illegally. The museum paid US$1 million which was funded through donations. From 1965, the museum was housed in a series of masonry buildings designed by the Russian-born Israeli architect
Alfred Mansfeld. A $100-million campaign to renovate the museum and double its gallery space was completed by Israeli architects Efrat-Kowalsky Architects who renovated the existing buildings in July 2010. The wings for archaeology, the fine arts, and Jewish art and life were completely rebuilt and the original buildings were linked through a new entrance pavilion. The passageways that connect between the buildings and five new pavilions were designed by
James Carpenter.
Mishkafayim Mishkafayim (Hebrew for “glasses”) was a
Hebrew-language art magazine published by the museum from 1987 to 2001. Tamir Rauner was the founding editor in 1987 and served in this capacity for nine years. For its first two years,
Mishkafayim was a joint project of the Israel Museum’s youth wing and the weekly magazine, Koteret Rashit (Hebrew for “main headline”). Koteret Rashit closed after the fifth issue of
Mishkafayim. As a result, from the sixth issue onward, the daily newspaper
Yedioth Ahronoth replaced Koteret Rashit as a partner in the publication of
Mishkafayim.
Mishkafayim was an innovative addition to the
Israeli cultural scene. It was a multidisciplinary magazine dedicated to culture that combined written and visual content, providing a stage to new and established writers, artists, and illustrators. In 1994, after
Mishkafayim had appeared for seven years, Tamir Rauner launched
Einayim, (Hebrew for "eyes"), a children’s magazine that was presented as "the younger brother of
Mishkafayim", that is, a children’s magazine with an outlook similar to that of
Mishkafayim. In 1996, after two years of editing both magazines, Tamir Rauner left
Mishkafayim and editor Smadar Tirosh replaced him starting with issue 26. Under Tirosh, the magazine’s character changed, taking a less innovative approach in content and form and beginning to appeal to a more mature audience. From issue 29 onward, its subtitle changed accordingly, from the "quarterly of the youth wing" to "art quarterly"; similar changes were made in its
graphic design, including the design of its name. In 2000, Monica Lavi replaced Smadar Tirosh and the magazine’s name was changed to
Muza (Hebrew for "muse") which ceased publication in 2001. Each issue of
Mishkafayim was dedicated to a main theme, such as drawing, writing,
portraiture,
comics, photography, legend, light, games, packaging, chair, material, illustration, artists, nature, movement, childhood, love, politics, time, sex and art, heroes, forgery, language, madness, dreams, maps, television, food, earth, and stone. In some cases, the theme of the magazine was chosen in coordination with exhibitions at the Israel Museum Youth Wing, such as "Earth". ==Archaeology Wing==