PAST EXHIBITION

The Power of Attention: Magic & Meditation in Hebrew “shiviti” Manuscript Art

On View:
Jan 24, 2017 - Dec 15, 2017
Location:
The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life
2121 Allston Way | Berkeley , CA
The Magnes
Gallery Hours:
Tuesday-Friday, 11am-4pm

Created from the early-modern period and into the present, shiviti manuscripts are found in Hebrew prayer books, ritual textiles, and on the walls of synagogues and homes throughout the Jewish diaspora. Wrestling with ways to externalize the presence of God in Jewish life, these documents center upon the graphic representation of God’s ineffable four-letter Hebrew name, the Tetragrammaton, and associate it with words and imageries that evoke mystical powers, protective energy, and angels, as well as key places and characters in Biblical and Jewish history.

Deciphering the content of a shiviti manuscript, or simply classifying it within the realm of Jewish cultural production, is a fascinating puzzle for today’s scholars. Research on these documents encompasses the analysis of biblical and prayer texts, magical formulas, visual motifs, and various modalities of material culture across the Jewish world. The very presence, and use, of the shiviti in such varied contexts as individual and communal prayer, the celebration of life cycle events, and the production of (and demand for) amulets for personal and household protection, opens new paths in the understanding of the role of text in Jewish culture. The persistence of these documents in Jewish life attests to the ongoing beliefs in the power and efficacy of magic and meditation that accompany the more normative aspects of Judaism as we know it.

The Power of Attention (2017) | Exhibition Installation Shot

The exhibition highlights a selection of shiviti manuscripts, books, amulets and textiles from The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life. The display is accompanied by new media art created especially for this project by Greg Niemeyer, as well as by resources and quotations that allow viewers to penetrate the elaborate textual and visual elements, while also experiencing the inherent power of the unique cultural objects on view.

~Francesco Spagnolo


Power of Attention: Magic & Meditation in Hebrew “shiviti” Manuscripts by magnesmuseum on Scribd







Curator
Francesco Spagnolo,

Curatorial Assistant
Zoe Lewin

Department of Art Practice, GIF Collider animation
Greg Niemeyer

Magnes Graduate Fellow 2015-2016
Yosef Rosen

Registrar
Julie Franklin

Head Preparator
Ernest Jolly

Design
Gordon Chun Design, Casey Knudsen and Andrew Stacklin

This project explores the power of textual and visual motifs in a selection of documents, manuscripts, prints, textiles, and ritual objects that are part of The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life and that were collected in South and Central Asia, North Africa, and Europe. By leveraging a multidisciplinary approach to the artifacts of Jewish culture, the exhibition integrates the collective research efforts of a team of curators, graduate and undergraduate students, and the contributions of colleagues from Jewish Studies, Art Practice, the Berkeley Center for New Media, and Digital Humanities at Berkeley.

Major funding ($100,000+) for The Magnes Collection comes from Karen and Franklin Dabby, the Walter & Elise Haas Fund, the Helzel Family Foundation, the Koret Foundation,  Peachy and Mark (Z’l) Levy, Magnes Leadership Circle, Magnes Museum Foundation, the Office of the Chancellor at the University of California, Berkeley, Barbro and Bernard Osher, and Taube Philanthropies.

Research for The Power of Attention was made possible in part by funds and resources provided by the Undergraduate Research Apprentice Program (URAP). Digital documentation and research for this project was supported by a generous grant from Digital Humanities at Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley. Support for the installation of this exhibition was underwritten by an anonymous donor


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