about us | contact | help 

Modiya  > Kabbalah  > 1. Kabbalah and Contemporary Art    ]

Item: Fashions for the Millennium: Protective Amulet Costume



DC FieldValueLanguage
contributor.authorBerkowitz, Michael-
date.accessioned2005-03-17T04:13:42Z-
date.available2005-03-17T04:13:42Z-
date.issued1999-
identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1964/426-
description"Most recently, [Berkwowitz has] begun creating "Protective Amulet Costumes", covering costumes of my own design with religious texts. These are meant to be seen as objects, in and of themselves. They will also, however, be used in performance pieces. The imagery in [his] work is drawn from many sources: world religions, popular culture, literature, psychology and myth, all of which serve to touch the collective soul. These images are wedded to the written invocations, which give them focus and context. In Judaism, words themselves are believed to have great power. After all, words were the tools used by God to create the universe. As we arrive at the millennium, the ideas and images contained in this body of work take on new meaning and urgency."en
description.abstractPhotograph of "Fashions for the New Millenium: Protective Amulet Costume," 1999. Michael Berkowitz, born, 1952. Originally designed as a bridal gown for the artist’s wife, the costume features red text on white satin.en
format.extent18274 bytes-
format.mimetypeimage/jpeg-
language.isoen_US-
subjectJudaismen
subjectKabbalahen
subjectFashionen
subjectKimonoen
subjectContemporary Art-
subjectMichael Berkowitz-
subjectBridal Gown-
titleFashions for the Millennium: Protective Amulet Costumeen
typeImageen
subject.typeImage-
Appears in Collections: 1. Kabbalah and Contemporary Art

FashionsfortheMillenium_v3.jpg
30Kb JPEG

Show simple item record



There is no mediation info available for this item.


Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1964/426

All items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.

DSpace Software Copyright © 2002-2004 MIT and Hewlett-Packard - Feedback