Branching Out Li Rafael Guber researches family trees j' and preserves personal histories with artistic presentations. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Rafael Guber creates genealogical works of art "that should be in a family for hundreds of generations." afael Guber recently visited Michigan to give advice on re- searching family trees and sur- prisingly found a branch of his own. Guber, speaking before the Jewish Genealogical So- ciety of Michigan at Temple Beth El, told how he developed an art form that blends historical documents, photos and heir- looms into an ancestral montage designed for aesthetic display. The day before, at a Young Israel of Southfield gathering, his constant ques- tion to people he meets — "Where is your family from?" — opened a conversation that revealed he shared lineage with some people there. "I started doing genealogical studies when I was past 40," said Guber, 44, who had been an investment banker. "I was going to play out my mid-life crisis by sat- isfying a creative need, serving myself and others. "I saw genealogy and the images of ge- nealogy as a way of reaching people in a personal way. What makes my work ef- fective and compelling has less to do with me than it has to do with others. "The subject is inherently interesting because it's about them. It's as funda- mental as asking, 'How did I come to be whoever I am?' "Yesterday, it was eerie because I met one man who looked like he could be my brother; we had the same facial features. I showed him a picture of my grand- mother and was introduced to a woman who looked exactly like her. "I started to tell a family story, and a lady at the synagogue finished it. Before I left, we made plans to continue our search to find out more about our com- mon relatives." Guber studied historiography and his- tory at Columbia University, the Jewish Theological Seminary, Hebrew Univer- sity and Bar Ilan University. His artistic techniques were advanced at the Art Stu- dents League in New York. "I started to do a collage for myself and showed the piece to a well-known art col- lector," Guber recalled. "I did a piece for him, which led to a number of other com- missions." As Guber's clients increased, he es- tablished the Sepia Guild, a working group of genealogists, artists, archivists, biographers and historians providing both genealogical research and creating artis- tic presentations of personal history doc- uments. "When I'm given a commission to look into a family's background, I choose a team to work around it in terms of their research and artistic capabilities," he ex- plained. "Sometimes there is so much ma- terial that we build breakfronts. "A woman in the process of rediscov- ering her connections to Jewish life had a cousin who saved candlesticks once owned by our client's great-grandmother. The cousin offered them to us, and we built them into a piece with a glass door so that on Friday afternoons she can take them out and make the blessing with them." Being hired by celebrity clients has become common- place for the Sepia Guild. An example is the wife of the creator of "The Simpsons." Guber does not restrict his work to those with Jewish heritage. Among his most visible projects has been ancestral artwork given by the mayor of New York to the grand marshal of the St. Patrick's Day parade. Another out- standing experience was creating a mon- tage for a prominent Swedish couple and then presenting it in the presence of the king and queen of Sweden at Ellis Is- land. Guber takes Jewish groups through Ellis Island and re-enacts the experiences of their immigrant forebears. He put to- gether the fourth episode for a 10-part PBS series, "Ancestors," showing his art, his life and the use of genealogy to re- connect spiritually to the Jewish past. Although his wife, Rosalyn, does not participate directly in the special perfor- mances, she encourages the involvement of their children: Rivky, 15; Yehuda, 13; and Rayla, 11. "The good part about genealogy is that there are no problems with Orthodox, Conservative and Reform factions," said Guber, who is Orthodox. "Everybody had bubbies and zaydes, and I work off that theme to promote Jewish community. "I'm working with a group of Reform rabbis on a special project to be an- nounced shortly. It will promote Jewish unity through genealogy." A lot of Guber's art projects are for awards presentations. An unnamed auto executive from Detroit soon will receive his ancestral montage as a surprise. "For people who seem to have every- thing, we give them back the names of their great-grandparents and the images of their families," Guber said. "We'll find passenger manifest lists and photos of relatives they may not have seen before. "We also find photographs of ancestral towns and render them as pastels and watercolors. I do about 95 percent of the art. "With little bits of information, we can find things about relatives from long ago — the places they lived and the streets they walked, fleshing it all out as art to create a piece that should be in a family for hundreds of generations." Among the most interesting collages completed by the Sepia Guild is one for a man who played the piano on Ellis Island to prove he had the skills that could get him out of detention. The guild built an entire frame of piano keys crafted in the same year as the original piano. Occasionally, Guber will not follow through with a montage that seems con- trary to his principles. He declined a couple's request to intertwine a grand- mother's rosary beads with the straps from a grandfather's tefillin. "I told the couple that regardless of the choices made in their lives, I don't think their grandparents would have been hap- py with what they wanted to do," he ex- plained. "They understood, and I ended up with two separate pieces, partly be- cause there was so much to use." The Sepia Guild is working on an enor- mous project for the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. Opening in 1998 with the goal of teaching tolerance, it will be the world's largest genealogical exhibit ever created. Working with other prominent gene- alogists, Guber will take six famous Hollywood families representing differ- ent ethnic groups and create rooms of liv- ing memories. The 12-month exhibit, which includes a major genealogical computer center, will be filmed and turned into a docu- mentary. "I've learned that many more people want to know about genealogy than I thought," Guber said. "I've also learned about the big commonality of experi- ence. "The blessing side of this work is to take names of people who might never be remembered otherwise and return them to future generations." ❑ fl The Sepia Guild can be reached at (718) 520-1297.