My latest book Through a Bible Lens: Biblical Insights for
Smartphone Photography and Social Media hot off the press from publisher
HarperCollins arrived last week in Israel from Tennessee. Nice to finally see it in print. Thumbing through the book to see how my
photographs appear in miniature matt, Trump’s wall jumped out at me.
When I moved from New York to accept the position as dean of New World School of the Arts,
University of Florida’s arts college in Miami, I sensed that I had come to live
at one of the four corners of continental United States. The photos in my book document my Four
Wings of America environmental artwork linking the four corners of USA. I created it for the City of Miami’s
centennial celebration in 1996. In 1996?
Twenty-three years ago, Trump’s wall was already up at the southwest corner of
USA.
While working on my continent-wide artwork, I began to see
the four corners of America through a Bible lens. The biblical Hebrew word kanfot
used for the four “corners” of one’s garment and metaphorically as the four
“corners” of the earth is the same word used for “wings.” The preeminent
biblical commentator Rashi points out the links between corners and wings, “The
fringes are placed on the corners of their garments, alluding to God having
freed the Israelites from Egypt, as it states, ‘and I carried you on the wings of
eagles.’” It brought to mind four biblical passages.
“Speak to the Israelites and say to them that they shall make
fringes on the corner wings of their garments for all generations. And they shall include in the fringes of each
corner wing a thread of sky-blue wool.” (Numbers 15:37)
Before the Israelites received the Ten Commandments, God tells
Moses to say to the Israelites:
"You saw what I did in Egypt, carrying you on wings
of eagles and bringing you to me.” (Exodus 19:4)
Forty years later standing on the east bank of the Jordan
River, Moses reviews the laws of the Torah for the generation born in the
desert before they enter the Promised Land. He again said:
“Make yourself fringes on the four corners of the
garment with which you cover yourself.” (Deuteronomy 22:12).
Before donning his prayer shawl each morning, a Jew says,
“May the talit spread its wings like an eagle
rousing his nest, fluttering over its eaglets.” The biblical prophecy in
Isaiah 11:12 is being realized in our day:
“He will ingather the dispersed ones of Judah from the
four corners of the earth”
I created Four Wings of America as a
visual commentary that conceptually links wings to corners of
a garment and to corners of the land. I made white rope multi-strand
fringes each with a sky-blue thread to attach to the four corners of
America.
I contacted American Airlines, the largest U.S. corporation
in the wing business, to request their sponsorship of my artwork. They
invited me to present my proposal. I
spread the rope tzitzit on the boardroom table to explain to
the airline executives their biblical significance and why I wanted to create a
visual commentary by placing them at the four corner/wings of
America. It became apparent my proposal was appreciated, when the
airline’s vice-president said, “It is as if the United States is spiritually lifted
up by its four corners as the blue thread of the fringes links the sea to the
sky.” They agreed to sponsor the project by flying me to the four corners
of America to physically realize my spiritual metaphor.
I attached tzitzit fringes to a swaying palm
shading the beach of a balmy Florida bay and to a huge barnacle-encrusted
boulder on the Maine coast. I flew to Seattle and drove to Neah Bay, an
Indian reservation at the end of the Olympia Peninsula in Washington State,
attached the tzitzit to a tree at the shoreline. At the
southwest corner, the tzitzit shuddered in the wind hanging
from the steel wall that separates San Diego from Tijuana at the Pacific
Ocean.
My book with all fifty full-color pictures is available at
Amazon and most other Internet booksellers as well as at your local
bookstore. See the book’s blog at http://throughabiblelens.blogspot.com.
From Times of Israel, IsraelSeen, and LinkedIn
From Times of Israel, IsraelSeen, and LinkedIn
No comments:
Post a Comment