New York photographer Todd Weinstein, a native Oak Parker, comes home to show his photographs in a new exhibit at the Janice Charach Epstein Museum/Gallay. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS PHOTOS BY TODD WEINSTEIN Top: New Russian immigrants, Berlin. For 11 years, he maintained the Union Square Gallery in New York and let artists use it Above: Reflection, Three Generations. without charge. "Ernst died in 1986, and in 1991 I became a consultant to his estate to work on a 100-image exhibition," Weinstein said. "There was the color retrospective book as well as a black and white book to do... It was time for somebody else to take on a free gallery." Weinstein, who is single, has little time for interests beyond photography as it becomes an expression of his personal spirituality. His home is filled with photographs, including "Nevada Sky," a favorite from Haas' book The Creation. `The image looks like the sky is separating, almost as if it is showing the first light," explained Weinstein, whose studies at Congregation B'nai Moshe were another influence in his spiritual outlook. "Haas was the first artist to illustrate the creation through photographs, and his work becomes a very poetic interpretation," said Weinstein, who captured the commemorations of the 50th anniversary of the liberation of the camps as the second phase of his work in Germany. The next phase will be devoted to One by One, an organization working at uniting the children of Jews and Ger- mans who lived in Europe at the time of the Holocaust. ❑ Left: Elderly Home, Munich. `While I was in high school, I transformed what I thought was a worthless negative into an image that won a Scholastic Award and realized that the cam- era offered a way of exploring the world and myself" Weinstein recalled. "I received a scholarship to the Center for Creative Studies in 1969 and, in the summer after my freshman year, became one of the first photographers for Creem Magazine, a national rock publication. At the end of that summer, Weinstein decided to move to New York to study photography privately and served as an apprentice to Ernst Haas, who became his mentor. During the 1970s, Weinstein experimented with high-speed color negative film, and he refined his technique throughout the '80s. In 1991, he self-pub- lished a retrospective collection of his photos in the book Todd Weinstein, Per- sonal Journalism: A Decade of Color Photography, 1980-1990. Weinstein began teaching his craft in the early 1970s and has been associ- ated with the Tisch School of Photography, the Maine Photographic Workshop, Pratt Institute and the Fashion Institute of Technology. The artist also accepted corporate assignments. "Commercial photography allowed me to enter worlds that I otherwise would not have entered," Weinstein explained. "I could photograph someone laboring in a coal mine as well as the president of the corporation employing the min- er. That range has helped me artistically." Et 'Darkness Into Light: Re-Emergence of Jewish Culture in Germany" will be on display through Oct. 17 at the Janice Charach Epstein Muse- um/Gallery at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center, 6600 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield. Gallery hours are 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Wednes- day; 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursday; 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday. For more informa- tion, call (810) 661-7641. 103