 |
Exhibitions
Imprints:
Selected works by Diane Samuels
September
12 -
November 3, 2002 |
 |
Diane Samuels is the
winner of the design competition for artwork to be mounted on the main
wall in the Great Hall of the Center for Jewish
History. She has created several
projects that deal with language, text and context, using the letters
of the alphabet to create alternative approaches to communication, both
between ordinary people and as a link to the Divine.
 |
The work
presented in this show includes selections from exhibitions in Germany,
Slovakia, Poland, and the United States, where Samuels has worked for
long periods with communities and individuals developing series of
interrelated pieces in a historically charged context, which she calls
"projects." These projects seek to bridge the gap of time and meaning
between the original events and the memory of those events. While they
have a highly formal character, they still have an emotional chore. |
In the course
of
researching the historical background of her work, Samuels made use of
the collections of both the Leo Baeck Institute and YIVO. Some of the
Leo Baeck Institute materials she reviewed are presented in this
exhibition as well as some background materials for other projects.
The pieces
themselves are rooted in Samuels' ongoing attempt to explore the
contemporary meaning of Jewish folktales that interrelate prayer, the
alphabet, language, creative power, and a sense of being. A theme
common to all these otherwise diverse works is the premise that the
world can be experienced as a book.
|
 |
Thus, as
Samuels
wrote in her proposal for the Great Hall commission to the Center for
Jewish History, "Insofar as we make this book together and assert
meaning to its making, to live in the world is, thus, inevitably to be
both a reader and a writer."
The
LBI Gallery is located at the Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th
Street, New York, NY, on the mezzanine level.
Gallery hours:
Tuesdays,
Wednesdays, Sundays: 11 am-5 pm; Thursdays: 11 am-8 pm.
Admission is free.
|