| The
Land of Israel was possessed by a terrible drought and prayer
was necessary. “It happened that the people said to Honi the Circle
Drawer, pray for rain to fall…He prayed and no rain fell. What
did he do? He drew a circle and stood within it and exclaimed,
Master of the Universe, thy children have turned to me because
they believe me to be as a member of thy household; I swear by
Thy great Name that I will not move from here until Thou has mercy
upon Thy children. Rain then began to drip, and thereupon he exclaimed:
It is not for this that I have prayed but for rain [to fill] cisterns,
ditches and caves. The rain then began to come down with great
force, and thereupon he exclaimed, it is not for this that I have
prayed but for rain of benevolence, blessing and bounty. Rain
then fell in the normal way…(Taanis 3:8)”
In
Boston there is an artist, Gad Almaliah, who has created a series
of six constructions of open books. He manipulates second hand
books into facsimiles of Hebrew books, using carefully generated
computer images to avoid any desecration of holy words. Each construction
is contained in a box twenty inches square with one side open
for viewing. The artist says they are deeply personal pieces about
“the future of Jewish life, culture and its survival.”
Certainly
Jewish survival is the subject of Honi The Circle Drawer. In the
first construction, a kneeling Honi is surrounded by a circle
of Hebrew letters and twelve figures of contemporary people encircle
the circle and look on in anticipation. Honi's audience stands
on ground made up of arbitrary letters. The opposite page is from
the Midrash Rabbah and seven gigantic sheaves of wheat sprout
through its pages. The open book is set on a circle of earth deeply
fissured and cracked by drought.
It
seems the artist is telling us that a tzaddik like Honi is fundamentally
distinct from us, the Jewish people. Yet he is within our circle,
using our language and arguing our case before the True Judge.
Imagination, determination (even chutzpah) and piety like his
can make the midrashic text blossom with very real nourishment.
The
pages of the next book split to consume Pharaoh's army and horse
drawn chariots while the Children of Israel march calmly in single
file, suitcases in hand away from the chaos behind them. This
construction entitled, We Were All Slaves, again using the Midrash
Rabbah as the foundation text, connects the splitting of the sea
with the Golden Calf, here seen as a massive bull surrounded by
a scaffold being fashioned by the Jews. The way that Almaliah
combines these two events, making them feel simultaneously contemporary
and Biblical is only the beginning of his achievement. Viewing
his sculpture, we are forced to confront the miracle of God's
salvation of the Jewish people and our subsequent ability to ignore
it with a shocking lack of faith as exemplified by the Golden
Calf.
Gad
Almaliah is a Jerusalem born graphic designer not known for his
sculpture. He is a graduate of Bezalel Academy and has worked
for many years in graphic design for the Israel Army, a Tel Aviv
advertising firm, a Mexican university and now owner of The Design
Lab, based in Boston. Unlike his normal production of Judaica,
hand embossed metalwork ketubot, poster, print and stamp designs,
this series of constructions are not for sale. Rather he hopes
them to become a traveling educational exhibition.
Two
of his pieces in the Life on the Book series are too personal
for me to penetrate. Untitled presents us with a hole burned in
the center of a text filled with babies' bodies opposite an enormous
quarter dollar. The Rule of Law, while somewhat more approachable,
still is mired in obvious symbols like a ruler, a courthouse and
US currency. Only when Almaliah sticks to Jewish and Biblical
subjects that his works reaches its full potential of complexity
and insight.
White
Bones confronts Ezekiel's Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones in
the very body of the Hebrew text. The page has been scorched open
to reveal a grotesque skeleton amidst other bones and discarded
Hebrew letters. A plaster-cast angel floats beatifically in the
purple dark sky above as the English translation on the opposing
page confirms the subject. The unease felt with this image deepens
as we notice behind the book a jarring scene of modern vacationers
around a little pond. The left side of the book is lined with
contemporary figures marching determinedly as the surrounding
ground is littered with more discarded Hebrew letters. The ancient
prophecy of the resurrection of the Jewish people is here cast
as a contemporary question. Can this text and these bones live
now? Are our lives, now largely comfortable and secure, still
subject to this vision of Jewish renewal? While the bones may
be reconstituted in our world, does the text live for us?
The
last work in the series, Graveyard, affords us a view of a bifurcated
world. Again twelve contemporary figures stand on a page of bas-relief
letters. All but one are separated from the graveyard by a solid
brick wall. The graveyard contains the tombstones of twenty-four
sages, from Rashi to the Baal ha Tanya and including 20th century
masters. Behind this tableau morte an ancient tome lies half buried
in the sand alongside Greek ruins. Almaliah's pessimism about
penetrating the wall separating us from our spiritual sources
reflects a secularist's frustration at approaching Jewish knowledge
from the outside, even with the tools of Modern Hebrew. Still
there is hope, as witnessed by the singular figure on the graveyard
side of the wall and the chorus of women and children adjacent
to the sages. Again and again Gad Almaliah's work questions the
pressing issues of Jewish life, culture and its survival by examining
our connections of language, holy texts and buried traditions.
There
are droughts and we pray. Simeon ben Shetah criticizing Honi the
Circle Drawer because he troubles God about rain many times then
said; “but what can I do to you who importunes God and He accedes
to your request as a son importunes his father and he accedes
to his request.” We are certain that the True Judge hears and
will have mercy on His children.
Richard
McBee
February 5, 2002
Article courtesy richardmcbee.com
Gad
Almaliah can be reached concerning Life on the Book at thedesignlaboston.com
Published
in The Jewish Press
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