Yiddish in Pittsburgh

Posted by on May 8, 2012 in News, Upcoming Events | 2 comments

Yiddish in Pittsburgh

On June 3, 2012, Lauren Brody and I will  settle in at the JCC in Pittsburgh for a pair of concerts designed to complement the Jewish Museum’s exhibit on the artists who illustrated the works of Nobel Laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer.   At 10 am we will bring a menagerie of animals (in song only!), props, costumes, and sing-along lyrics to a family concert that will recreate aspects of Singer’s world and bring some of his stories to life.  Then at 3 pm, we’ll be on the stage for a full concert with accordion and piano as well as our blended voices to highlight some of Singer’s works for an adult audience.  While some of his illustrators had Eastern European Jewish roots, many of the later illustrators, chosen by the publishers, did not share Singer’s worldview, and the artwork takes the stories into another realm.   How delicious to be learning new songs to share with new audiences and weaving visual art and music together in the process! Great thanks to PennPAT  and the PA Humanities Council for supporting this programming with grants.    ...

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Vivid Papercut Ketubah

Posted by on May 2, 2012 in Ketubah Art, News, Papercuts | 0 comments

Vivid Papercut Ketubah

The exuberance of this couple is reflected in their concise wish-list for their ketubah:  “Bright!  A circular text with papercuts and a tree and two doves and… whatever you think!  Bright and colorful!”  We talked to flesh out some more specifics, but basically I was guided by a feeling of their energy and relationship.  So here’s the finished product, which brought them to tears and had them each ask me how I had climbed into their minds to craft exactly what they’d hoped for!

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Calla Lily Papercut Ketubah

Posted by on May 2, 2012 in Ketubah Art, News, Papercuts | 0 comments

Calla Lily Papercut Ketubah

The bride and groom approached me with a desire to develop an elaborate and meaningful papercut design for their ketubah, and with just that much information and their short list of images – calla lilies, menorah, chai, a tree of life symbol, their Hebrew names, and a passage from Song of Songs – I set to work!  I chose a domed shape for the text and a curved top to the entire piece to soften the look, as well as to connect to some historic ketubot, and tapped some traditional patterns from Arabic tilework as the lacy network to hold the papercut together.  Hours and hours of cutting, and about two dozen blades left me with a happily tingling forefinger and a carpet of confetti!  The couple chose to frame the ketubah by first mounting it on museum grade (non-reflective) Plexiglas, for the ceremony, that will eventually give the impression that the papercut ketubah is floating above the backing mat once the framing is complete. The lettering around the perimeter reads, “Ani l’dodi v’dodi li” in Hebrew across the top, and the English translation, “I am my beloved’s and my beloved is mine,” wrapping around the bottom.  On either side are the bride and groom’s names in Hebrew.  The engineering challenge in crafting a papercut is to make sure everything stays attached, so particular care is taken to plan connections before a knife touches the paper. Calla Lily Papercut Ketubah    ...

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Illumination demonstration, Lafayette College

Posted by on Mar 28, 2012 in News, Susan at work | 0 comments

Illumination demonstration, Lafayette College

In March, 2012, I gave lecture/demonstration titled “The Improbable History of Sarajevo Hagaddah” at Lafayette College in Easton, PA. In large ‘smart’ lecture hall, and could take advantage of document camera to project lettering, gilding, and design work as gave students, faculty, and community members glimpse of how work was manuscripts in 14th Century! http://www.buy-online-watches.com/ https://www.replicawatchesguide.com/ https://www.best-watches.cc/ https://www.swissreplicas.to www.replica-watch.org http://www.123celebrities.com/ www.expresssgiftz.com...

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YIddish in the Nutshell: The Stories and Songs that Shaped the Wild Things!

Posted by on Mar 9, 2012 in News, Upcoming Events | 0 comments

YIddish in the Nutshell: The Stories and Songs that Shaped the Wild Things!

Sunday, April 15 starting at 3:00 pm, the Haverford Township Free Library will swell with the traditional sounds of Yiddish song and the Klezmer clarinet as Susan Leviton accompanied by Ken Ulansey bring Maurice Sendak‘s childhood neighborhood, family, and influences into new focus. The library was chosen as one of 15 across the nation to host a traveling exhibit from the Rosenbach Museum, home of the Sendak archive.  The program will be an interactive, intergenerational Wild Rumpus with costumes, props, and sing-along materials, so if you are anywhere close by, make tracks to Haverford for a truly Sendakian afternoon! Here’s the link to see everything at the library about the exhibit, which is titled “In the Nutshell: The Worlds of Maurice Sendak.  The exhibit runs through April 20, 2012....

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