GEORGE L. MOSSE/LAURENCE A. WEINSTEIN CENTER FOR JEWISH STUDIES SEVENTEENTH ANNUAL Greenfield Summer Institute Jews and the Arts July 10 14, 2016 University of Wisconsin Madison
The arts have been an important form of expression for Jews since antiquity. From the psalms and the design of the mishkan in antiquity to Biblical and Talmudic writing; from medieval illuminated manuscripts to Yiddish song; from the painting of Chagall and Lichtenstein to the museums and monuments commemorating Jewish culture Jews have been a vibrant force in the world of the arts. The 2016 Greenfield Summer Institute will explore Jews relationship with the arts in all of their forms, and will address the question of whether there is a distinctly Jewish approach to the arts. Speakers will address the visual, plastic, and performative forms from the ancient world to contemporary times, and will consider how a Jewish approach to the arts from the ban on graven images, to Jewish influences on Christian and Islamic art, to the notion of tikkun olam has influenced the contemporary world. Space is limited, so please register early. Can t make it for the whole Institute? You can register for each day s lectures and events separately! Registration deadline: July 10, 2016 Online registration: jewishstudies.wisc.edu/greenfield The Greenfield Summer Institute is sponsored by the Mosse/ Weinstein Center for Jewish Studies through the generosity of Larry and Roslyn Greenfield. 2 jewishstudies.wisc.edu/greenfield
SUNDAY, JULY 10 5:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Arrival and appetizers at Fluno Center (601 University Avenue) 6:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Opening Dinner Fluno Center Welcome and opening remarks by Simone Schweber, Director of the Center for Jewish Studies All lectures will be held at Grainger Hall, 975 University Avenue, unless otherwise noted. MONDAY, JULY 11 Productions of Identity 8:00 a.m. 9:00 a.m. Check in and pick up information packets 9:00 a.m. The ARC of Melissa Shiff s ART Melissa Shiff (University of Toronto) For seventeen years, artist Melissa Shiff has focused exclusively on an exploration of the intersection of Judaism and art. In this talk, Shiff will speak about the intersection of performance art, art activism, and ritual by lecturing about three of her reinvented Jewish rituals. 10:45 a.m. Contemporary Art and Jewish Experience Leah Kolb (Madison Museum of Contemporary Art) This talk will examine a number of contemporary Jewish artists who create work that, while rooted in recognizably Jewish subjects, transcends the specificity of a Jewish 608-890-3572 I greenfield@cjs.wisc.edu 3
experience to reflect on broader, more universal themes. The focus will be on artists who mobilize time-based media to explore notions of historical and collective memory, the psychological weight of oppression, and the slipperiness of (political) borders. 1:30 p.m. The Art of Trash: Jewish Artists and Scrap Materials Jonathan Z. S. Pollack (Madison Area Technical College) The trade in scrap, second-hand, and surplus materials has been an industry associated with American Jewish entrepreneurs since the late 19th century. Scrap dealers founded Jewish communities, large and small, in the industrial Great Lakes area and across the country. Reflecting the connections between Jews and scrap, Jewish artists like Louise Nevelson and Wallace Berman created influential works of art composed of scrap materials. In a broader sense, repurposing scrap into art is part of a larger Jewish tradition of making do with available materials. 3:15 p.m.- 5:30 p.m. The Jewish Impact on American Popular Music in the Twentieth Century (location TBD) Ben Sidran (Jazz musician and producer) Musician Ben Sidran will give a talk and performance on the Jewish influence on American popular music. TUESDAY, JULY 12 The Business of Collecting 9:00 a.m. Munich Was Radiant: The Fate of the Nazi-Looted Collections of Alfred Pringsheim and Michael Berolzheimer Barbara C. Buenger (University of Wisconsin-Madison) This talk discusses two Jewish private collectors, Alfred Pringsheim (father-in-law to Thomas Mann) and Michael 4 jewishstudies.wisc.edu/greenfield
Berolzheimer, and how they made vital contributions to the city s cultural and intellectual life. It looks at how new research has recently illuminated the full story of looting and still-incomplete recovery of works from these collections and helps us consider their histories within the larger context of Nazi art looting and restitution history. 10:45 a.m. Rudolf Mosse: Businessman, Art Collector, Philanthropist John Tortorice (University of Wisconsin-Madison) This lecture examines efforts to trace and restitute the art collection of Rudolf Mosse that was expropriated by the Nazis in 1933, and dispersed. Rudolf Mosse was largely responsible for inventing the economic and technical framework of the modern newspaper. His art collection, housed in the Mosse Palais in Berlin, was the largest private art collection in Berlin at the turn of the twentieth century. He was the grandfather of George L. Mosse. 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. Exploring the Chazen Museum of Art (750 University Avenue) Film, Woman in Gold (optional) Participants will attend a docent tour of the Chazen Museum and observe the Herbert Kliebard Judaica Collection on display. The docents will introduce visitors to both representative and unusual examples from the Chazen s art collection, including art from ancient times to the 21st century. This will include a visit to Three Centuries of Japanese Prints from the Chazen Collection, a temporary exhibition that displays woodblock prints rarely on view. Maria Saffiotti Dale (Curator of Paintings, Sculpture, and Decorative Arts at the Chazen Museum) will greet 608-890-3572 I greenfield@cjs.wisc.edu 5
