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Museum Cinema / Cabaret, 1972

At evening time there shall be light | A Cinematic View of the Museum’s Exhibitions
Curator: Karin Rywkind Segal

The Tel Aviv Museum of Art is proud to present a rich weekend of films, carefully selected in dialogue with the current exhibition season—shows conceived in response to the turbulent times in which we are living. These include Year Zero, The Day is Gone: 100 Years of the New Objectivity, andVision of the New Bones: Jewish Imaginations after 1940. The film program accompanies these exhibitions, enriching and deepening the visitor experience.

The screenings will be accompanied by introductions from the Museum’s curators and guest lecturers. Some screenings will take place in the galleries.

Cabaret
Director: Bob Fosse | With: Liza Minnelli, Michael York, Helmut Griem, Joel Grey | United States, 1972 | 124 min. | English, German, French; Hebrew subtitles

A musical drama set in 1931 Berlin, against the backdrop of the collapse of the Weimar Republic and the rise of the National Socialists. Sally Bowles (Liza Minnelli), an American cabaret singer at the decadent Kit Kat Club, becomes romantically involved with British student Brian Roberts (Michael York). Their relationship grows increasingly complicated with the arrival of the wealthy playboy Maximilian von Heune (Helmut Griem), while outside the club the Nazi Party gains strength and reality begins to fracture. Director Bob Fosse masterfully weaves social, sexual, and political tensions into the framework of the musical—a genre previously associated primarily with lighter themes.

The film won eight Academy Awards (1973) and is regarded as a groundbreaking work and a landmark in cinema history.

The films screened over the weekend are in dialogue with the exhibitions currently on view at the Museum, including Year Zero, andVision of the New Bones: Jewish Imaginations after 1940, as well as a recently presented exhibition, The Day is Gone: 100 Years of the New Objectivity. Like the artworks, they emerge from the history of twentieth-century Europe—particularly in the context of the World Wars and their aftermath—and span historical rupture, a sober gaze at reality, and a search for new horizons of hope. In the shared space of cinema and visual art, both engage with questions of identity, memory, and the human condition in times of upheaval and uncertainty, offering distinct yet resonant ways of reflecting on similar experiences.

We invite you to visit the exhibitions to expand your viewing experience. An intimate encounter with the artworks on view can deepen your understanding of the social contexts reflected in the films.

Note: Film introductions will be in Hebrew.
The number of participants is limited | Advance reservations are required for all participants.

Participation in the tour includes entrance ticket to the Museum.

For more information on “A Cinematic Weekend at the Museum” and the full screening program >