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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 Helène Aylon’s “All Rise”

Monday, August 31st, 2009

We’re a few days behind in posting images. Last Thursday, Helène Aylon came in to install her major work “All Rise.” The color and the scale of the piece perfectly fits that of its gallery, amazing since the artist had not inking of this presentation when she designed and produced it in 2007.

Click thumbnails to enlarge and redirect to our Flickr page

Flat-pack

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Another major element of the exhibition design is the system of tables, bases, and panels that Incorporated designed to display the range of media: jewelry, ceramic plates, videos, silver implements, textiles, and so on.

The initial inspiration came from an exhibition I viewed at Foxy Productions in Chelsea, where a variety of small sculptures and objets d’art were displayed on a sawhorse table. Each item was under plexi cube, and the display itself came off as an installation for the objects in the show. To me, the presentation seemed uninflected and honest, modest and sophisticated. Departing from this one image, Incorporated developed a simple and elegant solution to the display of the diverse group of works in Reinventing Ritual within the hundred-year-old container of the museum’s galleries.

Raw plywood is cut and slotted so the pieces smoothly join. For tables and bases, the horizontal deck nests right into a sturdy base formed by the supportive sheets crisscrossing on the vertical axis. For panels that support wall-oriented works and flat-screen monitors, sheets of plywood are suspended by a variation on the same support system. I’m probably not describing these very well, so take a close look at the preview of some of the tables and panels in the gallery to better understand how they work. There is no hidden armature, no decoration or ornament. No illusionism or superglue. The cases are purely functional and communicate their structure inside and out. I think Mies would be pleased that American architects continue to heed his ideas.

Taking commercial materials, cutting them into geometric units, and crafting them into functional objects is the same approach used by the textile artist Galya Rosenfeld. Her prototypes for ark curtains, commissioned by the Minneapolis Institute of Art for a Judaica show in 2007, are made from small modules of fabric cut from gray polyester IKEA curtains. They are woven together in an innovative structure that subtly creates Stars of David in a repeating pattern, and can be seen in Reinventing Ritual.

Put another way, the casework for Reinventing Ritual is one part IKEA and one part Tobias Putrih, a simple flat-pack system both industrial and artsy. Another important aspect of the cases and panels is that they can be easily dismantled. The plywood boards are held together by gravity and torque; there are no glue or nails to affix them. After the exhibition closes in New York, all the cases and panels can be popped apart, stacked, and shipped to San Francisco, where they will be reused in the representation at the Contemporary Jewish Museum.

Call it retro-functionalism: the old modernist ideals of the rational building stripped of ornament, combined with the postmodernist values of environmentalism and sustainability. An eco-Bauhaus if you will, calling for smart industrial production. I like to think that this retro-functionalist approach to building and design is expressed in every aspect of the exhibition contents and design, especially the casework.

All Rise

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

The following text was composed by Helène Aylon, whose latest installation will be featured in Reinventing Ritual. She is also participating in two group exhibitions this fall: A Complex Weave: Feminism and Identity at Rutgers University and Women in the Bible: Tricksters, Victors and (M)others at the Jewish Museum of Australia, in Melbourne.

Feminism reinvents all of reality by the participation of women bringing the issues into male dominated spheres. I have used a feminist lens to investigate the main issues of the decade from the time I began my career: in the 1970s, addressing the notion of change itself and the Body; in the 1980s, the Earth; and in the 1990s and 2000s, G-d. (G-d required two decades!)

The G-d Project: Nine Houses Without Women began in 1990 with The Liberation of G-d. [Exhibited in “Too Jewish?” at The Jewish Museum in 1996, and now in the museum’s permanent collection.—Ed.] The “House” is a Beit Midrash—a house of study where men congregate to learn together.

For the finale of the G-d Project, I wish to make an actual tikkun, rather than a metaphoric inquiry. I am petitioning that women judges be allowed to judge on a Beit Din. We now have women rabbis and women cantors; it is time for women to be allowed to judge. All Rise is a Beit Din, A House of Law, a courtroom.

The pink pillowcase flags of the All Rise Beit Din refer to the pillowcases I collected in the 1980s with women’s dreams and nightmares about the state of the world. The pink neon in the word G-d represents a feminine presence. The Tzitzit under the judicial seats refer to the fringes worn around the groins of religious men to protect them from the lure of women.

This courtroom can be utilized as a focal point for discussion. It is significant that The Jewish Museum originated The G-d Project with The Liberation of G-d, and now will be showing the finale, All Rise.

Helène Aylon

Redecorating

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Central in the dialogue in Reinventing Ritual is the relationship between the decorative and the functional. A much reviled expression in modernism, the decorative or ornamental was derided by critics like Clement Greenberg and Adolf Loos as inessential, if not a crime, against the purist ideals of formalism and functionality. Feminist and other reactions to modernist hegemony in the 1970s brought the decorative back into critical favor, where it became one of the pillars of postmodernist art and design. The core idea was to invest the decorative and its objects, once dismissed as useless and meaningless, with value and purpose.