Greenfield guests and answer questions about a selection of the Herbert Kliebard Judaica Collection. This collection includes objects of Jewish ritual art of predominantly European origin dating from the 17th to the 20th centuries. WEDNESDAY, JULY 13 Picturing Experience 9:00 a.m. The Aliyah: A Photographer s Perspective on the Raw Emotion of Immigration Stephanie Lifshutz (University of Wisconsin-Madison) This presentation explores Lifshutz s series of photographs documenting her family s immigration to Israel in August 2015, and the complexity surrounding the subject through her point of view as a Jewish woman, a photographer, and also someone left behind. 10:45 a.m. Conversational Art and the Jews The Case of Adi Nes Philip Hollander (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Practitioners of Conversational Art view art as something forged in conversation with a larger reservoir of preexistent images, concepts, and ideas, and best understood through attention to these conversations. This talk will explore Israeli photographer Adi Nes work within the context of ongoing conversations with Western painting and photography, Israeli history, and the Hebrew Bible. 1:30 p.m. The Rabbinical Subject and the Female Artist Maya Balakirsky Katz (Touro College) This talk examines a singular series of life portraits of a Hasidic rebbe rendered by artist Gertrud Zuckerkandl before the Second World War. Zuckerkandl cast new light 6 jewishstudies.wisc.edu/greenfield
on the modern rabbinical portrait and her portraits reveal not only a fascinating story of Hasidic cosmopolitanism in the 1930s, but the challenges that female Jewish artists faced at the time in Vienna. 5:30 p.m. Closing Dinner Steenbock s on Orchard at the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery 330 N. Orchard Street THURSDAY, JULY 14 Graphic Arts: A Novel Approach 9:00 a.m. Jewish American Comic Art Paul Buhle (Brown College) From Yiddish comic strips to comic books, and from underground comix and alternative comics to cutting edge comic art today, Jewish American artists have determinedly raised issues of poverty, class, gender, peace, and war for audiences across the generations. Paul Buhle will describe sections of this history, including sections that overlap with his own history in comics and the peculiar story of Wisconsin comic art. 10:45 a.m. Judaism and the Graphic Book: The Case of Spinoza Steven Nadler (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Ben Nadler Steven Nadler and his son, Ben Nadler, will discuss their book Cogito: The Wondrous Beginnings of Modern Philosophy (Princeton University Press) and the creative process of illustrating a graphic history of philosophy, Jewish philosopher Baruch Spinoza in particular, in the seventeenth century. 608-890-3572 I greenfield@cjs.wisc.edu 7
REGISTRATION/PAYMENT INFORMATION Fees > The fee for the Greenfield Summer Institute is $195 for all programming, including the opening and closing dinners. Registration received after June 25 will be subject to a fee increase. For information about programming or kosher meal options, please contact the Center for Jewish Studies at 608-890-3572. A la carte pricing > $50 to attend lectures and afternoon activities on Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday $35 to attend lectures on Thursday morning $30 opening OR closing dinner for Greenfield registrants $30 to attend opening OR closing dinner for those not attending Greenfield (i.e., additional friends and family) Registration Online > Participants are encouraged to register and pay online with a credit card at jewishstudies. wisc.edu/greenfield. Registration By Mail > You may still register by mail using the form on the next page and mailing it to the address below with a check for $195, payable to UW-Madison. CALS Conference Services 640 Babcock Drive, Madison, WI 53706 FAX: 608-262-5088 For registration questions, call 608-263-1672 or email conference@cals.wisc.edu Please be sure to register only once! Confirmation of your registration, as well as information about the lectures, housing, specific events, and parking will be sent to you after your registration has been processed. This information will be sent via e-mail if you register online, and via US Mail if you register via mail. Parking > Underground parking is available in Grainger Hall. Information about access to parking will be sent after your registration has been received. Lodging > The Institute has blocked rooms at several nearby hotels. A list of hotels, with information about discounted rates, is available on our website and will also be sent after your registration has been received. 8 jewishstudies.wisc.edu/greenfield
PLEASE CHOOSE AN ENROLLMENT OPTION Early Bird Cost Cost after 6/25/2016 # of People Subtotal h Complete Package $195 $225 x $ h A la carte options Event Sunday opening dinner $30 $35 x $ Monday lectures & events $50 $60 x $ Tuesday lectures & events $50 $60 x $ Wednesday lectures $50 $60 x $ (does not include dinner) Wednesday closing dinner $30 $35 x $ Thursday lectures $35 $40 x $ Total amount enclosed: $ Continue registration on next page >
Name (s) Guest names (if applicable) Address Phone E-mail h I would NOT like to be included in the 2016 Greenfield Contact Sheet. Please note any special assistance you require due to dietary restrictions, visual and/or hearing impairments, or mobility limitations. For more information: Phone: 608-890-3572 / E-mail: greenfield@cjs.wisc.edu / jewishstudies.wisc.edu/greenfield
608-890-3572 I greenfield@cjs.wisc.edu 11
University of Wisconsin Madison Center for Jewish Studies 4223 Mosse Humanities Building 455 N. Park Street Madison, WI 53706 608-890-3572 greenfield@cjs.wisc.edu jewishstudies.wisc.edu Seventeenth Annual Greenfield Summer Institute Jews and the Arts