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Most Likely

Designers, Archaeologists, and Mysterious Objects
June- Dec' 2024
Israel Museum Jerusalem /Bella and Harry Wexner Gallery
Curators: Nurith Goshen and Oded Friedland
Designer: Tal Gur


 

Most Likely displays ten archaeological mysteries: objects that archaeologists do not yet know what they were used for, and that designers will try to decipher.

Archaeologists investigate the past by revealing, documenting, and analyzing buildings, objects, materials, and forms. Each new discovery updates their knowledge and has the potential to change their view of history. There is an inherent gap between the archaeological facts and the interpretations of these facts; between what exists and is known – such as the characteristics of the object and the context in which it was found – and what is unknown – the function of the object and its meaning in early societies. Archaeologists’ doubts and the possibility that a different interpretation may emerge in the future are what stand behind the frequent use of the expression “most likely.”

In order to get as near as possible to the truth, archaeologists often call upon experts from other disciplines. The innovative appeal to the field of design adds a new tool to the archaeologists’ toolkit. Unlike researchers who typically employ an analytical way of thinking, designers use a free, unbounded mode of thinking that moves in different and even contradictory directions.

By harnessing design thinking for the benefit of archaeological research and employing an interdisciplinary approach, the exhibition seeks to re-examine the story of objects thousands of years old and perhaps even reveal their secrets. Will it succeed?

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Photography: Elie Posner and Zohar Shemesh / Israel Museum Jerusalem

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