Tamy Ben-Tor and Miki Carmi’s exhibition at the Zachęta National Gallery of Art attempted to bring together two strong artistic personalities that seemingly did not have much in common. It was a kind of experiment–, a challenge posed by the artists for themselves: Could this real-life couple also work as an artistic duo? The exhibition featured nine video works by Ben-Tor, ranging from her video performances with “talking heads,” in which the artist wears make-up and costumes and plays roles, commenting in a perverse way on her situation as an Israeli artist living in New York, to her video Young Emerging Artists Eating and Fucking (2015), which gave the exhibition its title. Constantly provoking the viewers, Ben-Tor examines her Jewish identity, contemporary perception of the Holocaust, and life in the New York art world in a perverse and witty way. Her work is accompanied by ten paintings from Carmi’s long-term project, pursued since the late 1990s, in which the artist has been conducting a peculiar kind of anthropological research on a quest to find the so-called Jewish type. Initially, the paintings showed hyper-realistic portraits representing the ethnicity, but they later evolved to be dominated by portraits of his family members. The paintings also became increasingly abstract, with the artist reducing the faces of his models to purely biological features: ears, nose, mouth, eyes, and skin.