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Photo: Thomas Ide. Courtesy Headlands Center for the Arts.

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Walk in the Headlands: A Hike with Artist Annie Albagli

Sunday, January 21, 2024 | 12–3pm

ADMISSION: Free

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2024-01-21 12:00:00 UTC2024-01-21 23:00:00 UTC America/Los_AngelesThe CJM - 736 Mission St, San Francisco, CAWalk in the Headlands: A Hike with Artist Annie AlbagliExperience a unique outdoor program that combines the joy of the Marin Headlands, Jewish ritual, and art. The walk is organized in conjunction with Annie Albagli: We Become [Vessels]—a video-based installation now on view at The Contemporary Jewish Museum that combines imagery and field recordings of the Headlands with Jewish ritual objects to offer visitors new ways to move through space, time, and familiar and unfamiliar places. During a hike led by artist Annie Albagli, experience the majestic landscape of the Headlands as a means to reframe our relationships to the natural environment, reimagine notions of interconnectedness, and explore the boundaries of the self. 

Experience a unique outdoor program that combines the joy of the Marin Headlands, Jewish ritual, and art. The walk is organized in conjunction with Annie Albagli: We Become [Vessels]—a video-based installation now on view at The Contemporary Jewish Museum that combines imagery and field recordings of the Headlands with Jewish ritual objects to offer visitors new ways to move through space, time, and familiar and unfamiliar places. 

During a hike led by artist Annie Albagli, experience the majestic landscape of the Headlands as a means to reframe our relationships to the natural environment, reimagine notions of interconnectedness, and explore the boundaries of the self. The 3.5-mile hike will include pauses for discussion, observations, and brief readings from materials the artist used in her research for the artwork. The hike will be punctuated by a short activation of the Marin Headlands military bunkers using a shofar.

What to Expect
  • This mid-level exertion hike is 3.5 miles, and will take approximately three hours. 
  • Dress for unpredictable weather; warm layers and checking the weather in advance are recommended. 
  • The hike will start and end at Headlands Center for the Arts (944 Simmonds Road, Sausalito, CA 94965). Participants will gather in The Commons (area between Building 944 and Building 945) at 12pm before beginning the hike, and will return at approximately 3pm. 

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About the Program Leaders
Annie Albagli

Annie Albagli's work explores new ways to witness a landscape and its relationship to human and nonhuman worlds by examining the cultural contexts from which they are born and the layers of manipulation that shape them. Her work pays particular attention to personal histories and their entanglements with landscapes molded by power—be it government, military, or industry. Through archival and field research, play, and community engaged projects she explores one’s perception of self as existing beyond the body through relationships with the living world; to see our bodies’ porosity and build reverence for a collaborative existence.

Her work has been shown nationally at such venues including the Headlands Center for the Arts, YBCA, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, and the Art Museum of the Americas and internationally, at Muzeul Zemstvei in Chisinau, Moldova, Art Prospect in St. Petersburg, Russia, The Trash 3 Festival in Bishkek Kyrgyzstan, and Beita Gallery in Jerusalem. Her videos have been screened as part of the Imagined Biennials Project at the Tate Modern in London, UK, the Bavarian Film Festival, ZWICKL in Schwandorf, Germany, and Artist Television Access in San Francisco, CA. She has participated in residencies throughout the U.S. and internationally including Fondazione Antonio Ratti in Como, Italy,  Oberpfälzer Künstlerhaus in Schwandorf, Germany, Art East in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, and The Headlands Center for the Arts in Sausalito, CA. She has contributed to various artists’ land projects such as AZ West, Mildred’s Lane, and Salmon Creek Farm. Between 2017-18, Albagli was a YBCA Truth Fellow. She is a co-founder and editor of the publication, WHIZ WORLD, and former Co-Director of the Royal Nonesuch Gallery. She teaches at the University of Nevada MFA-IA program.

Elizheva Hurvich
Elizheva Hurvich

Elizheva Hurvich is a self-declared Judaphile, loving many things Jewish and orienting her life around unusual Jewish practices. This Bay Area native grew up with an eclectic Jewish practice ranging from Shabbat Shul with the Rock n' Roll Rabbis to a conservative synagogue in Marin. She spent most summers with her Jewish family in Alabama and Tennessee and post-college lived in Jewish Renewal, Reconstructionist and Israeli communities around the world. She is enrolled in Rabbinical school and thrilled to sound a shofar in the Marin Headlands with this project.

Maurice Kamins
Maurice Kamins

Close to thirty years ago while sitting in the balcony at Congregation Sherith Israel listening to the sound of the shofar, with hubris and a bit of gall, Maurice Kamins thought he could blow the shofar and build his own, and served as the Ba'al Tekiah for the next twenty-five years. At the time Kamins was making sheath knives and noticed that Texas Knifemakers, as well as selling scales, sold whole Kudu horns. So he bought one and made his first shofar. It never occurred to Kamins when he started that there were hundreds of pages of biblical text and commentaries on the making and blowing of the shofar. Over the years Kamins has made some 600 shofarot from about twenty different kosher animals. Although he makes traditional shofarot from rams horns, he has also made shofarot from kudu, waterbuck, roan antelope, sable antelope, bighorn sheep, buffalo, prong horned antelope, scimitar oryx, and many others. He is honored that his shofarot have been carried around the world and are enhancing the High Holiday services in innumerable congregations.

About the Exhibition

Annie Albagli: We Become [Vessels]

Bay Area artist Annie Albagli’s expansive video-based installation draws on Jewish tradition, local geography, and ritual to respond to a time of widespread isolation and a desire for human connection. Situated in The CJM’s intimate Black Box Gallery, the installation combines overlaid imagery and field recordings of the Marin headlands with crashing waves and Jewish ritual objects to offer visitors new ways to move through space, time, and familiar and unfamiliar places. Displayed for the first time in a solo museum exhibition, Albagli’s work both draws on and decontextualizes Jewish stories and local histories to break boundaries, explore our interdependence with each other and our world, and offer ways in which viewers can reimagine notions of space and self.

A close-up image of a person's hand holding a shofar, against the backdrop of an ocean view

Annie Albagli, We Become [Vessels] (video still), 2021.

About Headlands Center for the Arts

Headlands Center for the Arts is a multidisciplinary, international arts center occupying a cluster of artist-rehabilitated military buildings at historic Fort Barry in the Marin Headlands, part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Headlands provides an unparalleled environment in support of the creative process and the development of new work and ideas. Through a range of programs for artists and the public, we offer opportunities for reflection, dialogue, and exchange that build understanding and appreciation for the role of art in society.