
Jackie Kennedy
In "Jackie Kennedy" (20X30 cm), Abisdris performs a radical act of abstraction. Instead of the First Lady's familiar portrait, she presents a composition of bold color fields—deep black, neon yellow, and hints of peach-pink. The piece examines visual memory and the way a public figure is transformed into abstract visual energy. Through expressive brushstrokes on textured canvas, she raises questions about visibility, disappearance, and the emotional resonance that remains of an image once it is stripped down to its most basic elements.

Korin Abisdris
Korin Abisdris is an active multidisciplinary artist and a graduate of the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design. Her work is frequently exhibited in galleries and art venues both in Israel and internationally. Abisdris’s practice revolves around the self-portrait as a fluid, shifting, and subversive image. Mastering a wide range of styles and mediums, from oil and acrylic painting to drawing and digital compositions, her work explores the boundaries between humor and vulnerability, chaos and tenderness, and the intimate and the public. Drawing daily as a form of meditation and self-inquiry, Abisdris transforms fragments of contemporary visual culture, from social media and advertising to art history and popular entertainment, into a rich personal mythology. Her expressive, spontaneous line captures fleeting emotional states while weaving together the visual languages of Surrealism, Dada, Modernism, and Pop with the raw immediacy of street culture. By inserting her own figure into iconic artworks and digital imagery, she re-stages identity as a performance of gender, role, and gaze. The result is a vivid, ironic, and self-aware body of work that reflects on the overstimulated visual reality of our time and the paradoxes of visibility and authenticity.
Korin Abisdris is an active multidisciplinary artist and a graduate of the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design. Her work is frequently exhibited in galleries and art venues both in Israel and internationally. Abisdris’s practice revolves around the self-portrait as a fluid, shifting, and subversive image. Mastering a wide range of styles and mediums, from oil and acrylic painting to drawing and digital compositions, her work explores the boundaries between humor and vulnerability, chaos and tenderness, and the intimate and the public. Drawing daily as a form of meditation and self-inquiry, Abisdris transforms fragments of contemporary visual culture, from social media and advertising to art history and popular entertainment, into a rich personal mythology. Her expressive, spontaneous line captures fleeting emotional states while weaving together the visual languages of Surrealism, Dada, Modernism, and Pop with the raw immediacy of street culture. By inserting her own figure into iconic artworks and digital imagery, she re-stages identity as a performance of gender, role, and gaze. The result is a vivid, ironic, and self-aware body of work that reflects on the overstimulated visual reality of our time and the paradoxes of visibility and authenticity.