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Previous Shows at the American Jewish Museum"A Window to My World"A project of the Galilead Initiative
A photography exhibit of life in the north of Israel representing the work of 70 Israeli Arab & Jewish photographers
Exhibit Opening The GaliLead Initiative is a partnership of United Jewish Communities, The exhibit will be on display at the JCC until October 31, 2008. Exhibit Curator: Effy Umiel-fadida The American Jewish Museum proudly presents: Resonance, Disintegration, Transport and ReintegrationApril 28 through August 1, 2008Paintings and prints by Pittsburgh artist Juliana Morris Hebrew letterforms provide the inspiration for Resonance, large, Lambda metallic C-prints in mandela-like formations. Disintegration, Transport and Reintegration, acrylic paintings on canvas incorporating Hebrew letters and inspired by a lengthy study of Kabbalah, will be exhibited in the Fine/Perlow Weis Gallery. As a contemporary visual artist, Morris explores the intensity of the mandala in conjunction with the calligraphic qualities of Hebrew letterforms seeking to focus the attention of viewers and establish a meditative experience. The exhibition is free and open to the public,
For more information, visit the artist's websites at: http://julianamorris.blogspot.com or http://www.julianamorris.com; or contact Melissa Hiller, American Jewish Museum Director, at mhiller@jccpgh.org. Funding for this exhibit is provided by the Anna L. Caplan and Irene V. Caplan Philanthropic Fund of the United Jewish Federation Foundation. The AJM is supported in part by grants from the Allegheny Regional Asset District, the Jewish Healthcare Foundation and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. Media sponsorship is provided by WDUQ-FM. Making Hope HappenFebruary 18 • May 16, 2008When introduced into a social environment, visual art can produce effects greater than or equal to other forms of social communication. Left alone, cherished visual artifacts are no different than any other object. Works of art can have poignant and lasting social impact, but generate their meaning only when viewers start communicating with and about them. The exhibition Making Hope Happen uses the communicative potential of art to transmit a diversity of life issues faced by people throughout the Pittsburgh community. Eight regional artists were chosen for this cooperative project of the American Jewish Museum (AJM) and Jewish Family & Children's Service (JF&CS). The artists include Leslie Ansley, Matt Forrest, Leslie A. Golomb, Adam Grossi, Wendy Osher, Philip Rostek, David Stanger, and Dror Yaron. The artists have created works that interpret stories of individuals served by the JF&CS and the pieces range from site-specific wall drawings and kinetic fabric sculptures to paintings, prints, and photographs. Berger Gallery • Alex and Leona Robinson Building • 5738 Darlington Road Funding for Making Hope Happen is provided by grants from the Jewish Healthcare Foundation, Reed Smith LLP, Anna L. Caplan and Irene V. Caplan Endowment Fund of the United Jewish Federation Foundation, The Fine Foundation, Staunton Farm Foundation and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic. Body Maps - The Bambanani Women of Capetown, South Africa
February 11 • April 18, 2008Body Maps are artworks created by a group of women, The Bambanani Womens Group, based in Cape Town, South Africa. The Bambanani Women were invited to tell their stories through a community outreach program initiated by the AIDS and Society Research Unit of the University of Cape Town (ASRU) and Médecins Sans Frontières. This program began to document the lives of this group of HIV+ women who were given access to drug therapies. With the help of Cape Town-based artist, Jane Soloman, the participants created Body Maps- life size images tracing the contours of their bodies that visualize the virus and articulate each individual history. Drawn on life-sized panels of butcher paper, "body maps" are made by tracing two bodies: one of the artist and one of a partner. The artist then goes about filling in the traced bodies with images, words, patterns, designs and scars. A type of art therapy, the maps are used in conjunction with group therapy, photography and writing in order to help each woman deal with her HIV-positive status. Body Maps clearly pull viewers into a direct dialogue with South Africa's epidemic AIDS problem. One is asked to identify with individual women on a highly personal, emotive basis. Ultimately, the images of hope and beauty are used as qualitative research tools as well as instruments for narrative therapy and treatment literacy programs. For the AJM, this exhibit is an extension of its mission and ongoing collaboration with the Jewish