Sunday, December 18, 2011

Paper Tefillah series:
"Barchu"


I shared this papercut with the Saturday morning minyan at Temple Ahavat Shalom this past Shabbat, and I'm pleased to share it with you here as well. (You can click the image to see it larger.)

This is my "Barchu," a papercut based on the Jewish call to worship. It's the first of the formal prayers of a contemporary Jewish service, the moment when we stop praying as as individuals and come together as a community. Our cross-talk, the silent reading of psalms, all of the business from outside vanish as the service leader calls out the first line, and the community responds with the second. This call-and-response is represented in the larger speech bubbles made up cut-up pieces of the prayer itself, showing how our private moments become part of a larger communal connection.

Here are two close-up details from the piece:


If you want to see it in person, you'll have to come to the opening at Temple Israel in Memphis on January 10.

3 comments:

  1. Your work looks fantastic! I am a musician and educator at Rodef Shalom Congregation in Pittsburgh, PA.

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