Romanian Architecture Ketubah – Modern Hebrew, Yiddish, and English
Fresh from their year’s work in Romania and Moldova, this couple chose to set their ketubah with papercuts inspired by architectural details of the clock tower of Sighisoura, rural woodwork, oh, and a design from the cover of an old piece of Yiddish sheet music! Musicians, cultural researchers… what a joy to collaborate with these folks! A trilingual ketubah: modern Hebrew, English, and Yiddish. This provided a challenge to get three texts of different lengths (the Yiddish – “an inefficient language,” their translator quipped, when that text turned out to be about 100 words longer than each of the other two!) to fit neatly into identical rectangles. (And nope, I use no computer to plot this out. It’s all eyes, a straight edge, and 10th grade geometry!) The rest of the wish list included specific architectural details, French horns and basses, and colors ranging from purples and greens to touches of yellow/orange. Here you see the result, and a few of the inspirations: ...
Read MoreCongregation Shaarei Shomayim, Madison
It’s with delight that I anticipate a return to a creative and welcoming Reconstructionist Congregation Shaarei Shomayim in Madison, Wisconsin on Friday, July 20, 2013 where I’ll be a guest lecturer for the Shabbat evening dinner. I’ll be lecturing that night on contemporary Judaica, with a look back as far as the 1950’s, and I will be sharing some outstanding images of creative and inspiring ritual art … and some of the best kitsch around, starting with my favorite right now: the 1963 Bas Mitzveh Zombie Bookend. Scared me then and scares me now! The congregation meets in the Frank Lloyd Wright Unitarian Church in Madison, and having just completed work on a new synagogue building in my own community, I relish the idea of examining that most thoughtful architectural...
Read MoreConcert – Chai Point, Milwaukee
We’ll be flying high in Madison on Sunday, July 21, 2013 as the University of Wisconsin’s Mayrent Center hosts A Bisele KlezKamp, and the following morning, all-star performers Lauren Brody, Hank Sapoznik, Kurt Bjorling, Cookie Segelstein, and dance instructor Jill Gellerman will join me for a full concert with dancing at the Chai Point Senior Living Center in Milwaukee. It’s a rare and exciting gathering for which we have all been preparing for months. If you’re in the area, the concert’s at 1:30 pm at 1400 North Prospect Avenue in...
Read MoreTall Trees Ketubah
Simple, simple, simple, abstract, long and narrow, palette of warm greys, teal greens, and pinks. OK! As stripped down as this appears to be in contrast to other ketubot I’ve crafted, the ability to identify the minute details of what couples want is a necessary skill I bring to all my work. We were back and forth with many mock-ups, and after mixing up paints to match the paint chips the couple provided, we went through a ‘discovery period’ and finally settled on this image. The text is modern Hebrew, laid out in a ragged format (no justified margins) to interact with the abstracted leaves to the sides....
Read MoreFloral and Papercut Detail
This detail of the bottom of a ketubah shows the clarity of my wildflower painting and highlights the use of a tiny papercut (probably an inch and a half in diameter) to provide additional visual interest. The intricate star shape is cut out of the full sheet of paper that forms the document, and it’s backed with a deep blue painted paper. The star is further enhanced with colored pencil shading that create and in and out weaving look. This type of container for greens or plants is one that is a universal image related to a tree of life, found in religious art throughout the...
Read MoreAbstract Tallit Fringe
This couple approached me with a focused and interesting idea. They were both drawn to the message of the tsit-tsit, the fringes on the four-cornered tallit, of prayer shawl, which serve to aid in mindfulness. If you look carefully, you will see the knotted top of one of the fringes towards the upper right. The eight white lines that come from that spot separate the color blocks as they intertwine outwards from the point of origin. This is intentionally a subtle image of the knotted part of the garment. Colors were chosen by the couple. The ketubah is painted in a batik style which allowed me to drop rich colors of the couple’s choosing into areas separated by thin lines masked out at the outset. Gold leaf accents on the first two words of the document and throughout the painted tan areas add...
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