Healthcare Foundation, by using art to engage crucial universal issues. Art is therapeutic and necessary in our lives, and this exhibit really does exemplify that concept. The exhibition will be on view at both the AJM and the offices of the Jewish Healthcare Foundation. Funding for this exhibit is provided by the Anna L. Caplan and Irene V. Caplan Philanthropic Fund of the United Jewish Federation Foundation and the A.W. Mellon Educational and Charitable Trust Fund of The Pittsburgh Foundation. Additional funding is provided by the Falk Foundation. The AJM is supported in part by grants from the Allegheny Regional Asset District, the Jewish Healthcare Foundation and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. Media sponsorship is provided by WDUQ-FM. Nazi Persecution of Homosexuals 1933 - 1945
November 18, 2007 - January 12, 2008 From 1933 to 1945, Nazi leaders waged a ruthless campaign against people deemed "enemies of the state." Hitler's regime, driven by a racist ideology, carried out the mass destruction of six million Jews in the Holocaust and implemented a murderous program of "race hygiene" to cleanse German society of "foreign-blooded" Roma (Gypsies), carriers of hereditary diseases, and "aberrant" social behaviors, including homosexuality. The Nazis did not seek to exterminate all German homosexuals but endeavored to change their "erroneous" sexual behavior through forced "re-education" or, failing that, isolate their "contagion" from society. To view the online exhibition developed by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, please visit, http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/hsx/Of the Painted Image | Miriam Cabessa, Seth Cohen, Peter Rostovsky Of the Painted Image was developed with the hope that through the encounter with the exceptional work of leading contemporary painters, viewers can develop a greater and more expansive understanding of what it is to be a contemporary Jewish artist and what we envision when we say Jewish art. This inaugural exhibition included paintings by New York City based artists Miriam Cabessa, Seth Cohen and Peter Rostovsky. To learn more about the artists please take a moment to visit their websites:
Seasons | The Fabric Art of Tina Rieger June 4 • June 29, 2007 This memorial exhibition will display over 20 works by fabric artist Tina Rieger, including two chuppahs (wedding canopies) made for her children's wedding, a technicolored Joseph's coat and many other beautiful fabric pieces that celebrate a diversity of Jewish themes.
The Forgotten Photographs: The Work of Paul Goldman 1943-1961 The Forgotten Photographs: The Work of Paul Goldman from 1943-1961, from the collection of Spencer M. Partrich, displays over 100 historic images documenting Eretz-Israel during the final years of the British Mandate and Israel's struggle for survival during its first thirteen years. Goldman's privileged access, first as a British Army member and later as a journalist befriended by Israeli leaders, offers a front row perspective of personal moments at a time of sweeping, historic change.
The exhibition included 30 photographs and accompanying text interviews which provided viewers with poignant portraits of individuals that have been affected by or have perpetrated acts of genocide, specifically engaging the experiences and histories of Bosnia, Darfur, and Rwanda. Please stay connected with local efforts by visiting the Pittsburgh Darfur Emergency Coalition's web site - www.pittsburghdarfur.org.
Body: In Diaspora was a community art project that brought together Somali and Jewish refugees for dialogue on their emigration experiences and their process of assimilation in a new society. The archives of their conversations along with biographies of the participants through video and prints are components for this new installation work by artist Maritza Mosquera. The American Jewish Museum supported this project and exhibition.
The exhibition included over 20 exceptional paintings by acclaimed New York artist Joan Linder, providing viewers with touching depictions of the events and memories held within the walls of her grandparent's apartment at 118-60 Metropolitan Avenue in Queens, New York. 118-60 Metropolitan Avenue | Paintings by Joan Linder was presented in its entirety for the first time at the American Jewish Museum and we are proud to have mounted such a comprehensive exhibition of this important work. Partners:
General support for the American Jewish Museum is provided by the Allegheny Regional Asset District, the Anna L. Caplan & Irene V. Caplan Philanthropic Fund of the United Jewish Federation Foundation, the Jewish Healthcare Foundation and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. Media sponsorship is provided by WDUQ 90.5 FM. | ||||||||||||