Donor Recognition and Tribute Book
L’dor va’Dor is the appropriate title of this book to honor donors and the names that appeared on plaques in a previous synagogue building which was destroyed by fire. The wooden book was fabricated in Maine by Welch USA, and I quilted and painted the fabric insert. The exterior brass binding seen below was crafted to match a border design that I developed for the main donor recognition wall. Shown here prior to being stretched and mounted into the wooden frame, this quilted silk was put together in a palette that matches the new building in which it is placed. The words ‘L’dor vador’ (Generation to generation) are painted in gold with copper accents, and embellished with small clusters of Czech beads at the ‘waistlines’ of the letters....
Read MoreFeature/ Major Donor Recognition Wall
In 2013 I was charged with designing a 17′ X 8′ curved donor recognition wall for the recently completed Chisuk Emuna Congregation in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The finished design tells the story of the congregation’s 19th Century roots in Kovno, the various buildings that housed the congregation, and the values of the synagogue. The entire donor recognition system throughout the building is anchored here as the major donors who helped create the reality of a new home are honored between the art panels. Each designed panel measures two feet across and eight feet high and is fabricated from a variegated Formica and Youghiogheny art glass. The calligraphed words of the soaring central panel are incised into Corian. The designs of the four decorative panels are based on traditional Jewish papercut art in that the imagery is all interconnected. Welch USA, a signage company in Maine, brilliantly lasercut my full size designs and installed the completed wall, which is a single aspect of the donor recognition system. Photo above by Daniel Shanken. Please note: This artwork is copyright protected and may not be reproduced without permission. Thank...
Read MoreSusan in Solo Concert at Penn State
Performing is a joy. Simply that. Here I am in a hall full of people at Penn State University Library in the middle of a vibrant give-and-take lecture/recital. I would love to slip into your community at any time and bring the wonders of Yiddish Alive with me!
Read MoreHAZAK Scholar 2015
From June 24 through July 1, 2015, I’ll be a scholar/artist in residence at the annual USCJ Camp Hazak, scheduled for the Hudson Valley Resort and Spa in Kerhonkson, New York. In addition to teaching a round of lecture/recitals on Yiddish song, I’ll be hanging an art show in the hotel lobby and will sing people through many of the visual representations of meaningful Yiddish material. This annual gathering draws active adult learners affiliated with the Conservative movement from around the country to explore arts, literature, and Jewish text and ritual in a resort setting. And what a marvelous cohort of fellow scholars, including Eric Goldman, Rabbi Moshe Edelman, Gloria Goldreich, Sheldon Horowitz, and others steeped in Jewish learning. Come to summer camp! Tempted? Click HERE for more...
Read MoreModern Yiddish Marriage Contract
A brilliant and exuberant couple, deeply involved in Yiddish folk life, offered me the opportunity to expand Jewish folk arts this year by crafting their ketubah in Yiddish and English. After writing their text, it was translated into exquisite Yiddish by Itsik Gottesman, and then the fun began! One Skype conversation pretty much brought us to a final goal: papercut art representing the seasons, heavy on tree images, four specific bold colors, and the text in a circle with the squared art around it. Particularly touching is the fact that the groom’s mother has been a papercutting student of mine over the years, so I knew as I was working, that her eyes would be processing the work in a way different from most other wedding guests! The text and design are elevated slightly from the background painting, which also features splashes of 23 K gold leaf to catch the...
Read MoreMennonite Heritage Center Folk Arts Show
I’ll have 12 works hanging in the annual folk arts show benefiting the Mennonite Heritage Center in Harleysville, PA, opening December 6, 2014 and running through the month of December. The works will range from English language illustrated quotes to Hebrew/English works taken from Pirke Avot and the Torah. Of particular interest are several intricate papercuts. In both language history and folk arts traditions, the Jewish and Pennsylvania German/Mennonite cultures have many points of intersection, and I look forward to being a featured artist among creators of Fraktur work and other lettering and paper arts....
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