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Item: Model of a Synagogue



DC FieldValueLanguage
contributor.authorBarnett Newman-
date.accessioned2005-04-08-
date.available2005-04-08-
date.issued2005-04-08-
identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1964/475-
descriptionNewman based his steel sculpture Zim Zum I (1969) on the windows of his synagogue model, first presented at The Jewish Museum in the 1963 exhibition Recent American Synagogue Architecture. The design is an eclectic fusion of modern architecture, Jewish mysticism, and baseball - arguably the most popular form of secular 'religion' in American culture. The congregation is seated in dugouts. Newman replaces the traditional bimah (pulpit) with a pitcher’s mound in the center of the sanctuary. In his statement, Newman refers to makom (“the dwelling place” - a mystical term for God) and zimzum: “The synagogue is more than just a House of Prayer. It is a place, Makom, where each man can be called up to stand before the Torah to read his portion…Here in this synagogue, each man sits, private and secluded in the dugouts, waiting to be called, not to ascend a stage, but to go up on the mound where, under the tension of that 'Tzim-Tzum' that created light and the world, he can experience a total sense of his own personality before the Torah and His Name.”en
format.extent28949 bytes-
format.mimetypeimage/jpeg-
language.isoen_US-
subjectJudaismen
subjectKabbalahen
subjectContemporary Arten
subjectBarnett Newmanen
subjectBaseball-
subjectSynagogue-
titleModel of a Synagogueen
typeImageen
subject.typeImage-
Appears in Collections: 1. Kabbalah and Contemporary Art

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