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Hands-on

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Prayer shawls made from tyvek. Menorahs made from wire. The wonders of blessing and song. The Jewish Theological Seminary and The Jewish Museum have collaborated on a special day of hands-on Judaica-making, music, and conversation. A Day of Reinventing Ritual is this coming Sunday, November 15, from 9:30 am to 4pm. For more information and tickets, please visit the JTS website. Everyone is welcome, and children over the age of 7 are free.

Artists from Reinventing Ritual, including Rachel Kanter, Allan Wexler, Studio Armadillo, Tobi Kahn, and LoVid will lead hands-on workshops for the creation of new ritual objects. Scholar David Kraemer and Canter Sharon Brown-Levy will also lead workshops introducing the methods of blessings and chant. Vocalist Galeet Dardashti will perform excerpts from her ongoing reinterpretation of Jewish and Persian musical traditions. Anthropologist Vanessa Ochs will close the day offering insights into the dynamical influences of art and ritual today. The goal of the collaboration is to transmit the specialized and specific knowledge and skills of a diverse group of artists and scholars to the broader community, where the process of reinventing ritual truly lives and breathes.

I’m especially pleased that Studio Armadillo will be making the journey from Israel to lead a workshop on DIY kippa-making. Their sculpture in Reinventing Ritual, “Hevruta—Mituta” is a wonderful reinterpretation of the ritual of Jewish study. The artists compare a chess match to hevruta, pairs or small groups that debate the Torah and rabbinical responses to elicit deeper engagement with evidence and arguments. The thirty-two skullcaps, crocheted by girls during lessons in religious school, become playful emblems of women’s increasing access to traditional Orthodox education and ritual. A second example of this piece will be on view in a forthcoming exhibition of contemporary Israeli design in Judaica, opening at Beit Hatfutsot, Tel Aviv, in December. The artists combine 21st century 3D printing technology and ancient weaving traditions in a truly innovative work.

The Rite Stuff

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

More than ever, design—and design-awareness—is influencing every aspect of our lives. Join designer Jonathan Adler and artist Allan Wexler in a wide-ranging discussion about the role of design in modern life in the panel discussion The Rite Stuff: Design and Modern Observance. The panel is next week, Thursday, October 22, 6:30 pm, and moderated by leading design critic Julie Lasky.

Click here for tickets, they are going fast.

This panel will consider how rites connected with birth, marriage, death, and seasonal celebrations have changed in light of contemporary attitudes toward community, family, and the environment. In what ways are we challenged to be both modern and traditional in the rituals we observe? What is design’s role in bringing these practices up to date?

Adler, who began his career as a potter using a wheel he purchased with Bar Mitzvah money, has been one of the country’s greatest popularizers of the mid-century modern aesthetic for a bright, punchy, geometrical sensibility for home décor. Adler’s whimsical ceramic pieces, from vases to figurines to menorahs, bring a playfulness and liberty to home design. That he was inspired in part by the bold modernist design of suburban Reform synagogues makes his practice highly unusual and ingenious.

Joining Adler is Allan Wexler, winner of the Leir Prize and a pioneering artist exploring the intersections of architecture and art. The panel is moderated by Julie Lasky, a brilliant design critic, author of an essay in the Reinventing Ritual catalogue, and the editor of the newly launched Change Observer website. Her insight into the new eco-consciousness in contemporary design, including Jewish ritual objects, is invaluable for us to understand where the community is going in the future. Finally, the curator Dorothy Twining Globus of the Museum of Arts and Design, New York, will offer her insights on the intersection of design and daily life.

Sheltering Sky

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

We’re midway through Sukkot, the harvest holiday that also marks the wanderings of the Jews through the desert after the Exodus. A main ritual of this holiday is the construction of a temporary outdoor shelter open to the sky. Jews eat in this hut for seven days reminding them of the fragility of life and the beauty of nature. Recently, at least in the U.S., Sukkot has been reinvented as the great DIY holiday, when families and communities dust off their power drills and ladders and use whatever materials are handy to work together to build their sukkah.

Sukkot is on track to become what Passover has been the last few decades: the Jewish holiday that embodies the values of the community today. As the floating world of the Internet continues to expand into every facet of our lives, the life of brick-and-mortar, real world places will have the duration more of a blog post than a cathedral. In the architecture world in general there is great interest in temporary structures, from tents to pop-up stores to art exhibits in shipping containers.

Judaism, as an inherently nomadic and diasporic religion the last two thousand years, is well equipped for the 21st century preference for the ephemeral. The sukkah is this structure par excellence, a temporary shelter for the bringing together of community and ritual, in a joyous and beautiful way. Two works in Reinventing Ritual explore the evanescence of the sukkah.

Francisca Benitez’s video Sukkah analyzes the fascinating lives of sukkahs in the congested urban neighborhood of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, built on fire escapes, roofs, balconies, and alleyways. The video contains four sections: construction, proliferation, use, and deconstruction. A staccato editing quality, and electronic soundtrack by Memoy Demay, defamiliarizes an already unusual practice in America, reinforcing the artist’s interest in how the sukkah is physically temporary and ancient at the same time. A good comparison is the famous Shinto shrine at Ise, Japan, where the temple is rebuilt entirely every 20 years.

