Contemporary Jewish Museum

- Wednesday, March 01, 2017

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The Contemporary Jewish Museum (The CJM) was founded in 1984 in San Francisco, California. Its current mission is to make the diversity of the Jewish experience relevant for a twenty-first century audience through exhibitions and educational programs.


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History

The Contemporary Jewish Museum was founded in 1984 and was housed in a small gallery space near San Francisco's waterfront for over two decades. In 1989, the museum initiated a planning process to address the growing community need for its programs. The result was the decision to create a more expansive and centrally located facility with increased exhibitions, an area dedicated to education, and added program areas including live music, theater, dance, literary events, and film. In June 2008, the museum opened a new 63,000 square-foot facility in downtown San Francisco.


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Exhibitions

The museum has no permanent collection. It curates and hosts a broad array of exhibitions each year.

Cary Leibowitz: Museum Show

From Generation to Generation: Inherited Memory and Contemporary Art

The Yud Video Project


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Programs

The museum's education programs include public tours, classes and workshops, film screenings, lectures and gallery talks, performances, teacher training, school visits, family tours and art making, and a teen internship program.


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Architecture

Daniel Libeskind designed the 63,000 square foot (5,900 square meter) museum, which occupies and extends the 1907 Jessie Street Power Substation, originally designed by Willis Polk. The building was completed in 2008. The museum cost $47.5 million to build.

Design

The museum's tilted, dark-blue stainless steel cube, constructed by A. Zahner Company, slices into the old substation's brick, making visible the relationship between the new and the old. Libeskind's design preserves the defining features of Polk's old building, including its brick façade, trusses, and skylights. 36 diamond-shaped windows light the top floor of the metal cube, known as the Yud, which hosts sound and performance based exhibitions. The museum's other section, a slanting rectangle known as the Chet, holds the narrow lobby, an education center, and part of an upstairs gallery.

Similar to Libeskind's Danish Jewish Museum in Copenhagen, the Contemporary Jewish Museum incorporates text into its design. Inspired by the phrase "L'Chaim," meaning "To Life," Libeskind let the Hebrew letters that spell "chai" --"chet" and "yud," inspire the form of the building.
Libeskind himself explains how he used the letters: "the chet provides an overall continuity for the exhibition and educational spaces, and the yud with its 36 windows, serves as special exhibition, performance and event space". .
"To Life", also a traditional Jewish drinking toast, refers both "to the role the substation played in restoring energy to the city after the 1906 earthquake and the Museum's mission to be a lively center for engaging audiences with Jewish culture.". The Hebrew word pardes, meaning "orchard," is embedded in the wall of the lobby.

The building also houses a multi-purpose event space, an auditorium, Wise Sons Deli, and a museum store.

Reaction

Critic Christopher Hawthorne of the Los Angeles Times praised Libeskind for a "careful balance of explosive and well-behaved forms" and gallery designs that abandon the architect's characteristic slanted walls. Likewise, David D'Arcy of the Wall Street Journal sees the museum as a laudable departure from Libeskind's previous work. He finds a "lightness to this [museum] that is rare in the architect's work" and that "relieves the surrounding district's glass and steel tourist-mall monotony."


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Management

Former Whitney Museum curator Connie Wolf was the museum's director from 1999 to 2012. Lori Starr, former executive director of the Koffler Centre of the Arts (Toronto, CN), was appointed the museum's director in 2013. In 2014, the museum hired Renny Pritikin as Chief Curator. In 2015, the museum hired Anastasia Rygle as Associate Curator.

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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