ARTS NEWLY CREATED JEWISH CEREMONIAL OBJECTS, UNUSUAL AND DIFFERENT, ARE ON' VIEW IN AN EXHIBIT. THE NEW JUDAEA MERRIE EISENSTADT Special to The Jewish News L The 9-inch long torah pointer, by Frederick Fenster, is made of sterling silver with turquoise and carnelian stones. 94 FRIDAY, NOV. 27, 1987 inda Altshuler, director of the B'nai B'rith Klutznik Museum in Washington, D.C., fully expects to shock some people who come to the museum's new exhibit of modern Judaica. She and the exhibit's guest curator, Gayle Weiss, know that Jewish ceremonial objects like glass Ibrah pointers, lucite and silver kiddish cups, and a menorah made of aluminum, marble, porcelain and wood, are unusual and different. "It may be a shock to some people who expect things to look the same old way," Altshuler says of the exhibit, "Masters of Ceremony: Designers of New Judaica," which opened last month and continues through January 31, 1988. The museum is located at 1640 Rhode Island Ave:, N.W., Washington, D.C. Still, Altshuler and Weiss stress the fine craftmanship of the 170 featured pieces, and believe the show will be well received, if not a trend-setter. In organizing the exhibit, Weiss, who is a consultant to the Israel Museum in Je- rusalem, enlisted many highly regarded ar- tists, both Jewish and non-Jewish, to create Judaica for the first time. "We have been very serious about requir- ing that the pieces be functional and con- form to Halachic requirements," Weiss says. The artists were receptive to her in- struction regarding requirements, she adds. "It's very exciting to be given some restrictions." Altshuler agrees. "If you are an artist, you always want new challenges," she says. - "These artists were flattered and excited to be included in this exhibit." According to Weiss, there is a growing interest in Jewish ceremonial art. Two reasons may account for Judaica's increas- ing popularity. First, Weiss says, "Young Artist Annette Hirsh created the silver and turquoise dreidl, which is only 3 inches by 1 1/2 inches.