The other work is the full-scale Gardening Sukkah by Allan Wexler. This piece won the Leir Prize and has been discussed in a previous post. If Benitez takes a purely architectural exterior view of the sukkah, Wexler is more interested in its usage as a temporary site for eating. He focuses on the interior of the work, meticulously mounting all the utensils and tools needed for ritual meals and gardening. By tying the meal as the essence of the sukkah to the annual cycle of nature—planting, reaping, lying fallow—Wexler helps us recall that architecture is at service of human activity.

The web (and the Museum’s online collection) is full of interesting news articles about creative sukkahs this year, from a drive-thru in Pinecrest, Florida to a student design/build project at Wesleyan University. The range of expression and interest is only growing each year. The Museum is interested in continuing to explore the sukkah in the future.

DIY

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Prayer is an essential part of the High Holidays. The artists LoVid through their diverse practice use language, song, music, video, and electronics to connect people. Their video garment Retzuot (ShinShinAgam), which is currently on view in Reinventing Ritual, brings these concepts of prayer and connection together into one beautiful and thought-provoking work. The artists have just posted video documentation of how to wrap and wear Retzuot, helping us to better understand how this piece functions as reinvented tefillin.

The following is LoVid’s statement about the work, as published in the exhibition catalogue:

Retzuot (ShinShinAgam) is inspired by the head
and arm pieces of tefillin. The straps of tefillin
reminded us of electronic conductive wires,
which we use in our media-based, audiovisual
work. In a similar way, tefillin straps conduct
and preserve information that is in the scrolls
and that has passed down through history.
In Retzuot (ShinShinAgam), the scrolls are represented
by circuit boards, which generate
continuous live video. The video image is a
minimal representation of the letter shin,
which in traditional tefillin appears on the
headpiece box.

This fall, LoVid will be leading two hands-on workshops about making Judaica with simple electronics. The first is for all ages during A Day of Reinventing Ritual at the Jewish Theological Seminary on November 15, and the second is a family workshop about creating electric menorahs at The Jewish Museum on December 13.

Reinventing Ritual is now open!

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

We had an absolutely incredible turnout on Monday night, with a long line outside, which I hear has never before happened at a JM opening. People compared it to a Biennial, which is so gratifying because that was one of the unspoken ambitions for this show. The energy and enthusiasm was amazing and inspires us to continue to support and exhibit this vital area of contemporary art, design, and Jewish ritual. Props to the opening co-host Heeb magazine and publisher Josh Neuman. For pictures, visit our Facebook and Flickr pages.

The highlight of the event was the awarding of the first ever Henry J. Leir Prize to Allan Wexler, one of the true pioneers in the area of “reinventing ritual.” The $5,000 prize recognizes a work that embodies the finest of contemporary art and design, and best expresses the dynamic practice of religion today. Wexler’s Gardening Sukkah impressed the prize jury with its craftsmanship, “green” awareness, and ability to make us rethink what a sukkah can be.

The distinguished panel of judges included: Rabbi Darcie Crystal, Coordinator of Leadership Initiatives at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, New York; Holly Hotchner, Director of the Museum of Arts and Design; and Daniel Libeskind, architect and designer. Thanks to them for their time and energy.

The jury also recognized two honorable mentions: Hadassa Goldvicht’s video Writing Lesson #1, and Ami Drach and Dov Ganchrow’s design +/- Hotplate.

We’ll continue to blog about ongoing events and activities around the exhibition. And if you have not yet seen the show, please come and check it out!

Installing Johanna Bresnick and Michael Cloud’s “From Mouth to Mouth”

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

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Installing Mierle Laderman Ukeles and Steven Handel’s “Scent Garden”

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

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Installing LoVid’s “Retzuot” (ShinShinAgam)

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

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Installing Tobaron Waxman’s “Opshernish”

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Installing Tobaron Waxman’s Opshernish has been a multiday affair. The original work was a hair-cutting and shaving performance staged in 2000 over several months. The performance referenced the ritual first haircut for Orthodox boys when they turn three in order to ask how gender constructs identity. The artist saved all the hair from the performance, and has kept it in a crate until this summer, when it was shipped to The Jewish Museum for reinstallation. A conservator prepped the long locks of hair so they would remain stabile over the four month installation at the museum, and the next iteration at CJM in San Francisco. Using documentary photos and videos, Waxman and Annie Varnot carefully reconstructed the pattern and position of the airplane wire suspended from the ceiling from which the hair dangles. The installation will also include examples of the implements used during the performance, as well as a re-edited video and sound documentation. We are still completing the presentation so that it most strongly suggests the affect of ritual without the presence of the body.

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Installing Allan Wexler’s “Gardening Sukkah”

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Allan Wexler, with the help of wife and partner Ellen Wexler, installs his “Gardening Sukkah.” The work is intended for year-round use as either a tool shed or a booth for the week-long harvest holiday of Sukkot. The piece transforms from shed to sukkah when the roof is opened, thereby fulfilling the ritual of the sukkah that it have a roof partially open to the sky. Also this Fall, Wexler presents a solo show of recent work exploring the interstices of art, design, and architecture, opening September 10 at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts.

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