62
Friday, June 28, 1985
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Ed
25%
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BACK PAGE
Artifacts
Continued from Page 80
State faculty in 1969 and h
had two stints as a "practicin
rabbi" — at Temple Beth El i
Birmingham in 1974 and wit
Cong. Solel in Brighton fro
1979 to 1982. Not affiliate
with any specific congrega-
tion presently, he still le
tures regularly at synagogues
throughout the United Stat
and substitutes occasionally
at weddings, funerals and o
the High Holidays.
While an associate profes-
sor of art history at HU
Gutmann began to do exten-
sive research into the field o
Jewish art, and in 1964 his
book Jewish Ceremonial Art
was published. At the time,
was one of the first works to
be compiled in the Unite
States on the subject. His
more comprehensive work,
published in 1970 an
entitled Beauty in Holiness.
Studies in Jewish Customs
and Ceremonial Art, is cite
as a principal source on
Jewish art in Encyclopedic'
Britannica.
"(The field of) Jewish cerej l
monial art is small and
encompasses largely only the
last 300 years or so," say.;1
Gutmann. Due mainly to the
numerous, forced migrations
of the Jews, not a single au-
thenticated Jewish ceremo:'
nial object used before the ,
15th Century exists, he says. I
According to Gutmann,
very few museums in the U.S
house significant, permanent
collections of Judaica. Excep-
tionsinclude the Jewish
Theological Seminary
Museum in New York and the
Hebrew Union College
Museum, now in Los Angeles-
While on the faculty at HUC,]
Gutmann was in charge at
that prestigious collection,,
then housed in Cincinnati.
His primary duties at the=
Detroit Institute of Arts have
involved training young stu-
dents to become part of
museum administration — a
program he and a number of
other Wayne State faculty
members initiated in the
early 1970s. "Also, from tim
to time, we help out the DIA
as far as expertise is con-
cerned," he says. "Some ob-
jects might come in and they
will ask us to help them date
the pieces. It's a loosely-
structured, co-operative work-
ing arrangement."
A collector himself, Gut-
mann has on display in his
home a small collection of
18th and 19th Century silver
and pewter Kiddush cups,
along with the 19th Century'
brass Sabbath lamp in his
study. All, he says, are 'Tam-