Blog this image
Copy this text to insert this image into your blog:
<script
src= "http://www.thejewishmuseum.org/onlinecollection/remoteImage.php?objectid=5404"
type="text/javascript" language="Javascript">
</script>
Sukkah Model
Dining Room with Walls as Projections of Chairs and Table (Study for Sukkah)
Allan Wexler (American, b. 1949)Not on view
Keywords: Postmodern Art , Sukkot
Collection Area: Ceremonial Art
The use of simple, unfinished wood reflects Wexler's interest in everyday materials to create objects of spiritual significance. His interest in temporary architecture made him an idea choice for designing a sukkah that was commissioned by Ronnie and Samuel Heyman for the museum's former sculpture court in 1988. It was this commission that led Wexler to explore the art and architecture of dining, a subject that continues to interest the artist as reflect in his Indoor Sukkah installation for the "Too Jewish?" exhibition. In the artist's own words: "This little building for dining needs to balance on a fine edge between many forces. Between Heaven and Earth, sky and ground, freedom and slavery, God and Man, the Housed and the Homeless, between roots and branches."