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Elisheva RevahSHEFA (Abundance)2025
2025
$16,632.72
£12,261.44
€13,900
CA$23,013.10
A$24,970.38
CHF 13,246.32
MX$306,634.25
NOK 163,813.94
SEK 155,131.60
DKK 105,832.87
About the Item
Taking its name from the seven-tablet Babylonian creation myth, Enūma
Elish unfolds across sculpture, video, engraving, and performance —
summoning ancient mythologies into contemporary space.
Revah’s practice fuses Mesopotamian myth, Kabbalistic symbolism,
and feminist ritual in a bold and spiritual language of gesture and
material. Her work is a meditation on divine femininity — not as
abstraction, but as lineage and presence. Across stone, skin, and
screen, Enūma Elish invites viewers to explore ancient and modern
archetypes of goddesses that are not distant, but embodied. The
exhibition spans two floors:
● Ground Floor: Stone Manifest — a sculptural sanctuary
featuring seven engraved “tablets,” merging Kabbalistic glyphs with
Mesopotamian iconography. Revah’s carvings echo votive reliefs and
minimalist sculpture — think Noguchi, Ana Mendieta, Agnes Martin —
but rooted in personal cosmology and ritual. Symbols like the snake of
Lilith, the spiral of rebirth, and the double triangle of giving/receiving
become vessels for mythic feminine energy. Centerpieces include
SHEFA, featuring a 15th-century found stone, and MANIFESTO, a raw
wood engraving featuring a manifesto by the artist on womanhood.
Upstairs: Goddesses of Now — a constellation of 22 short films,
each showing a woman embodying a contemporary goddess archetype.
Like moving tarot cards, the videos are stripped back, symbolic, and
ritualistic. Suspended stones, nude figures, and Kabbalistic signs
create a language of quiet power, recalling early video work by Joan
Jonas or Mendieta’s earth-body actions. An accompanying Oracle
Card set will be available in a limited edition of 50.
Text by Jemma Elliott-Israelson
- Creator:Elisheva Revah (1991, Israeli)
- Creation Year:2025
- Dimensions:Height: 24.41 in (62 cm)Width: 19.69 in (50 cm)Depth: 2.76 in (7 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:Byzantine
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:PARIS, FR
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU2897216927142
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Narváez was born in Porlamar, Venezuela, in 1905; he was the fifth son of eleven siblings; his parents were Jose Lorenzo Narváez and Vicenta Rivera. Don José Lorenzo, a multifaceted and creative man, sowed the seed of creativity in his son. “My father did not fit in with his fantasies of cabinetmaker, bricklayer, master builder, and self-taught architect.”1 From an early age, Francis was led to the artistic activity, he traced, carved, made replicas of the furniture and the saints restored by his father.
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In 1928 he presented his first solo exhibition at the Club Venezuela. With the money raised from the sale of the works and the support of Monsignor Sosa, and the Ministers Centeno Grau and Arcaya, he studied in Paris on a scholarship. Once there, he enrolled at the Académie Julian, where Tito Salas, Cristóbal Rojas and Arturo Michelena had also studied. It was in Paris where, unable to work in wood, he turned to stone carving. “In Paris, I didn’t have wood, so I carved a lot in stone (…), when there were demolitions I purchased chunks of stone, I would take them to the workshop and carve them.”2
His first attempts at volumetric sculptures and painting in plain colours, linked to the thematic of American miscegenation and Creole reality, can be traced back to that first trip to Paris. During his stay in the French city, Arturo Uslar Pietri, Alfredo Boulton, and Finita Vallenilla supported the artist both financially and logistically, and in February of 1930, the trio of friends arranged another exhibition for him at the Club Venezuela. Narváez describes his exhibition as follows: “(…) in it I feel that the sculptural work is more my own, done with more assurance, a response to my pursuit of large planes, stylisation and synthesis.”3 By then, as Boulton himself noted in his book about the artist, Narvaez departed from most of the artistic traditions that prevailed by that time in Venezuela.
In 1931 he returned to Caracas and established his atelier at the Barrio Obrero in Catia. The atelier became the hub of the intellectual life of the time. “In those years, the atelier of Francisco Narváez was the hub of the greatest Venezuelan hope. Nothing comparable to it can be found either before or since.”4
From that year onwards, exhibitions, projects, trips, and awards we multiplied. He was awarded the President of the Republic of Venezuela Prize, the National Sculpture Prize of the 1st Official Venezuelan Art Salon, and the John Boulton Prize of the 3rd Annual Venezuelan Art Salon; for the Military Academy, he produced a spectacular relief entitled La Patria.
In 1945, commissioned by the architect Carlos Raúl Villanueva, he produced two groups of sculptures known as Las Toninas, both located in the O’Leary Square. There, as he himself states, he incorporates some baroque patterns into the figures to the source itself: “It is a work of balance between the decorative requirements and the sculpture of planes and angles.”5
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