London Calling

5 May
2013

JW3_004 JC programming_Advert_320w x 260h mm_8

WANTED:

Storytellers and actors and writers and poets
and producers and musicians and comedians and
philosophers and yogis and gastronomes and
visual artists and performance artists and martial
artists and promoters and protagonists and
provocateurs and erudite educators and lyrical
linguists and fitness fanatics and spielers and
songsters and DJs and dancers and mixologists
and magicians and jugglers and japesters and
family entertainers and social commentators and
social activists and social satirists and…

This September we will open the doors to JW3 – a brand new, state-of-the-art, Jewish community and culture venue on the Finchley Road, London NW3.

To say we’re excited is an understatement.

Alongside the plans for our own events and activities, we’re also now talking to a wide range of extremely
talented people who are eager to showcase their ideas at JW3.

If you would like to partner with us on a commercial basis, and your ambitions match ours, we should talk.

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Can Boundaries Cause Unity?

Two exhibits ask whether eruvs speak to our essential beings or just replicate the conditions of our wanderings

By Sarah Lehat for Tablet

eruv_avnerbarhama_040713_620px

The works in the Yale exhibit are indicative of Shabbat’s choreography, containing as many variations as there are artists on the eruvic theme. Daniel Bauer and Avner Bar Hama each photograph the contested borders of eruv lines crisscrossing Palestinian-Israeli territories, recalling gang culture and turf wars of simultaneously global and personal magnitude. Ellen Rothenberg riffs on the eruv’s units of measurement—tefachim, or handbreadths, and amot, or cubits—tracing a simple black line along her skin, a snapshot of the human scale at the source of halachic terminology. There is Eliott Malkin’s hyper-conceptualized laser eruv, Mel Alexenberg’s exploration of the individual versus the collective, and Suzanne Silver’s depiction of eruv literature taking on a Kafkaeqsue life of its own. A series of exquisite photographs by exhibit curator Margaret Olin highlights the bricolage quality of the eruv’s amateur partitions: Telephone poles become columns to which are affixed the barest of horizontal wire architraves, which reveal how building an eruv can be an act of conceptual or performance art, simulating Christo-like contortions that test how much one can conceal an object while still maintaining its identity.

Read the full article here.

You are invited to the third annual conference of the Jewish Studies Center at Baruch College:

“Jewish Arts and Identity in the Contemporary World”

The Jewish Studies Center at Baruch College is hosting a conference to explore the portrayal of Jewish identity in theater, music and visual arts. The “Jewish Arts and Identity in the Contemporary World” conference will feature panel discussions with directors, Off-Broadway actors, composers, artists, museum educators and college professors. Audio and video clips of performances will be shown. Carol Zemel, Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art History at York University, will give the keynote address. Dr. Zemel was a Fellow at the Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania; completed a book, Graven Images: Visual Culture and Modern Jewish History; and is co-founder and co-director of Project Mosaica, a web-based exploration of Jewish cultural expression in the arts.

WHEN: May 7, 12 PM-8:30 PM (Please see the times for each panel and the keynote address below)

WHERE: 55 Lexington, Engelman Recital Hall, Baruch Performing Arts Center
Entrance is on East 25th Street, between Lexington and Third Avenue
This event is free and open to the public. Please make reservations (note the panel you are interested in attending) at: jewish.studies.center@baruch.cuny.edu

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Invito001-smVenice Center of Jewish Art
Golden Ghetto Award

Hall and Garden by the Hostaria del Ghetto
Cannaregio 2873 / c. 30121 Venezia

Sunday 19 May 2013 to
Wednesday 29 May 2013

by Elke Reva Sudin

This weekend, a retrospective of the works of Gary Baseman titled The Door Is Always Open, opened, at the Skirball Cultural Center. ‘Door’ recreates the artists’ childhood home filled with famous Baseman characters and Jewish subjects peppered about.

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Gary Baseman’s characters seated at a Shabbat Table.

Baseman has had a long and successful career with iconic characters and big clients to fill his CV, but recent works are the first time he is dealing directly with his Jewish identity and the value that it holds for him now. This exhibition represents a major step in the artist coming to terms with his past and the many travels that he has taken exploring his art and identity.

His work uses cute characters typical of animation to discuss serious issues. The paintings are imaginative and representational, with renderings of characters that look like they came straight out of a stuffed animal collection, except with an adult seriousness and more bodily fluids. Baseman’s work is indicative of the West Coast art scene identified as Pop-Surrealism or Lowbrow Art. This Los Angeles stylistic homecoming marks an appropriate meta commentary on the work’s themes.

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Deadline for final submissions: July 1, 2013

HaLapid: Journal of the Society for Crypto-Judaic Studies (SJCS) is seeking artistic submissions in the form of paintings, drawings, photographs, etc. to feature on the cover of its next volume. We invite artists’ submissions on a variety of themes pertaining to crypto-Judaism, crypto-Jews, and/or crypto-Jewishness. Artists dealing with aspects of the Sephardic experience or crypto-Jews in the American Southwest are also welcome. If you have a collection of crypto-Jewish themed art, we will likely want to feature an article of you and your art in HaLapid as well.

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Lili-BK1KOLORES GALLERY @ KKMI
A Doorway to the Sephardi Neshamah
Contemporary Art

Featured Artists: Liliana “LIFE” Ines-Friesel (Elkouss), Daniel Elazar Ashkenazi, Laurence Salzmann

GRAND OPENING

Thursday
23 Iyar 5773 ~ May 2, 13
6:30 P.M.

Vino and Aperetivos will be served

Kahal Kadosh Mikveh Israel
44 North Fourth Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
215.922.5446

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An informal Salon evening where artists can share their work in a friendly atmosphere and receive feedback.

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Salon Evenings: April 21 and May 19, 2013
7:30-9:30pm
542 W 112th St, Apt 4K
New York, NY
RSVP by April 14: timnab@gmail.com

Friends are extremely welcome, and anyone who is interested in coming as a participant or to be in the audience can join us. In addition, if you are not yourself an artist, but know of a piece of art which you would like to present through the prism of your Jewish identity, we welcome this as well.

We are looking for artists who can articulate a connection to their Jewish identity and explain how artwork connects to these themes. Jewish themes are as varied as the people who identify as Jews, so this could be as specific as connecting to a Jewish source, or as broad as feeling part of a community, or living your lives by values you associate with your Judaism.

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