Galit Eilat


Galit Eilat, born 1965 in Israel, is an independent curator and writer living in the Netherlands.

Israeli Center for Digital Art

Galit Eilat is the founding director of . During her directorship, she curated numerous exhibitions presenting both Israeli and international artists. Among the projects was the trilogy ', an attempt to establish a cultural network as a platform for artists and art centres in the Near East, the Mediterranean Basin, as well as in wider circles such as the former Eastern European bloc and the Balkans. In this same line of projects aiming to overcome national borders and limitations dictated by political conditions, Eilat established the '. Initiated in Hamburg in 2007, the Mobile Archive began its journey when each of its stations contributed artworks to the original collection. As of 2015, the archive visited more than seventeen art centres and art academies.

Ma'arav Magazine

Together with Michel Kessus Gdaliyovich she founded , an online arts and culture magazine, for which she was Chief Editor from 2004 – 2010. Ma’arav was a unique alternative platform on the Israeli media map. In each issue the magazine tackled a specific topic from various angles, including the presentation of relevant art works, talks with creators, debates and educational topics. It focused on issues such as fundamentalism, messianic movements, violence, the place of Judaism in Israeli culture, intellectual property and East-West relationship's impact on the Middle East.

''Liminal Spaces'' traveling seminars

With Eyal Danon, Reem Fadda and Phil Misselwitz she developed the traveling seminars. The initial focus of the project was Road 60, which connects Jerusalem and Ramallah, and how it might be possible through art and culture to overcome political, social and physical barriers created by the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Liminal Spaces was not an actual exhibition, but rather a joint research project, a collective micro-residency, production platform and a series of interventionist, site-specific conferences rolled into one. It has since permeated most of the politically engaged art in Israel and Palestine and opened the way for experimental curatorial initiatives well beyond. The book ‘Liminal Spaces’ was published in 2009.

International Activities: 2010 to Present

In 2010 Eilat left her base in Israel. From 2010 – 2013 among other projects she was a Research Curator at Van Abbemuseum. Alongside collaborative projects, she curated the exhibition ' 2010 as part of the Play Vanabbe series of exhibitions. Yael Bartana's ' 2012. 'in 2013 Other activities beyond The Netherlands include co-curating the projects ' at CAPC in Bordeaux 2011. ' at KUB-Arena, Kunsthaus Bregenz. at Museum of Moderen Art in Warsaw 2011. The solo exhibition of at MG + MSUM Moderna Galerija Ljubljana. ', , at the Museum of Yugoslav History, Belgrade, Serbia, and ', Yael Bartana's presentation at Polish Pavilion at the 54 Venice Biennale 2011.
Eilat is one of the founding members of the Academy of the Arts of the World, founded in 2012, in Cologne.
Eilat co-curated the 31st São Paulo Biennial
' at in Porto together with Charles Esche, Nuria Enguita Mayo, Pablo Lafuente, Oren Sagiv and associate curators Benjamin Seroussi and Luiza Proença. In 2014, she co-curated the exhibition ' with Sebastian Cichocki in collaboration with SALT, İstanbul and the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw. This show, about religious and secular in art from a post-secular perspective, premiered at , İstanbul followed by a more extensive presentation at Malmö's Malmö Konstmuseum. She curated the exhibition ', supported by the EU funded project Culture for All - Phase III, managed by the European Union Office in Kosovo. She curated the solo exhibition by at National Museum of Fine Arts.
Since June 2018 Galit Eilat is the director of ' and currently she is developing a large scale international research project entitled ' with partners in Amsterdam, İstanbul and Thessaloniki. The first seminar in the project took place in Thessaloniki in 2018 and the second in Izmir and Istanbul, bringing together international artists and scholars.
Eilat is the recipient of the
Keith Haring Fellowship for Art and Activism'', Bard College in 2017-2018. Eilat taught and conducted research at both the Center for Curatorial Studies and the Human Rights Project at the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College.

Co-editor