What’s interesting about the current trend is that a number of contemporary Israeli designers take the decorative a step further and invert the roles of the functional and non functional, the object and the ornament. Recent works have been inspired by the tablecloths and lace doilies that were part of the interior decoration of Israeli households once aspiring to import Old World sensibility into postwar concrete apartments. In Israel today, perhaps aware of the achievement of commercial abundance, industrial designers are reimagining the material culture of past as ritual objects for the present.

To wit, Studio Armadillo crafted Linen (2001), a sculpture of an actual-sized Sabbath table—wine bottle and ritual objects and all—out of white linen. The piece addresses how the Sabbath is sanctified by not only the traditional lighting of candles and eating of hallah, but the laying of the tablecloth, which sets the context and mood for the transition from the stress of the work week to the holy day of rest. The sculpture, when properly installed, seems to float in the air, giving off a magical, ethereal aura. It is a work of art, and would be used in Sabbath observance. This type of “conceptual Judaica” has entered The Jewish Museum collection as an affective conversation piece about Jewish ritual.

Two other works, each related to Passover, take this attention to the table covering one step further, so that a soft, delicate material can become a rigid and structurally sound form capable of performing the rituals.

Sahar Batsry’s Volcano (2007) turns the idea of a tablecloth into a soft seder plate. A white molded silicone disk serves as a “plate” supporting six etched glass dishes. The elastic properties hold in place the embedded dishes, which when used contain the symbolic foods discussed in the Haggadah. Small perforations around the plate’s perimeter recall the source inspiration in lace. The piece is flexible, so it requires a flat surface to be fully functional as a plate. Thus the piece metaphorically transforms the entire table into a plate by blurring the distinctions between object and furniture. Volcano rethinks the tripartite relationship among furniture, cover, and object: no longer a three-element combination, but all fused into one elegant object.

Talilia Abraham, also an industrial designer in Israel, created a material she calls … basically finely worked pierced metal that mimics lace. This type of unexpected hybrid of the hard and the soft can be found in a lot of jewelry and tabletop objects these days. But Abraham’s workshop hand etches the pieces to get an added delicacy, while most other examples in international design rely on laser cutting. For our interests, Abraham, as part of her large line of baskets and containers, created a few pieces specifically designed for Jewish ritual functions: one to hold the hallah, another to hold matzoh during the Passover seder.

The Passover piece, called Dantela after the type of heirloom lace that inspired it, directly endows the decorative look of lace with a new purpose. Thus the “lower” valued decorative item is “elevated” to status of ritual object to frame unleavened bread, eaten during Passover to recall liberation from slavery in Egypt. The feminist politics resolve clearly in this piece. Abraham reinvests an anonymous craft practiced by women for centuries. While these handicrafts are now largely industrialized, Abraham revives their patterns as tribute to the women of the past, and as a strong statement of her own presence and autonomy. Dantela is a feminist ritual object par excellence, literally bringing the history of women’s creativity to the Passover table.

Concluding here with a feminist piece I acknowledge that gender politics have not yet been a central part of the conversation on the blog. The next several posts should start thinking though the feminist approach that motivated many of the most important works in Reinventing Ritual.

Chance operations

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

This blog has so far explored a number of processes of reinventing. There is no one way of doing it. There is mash-up. There is hybridization. There is repurposing. There are chance operations. The subtle transformations that occur within the process of reinvention harbor creativity.

Good examples of the use of chance are the Passover (seder) plates by Israeli designers Johnathan Hopp and Sarah Auslander. The plates are made from random dinner plates found in the flea market in Jaffa, where Hopp currently maintains a studio. The assorted plates possess varied abstract, vegetal, and other patterns. Hopp and Auslander baked a decal image of a traditional seder plate directly onto each plate. The artists never knew what the result would look like when they withdrew the piece from the kiln.

Several transformations occur in these plates. First, the decal overlaps the original pattern on the plate. Sometimes the decorations blend unpredictably well, and other times the contrast is jarring. The colors and glaze of the plates also may change in the refiring. Overall, the high degree of chance and uncertainty that the process brings is satisfying for a sensibility that prefers open systems. It’s as if John Cage were to make a ritual object. I also like the punk quality of the decal, which rudely asserts itself against the domestic order of the original plate.

Surprisingly, the refiring serves a traditional ritual function as well. Baking at such high temperatures “koshers” the plate for Passover, burning off impurities and any trace of bread or other chametz. The layeredness of this piece, and the hybrid interaction of process and results, makes it an extremely rich example of the process of reinventing ritual.

The artists have created three limited edition versions of these plates over the last six years. Some are currently on view in the contemporary ceramics exhibition “Object Factory” at the Museum of Art and Design in Manhattan. The show is organized by designer Marek Cecula, and I thank him for bringing these pieces to my attention several years ago. A selection from the original edition will be on view in Reinventing Ritual, displayed as a pile to recall their origin in flea market stalls.

A large number of artists who reinvent ritual rely on chance and randomness. I previously wrote on Martin Wilner and Suzanne Treister, who both employ uncertainty. While this is not the only technique in reinventing ritual, its one of the most important, especially for those artists seeking ways to achieve the critical distance top turn a ritual object into conceptual art.

