Beginning November 8, The Jewish Museum will launch a new series of exhibitions focused on individual works in its world-renowned collection. Over the course of seven exhibitions, from 2013 to 2017, The Jewish Museum's curators will explore objects that highlight the breadth and diversity of the collection, ranging from an iconic Alfred Stieglitz photograph to a Moroccan wedding costume and a painting of a Passover seder by Carnegie Prize-winner Nicole Eisenman. These intimate Masterpieces & Curiosities exhibitions will provide new insights into works from the Museum's collection-contextualizing, examining, and rethinking the piece on view by surrounding it with other artworks, documents, and source materials.

The first exhibition in this series, Masterpieces & Curiosities: A Medieval Aquamanile, focuses on an extremely rare, late twelfth-century bronze lion aquamanile, recently acquired from the Michael and Judy Steinhardt Judaica Collection sale at Sotheby's in April 2013. Aquamanilia are imaginatively-shaped pitchers containing water for washing hands. The later addition of a Hebrew inscription transformed this particular example into a Jewish ritual object probably for use in a synagogue. The exhibition examines the social contexts in which the aquamanile was created and used, and explores issues it raises about valuation, sanctification, and cultural borrowing.

The aquamanile will be displayed for the first time since its acquisition, accompanied by several objects that were similarly converted from secular to religious use-including a Hanukkah lamp created from a military helmet plaque and a pewter dinner plate adapted into an intricately-engraved ceremonial object for Passover meals. Also on view is a pair of blessing hands from a nineteenth-century American Torah ark that depict the type of ritual in which the aquamanile was likely used. As part of the synagogue service on certain occasions, a descendant of the priests of the ancient Temple in Jerusalem blesses the congregation, spreading his hands in the gesture seen in this pair of carved wooden hands.

Oversize images of a manuscript illustrating a hand washing ritual and related aquamanilia from other museum collections will be displayed along one wall of the gallery. The exhibition will also feature a large reproduction of an X-ray providing clues about the aquamanile's creation, use, and repair over its eight-hundred-year history.

The Masterpieces & Curiosities series, organized by Jens Hoffmann, Deputy Director, Exhibitions and Public Programs and Emily Casden, Curatorial Assistant, is scheduled to run through 2017. This first offering, Masterpieces & Curiosities: A Medieval Aquamanile, is curated by Susan L. Braunstein, Henry J. Leir Curator.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: A Medieval Aquamanile
November 8, 2013-March 23, 2014

This first Masterpieces and Curiosities installment centers around a rare Jewish aquamanile, a lion-shaped hand-washing pitcher made of bronze and created in Germany in the twelfth century, surrounded by five additional works to provide further context.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: Diane Arbus's Jewish Giant
April 11, 2014-September 14, 2014

This exhibition focuses on the subject of Diane Arbus's Jewish Giant at Home with His Parents, Bronx, NY, (1970) using ephemera, sound recordings, and family photos to provide an intimate look into one of Arbus's most recognized yet least understood subjects. Curated by Daniel Palmer, Leon Levy Assistant Curator.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: A Jewish American Quilt
October 12, 2014-February 21, 2015

This exhibition showcases a colorful patchwork quilt bearing Eastern European and American imagery. A wonderful testimony to the acculturation process undergone by newly arrived Jewish immigrants, the quilt was originally owned by a Russian Jewish family that likely arrived in America during the late 19th century. Curated by Claudia Nahson, Morris & Eva Feld Curator.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: Nicole Eisenman's Seder
March 2015 - August 2015

Nicole Eisenman's painting Seder (2010) features a family seated for a traditional Passover dinner. In this Masterpieces & Curiosities exhibition, Eisenman's Seder, a painting commissioned by The Jewish Museum, is presented with objects from the institution's world-renowned Judaica collection. Curated by Joanna Montoya, Neubauer Family Foundation Assistant Curator.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: Alfred Stieglitz's Steerage
September 2015 - February 2016

This exhibition focuses on Alfred Stieglitz's iconic 1907 photogravure, The Steerage. The image of passengers aboard a ship to Paris is considered a masterpiece of straight photography, as well as an important social document of immigrant life in New York City. Curated by Rebecca Shaykin, Leon Levy Assistant Curator.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: A Question of Identity: Two Eighteenth-Century Portraits
March 2016 - August 2016

A Question of Identity will explore the uncertain history of two impressive portraits in the collection of The Jewish Museum. Curated by Stephen Brown, Assistant Curator.

Masterpieces & Curiosities: The Grand Costume, a Nineteenth-Century Moroccan Wedding Dress
September 2016 - February 2017

The Grand Costume (El-keswa el-kbira in Arabic) was a traditional wedding dress worn by Jewish brides in Morocco from medieval times to the early twentieth century. The late nineteenth century dress and other contextual objects will tell the story of Jewish expulsion from Spain and migration into Northern Africa, and the rich cultural heritage of Sephardim in a Muslim land. Curated by Emily Casden, Curatorial Assistant.

Widely admired for its exhibitions and collections that inspire people of all backgrounds, The Jewish Museum is one of the world's preeminent institutions devoted to exploring art and Jewish culture from ancient to contemporary. Located at Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street, The Jewish Museum organizes a diverse schedule of internationally acclaimed and award-winning temporary exhibitions as well as dynamic and engaging programs for families, adults, and school groups. The Museum was established in 1904, when Judge Mayer Sulzberger donated 26 ceremonial art objects to The Jewish Theological Seminary of America as the core of a museum collection. Today, the Museum maintains a collection of 25,000 objects - paintings, sculpture, works on paper, photographs, video, archaeological artifacts, ritual objects, and broadcast media.

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Closed on: 28th of November 2013, 20th of January 2014, 14th,15th, 21st & 22nd of April 2014

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Related images

  1. Hanukkah Lamp, shield: Europe, eighteenth century; oil containers: Italy, after 1800; repoussé copper alloy. The Jewish Museum, gift of Dr. Harry G. Friedman(?), F 3752
  2. Passover Plate, Sebald Ruprecht III (b. 1745), Augsburg, c. 1770-76, with later engraving, pewter. The Jewish Museum, gift of Dr. Harry G. Friedman, F 2804
  3. Casket for Circumcision Implements, Germany, fifteenth–sixteenth century with additions in 1737 or 1738, carved and painted fruitwood. The Jewish Museum, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Zeiler in memory of Mrs. Nan Zeiler, JM 35-66a