From the letters he took phrases and then scratched them into the surface of replicas of the Segregation Wall that stands between Israel and the Palestinian Territories. Phrases such as: “But I Also Feel”; “As If We Are”; “That Grey Area”; “I Was Proud”; “To Give In”; “Understand My Love”; “I Can Remember”; “Restored By Force”; “Your Home” and “We Only Meet So Far Away”.
As Yekutieli states: “By taking these texts out of their original context it is unclear whom the original author is, allowing it to gain a universal and ambiguous meaning and thus broaden the participation in the political discourse.”
Another significant element is the olive tree, the roots of which are present in each artwork. Besides the olive tree’s significance to both regions, it is the notion of offering an olive branch as a gesture of reconciliation or peace that comes to mind. How in offering these highly personal and disparate narratives from both sides of the the West Bank “wall” that separates Israel and the occupied Palestinian Territories, Yekutieli’s underlying project is to not only reveal the intricacies of living with this conflict, but perhaps to also bring people closer to a more insightful understanding and desire for peace.
The emotional resonance of the artwork (evident in the original letters which are on display for the viewer to read), acts as the vehicle to further explore these complex political realities by acknowledging people’s connection through a shared humanity, finding commonalities through feelings around home, longing, love, jealousy, frustration, anger or hope. This allows the work to speak to diverse people, to create dialogue—and potentially empathy or understanding—over division.
To create a crack in the walls that we erect to separate; to reach a hand out in support, kindness, compassion and hope.