Holocaust Memorial Center To Showcase Work of Detroit Native and Photographer Todd Weinstein

Weinstein’s work is known for its street photography depicting the ups and downs of life, and abstract images using Jewish lore to explore universal themes of suffering and redemption. "Light Is My Voice" to be on display from Sept. 21-Dec. 22.
By: Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus
 
FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. - Sept. 4, 2014 - PRLog -- The Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus (www.holocaustcenter.org) will host the photo exhibit, Light Is My Voice: Images, Legends, and Abstractions,” Sept. 21- Dec. 22.

The exhibit’s creator is Detroit native and photographer Todd Weinstein (www.toddweinstein.com), who will speak at the opening at 3 p.m. on Sept. 21 at the Holocaust Memorial Center is located at 28123 Orchard Lake Road in Farmington Hills.  Weinstein’s work is known for its street photography depicting the ups and downs of life, and abstract images using Jewish lore to explore universal themes of suffering and redemption.

Light Is My Voice: Images, Legends, and Abstractions explores three themes.  With “Darkness into Light,” Weinstein spent six years photographing the reemergence of Jewish life in modern-day Germany.  This project helped Weinstein understand how Holocaust survivors could go on with their lives in a country soaked with Jewish blood.  It also gave him a deeper understanding of his own Jewish identity and heritage.

As Weinstein continued to document Jewish life in Western Europe after the Holocaust, he began to ask himself “What could have saved the Jews?  What could have saved the world?”  Weinstein began to think the 36 Righteous Ones of Jewish legend may hold the key.  It is said the presence of these 36 keeps the world from destruction in times of peril.  By photographing images of human faces and gestures he saw in stone, metal, glass, shadows, fragments and stains, Weinstein found a way to address the unspeakable horrors of the Holocaust.

In the third section of Light Is My Voice: Images, Legends, and Abstractions, Weinstein captures the faces of the Prophets in a group of rocks and a twisted scrap of cloth, for example, or the image of Moses and the tablets revealed in the patterns of a broken piece of marble.

Weinstein’s four decades of work span a wide range of genres from documentary and street photography to abstract and commercial work.  His photographs have been exhibited at The Detroit Institute of Arts, New York’s Howard Greenberg Gallery, Pace/MacGill Gallery and Yeshiva University Museum.  Weinstein turned his attention to Jewish themes in the early 1990s when he spent time in Germany documenting the resurgence of Jewish life in the country.  That work culminated in the show “Darkness into Light: The Resurgence of Jewish Culture in Germany,” which premiered in Detroit.

“We are looking forward to hosting Light Is My Voice: Images, Legends, and Abstractions for the next few months,” said Holocaust Memorial Center Executive Director Stephen M. Goldman.  “Like all of the exhibits we display in our museum, Light Is My Voice not only evokes a sense of history in our visitors, but also messages of social responsibility and morality.”

Kay Yafee and Denny Brown, Nancy and Anthony Morris, and Marika Partridge and Larry Ravitz are the major supporters of the exhibit during its stay at the Holocaust Memorial Center.  Pamela and Kenneth Bloom, Rozanne and Bernard Friedman, Dorothy and Hershel Sandberg, and Susan Malinowski and Gary Shapiro are providing generous additional support. Visibleworks Design and Walter P. Sauer are contributing in-kind support.

About the Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus

The Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus opened in 1984.  Local Holocaust survivors, with community support, founded the museum to teach about the senseless murder of millions, and why everyone must respect and stand up for the rights of others if the world is to prevent future discrimination, hate crime and genocide. As Michigan’s only Holocaust museum, the Holocaust Memorial Center annually touches the lives of more than 85,000 individuals, who leave the museum profoundly affected with a newly acquired sense of history, social responsibility and morality. The Holocaust Memorial Center’s exhibits create a call to action, teaching visitors through the examples of those who risked their lives to save others, and asking its guests to react to contemporary challenges such as racism, intolerance, bullying and prejudice.

The facility is wheelchair accessible and free parking is available at both the North and South entrances.

For more information on the Holocaust Memorial Center, visit www.holocaustcenter.org, or call 248-553-2400.

Contact
Mike Ingberg
***@marxlayne.com
End
Source:Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus
Email:***@marxlayne.com Email Verified
Tags:Holocaust Memorial Center, Zekelman Family Campus, Light Is My Voice, Photographer Todd Weinstein, Street Photography
Industry:Arts, Photography
Location:Farmington Hills - Michigan - United States
Subject:Features
Account Phone Number Verified     Disclaimer     Report Abuse
Marx Layne & Company PRs
Trending News
Most Viewed
Top Daily News



Like PRLog?
9K2K1K
Click to Share