Mash-up

Monday, June 1st, 2009

The blog is a great opportunity to write in some more detail on objects in Reinventing Ritual, and to explore interpretations not fully covered in the catalogue for reasons of space or argument. I really got going on Martin Wilner’s Sephirot the other day so decided to write a separate post about its technique.

When I first viewed Sephirot in Wilner’s Pierogi Gallery solo exhibition in Feb 2008, I was at first turned off by his choice of the Star of David as the shape of the game piece. So obvious! So limiting! But as I considered the work, the familiar six pointed star ceased to function as a symbol and regained its status as an uninflected geometric shape, no more Jewish than a Chinese checkers board, or than a decorative pattern on a mosque. Jews don’t own the “Jewish star,” nor are they defined by it.

Wilner’s technique is what wins the day. It can best be called mash-up, a term popularized in recent years to refer to the overlaying and unexpected harmonizing of different voice and sound tracks in music (Danger Mouse’s mash-up of Jay Z and the Beatles might be the most famous example). The term is not often applied to the visual arts, especially Judaica. Yet the mash-up has become an important graphical strategy employed by a variety of artists interested in fusing Jewish ritual and everyday life to create new hybrid forms. The method is simple: take a Jewish symbol or image and infuse with secular content. The maneuver sheds light on the assumptions that underpin two or more systems of thought.

A good example of this is British artist Suzanne Treister’s Alchemy series. Taking alchemical symbols, including the Kabbalistic tree of life, Treister maps across them the headlines and thumbnail images from the newspaper she was reading that day, blurring distinctions between high and low, mundane and catastrophic. Her piece using the June 28, 2007 London Independent will be included in Reinventing Ritual.

The mash-up can be enacted the other way too. Artists map Jewish ideas and images to a secular organizational structure. Israeli graphic designer Dov Abramson’s Shoah: A Table of Elements carefully calibrates the relative significance and groupings of Holocaust memory by precisely locating its elements within the periodic table.

Collage and montage have been a part of modernism from the beginning. But what makes the technique of mash-up interesting is that it requires the artist to get into the structure of systems in order to see where part of one can be logically grafted to part of another. Mash-up requires both a high degree of craftsmanship and cultural sophistication. There is a fundamental irony to the process—the surprise of radical juxtaposition—but here the visual satisfaction comes not from dissonance but from synchronization. In postmodernism, juxtaposition was used the upset the viewer. In post-postmodernist mash-ups, juxtaposition sooths and assures the viewer that meaning can be created out of the vast complexity of the universe. Wilner’s piece is telling us that Jewish radicalism is itself a tradition, which should be acknowledged as the basis of legitimate personal practices.

The mash-up is not only a graphical art form, and future posts will explore this trend in Judaica, particularly in new American silver.

Welcome!

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Welcome to the blog for The Jewish Museum’s Fall 2009 exhibition Reinventing Ritual: Contemporary Art and Design for Jewish Life. The exhibition maps the 21st century avant-garde expressions of design in Jewish ritual objects, and art about Jewish ritual. We are defining Jewish ritual rather generally, to include everything from the reading of the Torah, to the observance of dietary laws, to the construction of green synagogues. Actions that perform a Jewish ceremonial function can motivate an artist to make a silver object, video projection, ceramic plate, or sculptural installation.

Fortunately, we are at a moment when the interests of design and Judaism overlap significantly. Critic Ellen Lupton recently defined design as the combination of critical thinking and human behavior. Judaism, which has been involved with making meaning in the everyday for over the millennia, has become an especially apt inspiration for many designers and artists today.

The blog is a way of returning to the online community more of the fresh and exciting news and insights gained from my own online research. When I started researching this exhibition in July 2007, I began with the Web. Typing key words like menorah, mezuzah, and seder plate into every relevant art and design website and blog, I came across some amazing objects, like Marit Meisler’s concrete mezuzah and Joe Grand’s iron pipe-fitting Hanukkah menorah. A number of these pieces have since been added to the museum’s permanent collection and/or the checklist for Reinventing Ritual.

The debate and excitement around the museum’s own commission of an amoeba-like silicone Hanukkah menorah by Karim Rashid in 2004 showed that other bloggers and design sites are hunting for cool Judaica too.

There is an active, if diffuse, conversation about the intersection of contemporary design and Jewish ritual practice. Yet, I felt that this conversation could be taken to the next level and given a platform. The exhibition itself, as well as its accompanying catalogue, co-published with Yale University Press, and public programs, will go a long way to filling the gap in this exciting and little-known area of contemporary art. Yet there are many more amazing works of contemporary Judaica appearing around the world than can be included in a single exhibition, and this blog will be a way to bring more works into the dialogue.

Over the next several months, in advance of and during the opening of the exhibition in September, this space will become a source for conversations around current issues and developments in Jewish ritual art. Some of the posts will be pegged to Jewish holidays, some will spread the word about new events or exhibitions around the world, and others will discuss the backstory of the organization and design of Reinventing Ritual itself.

Check back here frequently for semi-weekly postings. And we’d love to hear your suggestions and recommendations for new works and happenings.

Daniel Belasco
Henry J. Leir Assistant Curator