Comment on Check out the otherworldly transformation of a salt-covered dress left at the bottom of the Dead Sea

Check out the otherworldly transformation of a salt-covered dress left at the bottom of the Dead Sea

The Salt Bride dress is reminiscent of the "traditional Hasidic garment" worn by a character in the Yiddish play The Dybbuk. The play, penned by S. Ansky between 1913 and 1916, chronicles a bride possessed by evil who is exorcised. Landau's art explores themes of death and change by focusing in on how the Dead Sea altered the dress's appearance.

 

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