This fall I opened a new exhibition at
The Temple Museum of Jewish Art, Religion, and Culture in Cleveland called "
Men of Steel and Women of Valor," and I've been
keeping you posted here (and on
Facebook, and
Twitter, and
Instagram)
but as the exhibition comes to a close it seemed appropriate to put
everything up in one place – right here on my blog. (You can also read about it in
The Forward or the
Cleveland Jewish News.)
|
Standing in the gallery – in my Superboy shirt, of course. |
At the heart of the exhibition is a series of large portraits made of
cut-up comic books featuring Superman and Lois Lane, Daredevil and
Elektra, the Fantastic Four — transformed into the biblical patriarchs
and matriarchs, as well as modern figures. These portraits are a nod to
the Jewish custom of inviting guests into one’s sukkah during the fall
festival of Sukkot, since we opened the exhibition just before Sukkot. In fact, Rabbi Shawna and I went to
The Temple-Tifereth Israel for a
Paper Midrash weekend to coincide with the exhibition, praying and teaching and creating all weekend with the community.
|
Rabbi Shawna and I led a bunch of papercutting workshops during our Paper Midrash weekend |
|
We led a number of projects to create new art for the walls of the TTTI sukkah |
|
Teaching in "the birthplace of Superman" |
The exhibition focused heavily on Superman, created in Cleveland in
the 1930s by two Jews, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster — portraits of whom
are included in the show, made of cut-up Superman comics from the past
90 years. You can see the whole show online in
this PDF catalog, or check out the pix below.
|
"Abraham: Ignition" is made with cut-up Fantastic Four comics featuring patriarch Reed Richards |
|
"Sarah: Forward" is made with cut-up Fantastic Four comics featuring matriarch Sue Storm Richards |
|
"Isaac: Hurt" is made of comics featuring blind vigilant super hero Daredevil |
|
"Rebekah: Someone" is made of comics featuring ninja badass Elektra |
|
"Jacob:Disguise" is made of Clark Kent comics (and a little bit of Loki) |
|
"Leah: Suppress" is made of comics featuring Lois Lane (and so is her sister) |
|
"Rachel: Answers" is made of comics featuring Lois Lane (and so is her sister) |
It also included portraits of Golda Meir, Israel’s first
female prime minister, and Sally Priesand, America’s first female rabbi.
The portraits share the walls with landscapes of Jerusalem, stories of
fire and water and cloud, and explorations of the Mishnah — all made out
of cut-up comic books.
|
“Siegel: Chutzpah” is a portrait of Jerry Siegel, the writer who co-created Superman. Siegel is represented with cut-up comics featuring some of my favorite Superman writers from the past 90 years. |
|
“Shuster: Action” is a portrait of Joe Shuster, the artist who co-created Superman, Shuster is represented with cut-up comics featuring some of my favorite Superman artists from the past 90 years. |
|
“Priesand: My Turn” is a portrait of the first woman to be ordained as a rabbi in the United States, Sally Priesand. |
|
“Meir: Fight” is a portrait of Golda Meir, the first woman to serve as Prime Minister of Israel. |
You can see the whole show online in
this PDF catalog. For more information on our residencies and workshops, visit
PaperMidrash.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment