By Noa Heyne

Cities of Refuge, 2021. Polimer gypsum, cement, steel, ropes, pulleys and wheels. Dimensions variable.

Boaz Arad

Video documentation of The City Spreads its Limbs Like a Giant Insect, 2021

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
Arts and humanities open up our imagination. They encourage critical thinking and broad viewing of our present on the one hand, and allow for day-dreaming on the other. And the ability to imagine other futures, other realities or existences - is what allows for change.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
Cities of Refuge (2021) takes a contemporary look at the story of Noah’s Ark, asking what happens when you are forced to leave your home, what you to take with you and what you leave behind.
The piece presents a row of concrete structures that when moved in a certain way, resemble a wave, but which are also homes or tents, which stay up only as long as they are held by the dancers or the audience, and fall back apart the moment they let the ropes go.
Cities of Refuge was created by Heyne for the dance performance Ark, choreographed by Tomer Zirkilevich, in collaboration with artist Anna Mirkin, as part of LABA Fellowship program 2021.

In "The City Spreads its Wings Like a Giant Insect", streets from Jerusalem and Berlin relating to the artist’s personal history are put together to form a new composition. This composition is connected to wooden marionette handles which are in turn tied to servo-motors, and is choreographed to move like a breathing, restless creature. Like many of Heyne's works, this sculpture contemplates layers of possibilities and control over one's space.

Noa Heyne (1982) is an interdisciplinary artist inspired by the intersection of traditional aspects of sculpture and architecture and the imaginative world of marionette theatre. She received her MFA in Sculpture from the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) in 2017 and has since been creating interactive installations and concrete sculptures in Berlin.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.