Objects of Jewish Faith Inspire Objects of Art in Kansas Gallery

KANSAS CITY STAR
By Elizabeth Kirsch

Asheer Akram and Linda Lighton collaborated to create this steel and porcelain fixture, “Everlasting Light" ( 2011), inspired by a 200-year-old bronze synangogue chandelier in the Judaica collection of Michael Klein.
KANSAS - A yad, or Torah pointer, inspired three artists to create wildly different works. Marcus Cain, curator of the Epsten Gallery, suggested an invitational exhibit in which artists of different ages, backgrounds, religions and nationalities were instructed to “go into a religious artifact collection and see if something speaks to you.”  In art parlance, a “super-object” is a work that refuses to be pigeonholed within the traditional framework of art criticism. A room full of such objects is now installed in “Between Thee & Me: Artists Respond to the Judaica Collection of Michael Klein” at the Epsten Gallery. “Between Thee & Me: Artists Respond to the Judaica Collection of Michael Klein” continues through Sept. 4 at the Epsten Gallery at Village Shalom, 5500 W. 123rd St., Overland Park. [link]

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