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December 15, 2000 - Image 121

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2000-12-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SR

d

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Schapiro: His Painting, Drawing and
Sculpture (Harry N. Abrams; $49.50),
in which, for the first time, more than
200 of his works are published.
His widow (and wife of 67 years),
pediatrician Lillian Milgram Schapiro,
with the aid of their nephew Daniel
Esterrnan, assembled the pieces. The
volume includes Lillian's introductory
essay, three previously unpublished arti-
cles by Schapiro and a preface by former
New York Times art critic John Russell.
The Lithuanian-born Schapiro came
to the United States as a small child in
1907. He was one of the first Jews to
join the faculty at Columbia University,
where he remained throughout his
career, until his death in 1996.
Schapiro was a mentor and friend to
such artists as de Kooning, Newman,
Rothko, Segal and Motherwell.
A life-long Marxist who drifted
away from political involvement with
his disappointment at the failure of
socialism, Schapiro developed a strong
attachment to Israel. In 1983, the
Bezalel Academy awarded him the
Jerusalem Prize for Arts & Letters.
Schapiro's works in this book range
from the 1920s through the 1980s.
They include self-portraits, drawings
of his wife and children, views of his
retreats in Vermont and Florida and,
of special interest, his renderings of
notable intellectuals of his day, includ-
ing Irving Howe, Bernard Berenson
and Isaiah Berlin.
Meyer Schapiro referred to himself
as a "summer painter," but notes John
Russell, "there are summer painters
who bring to their work a freshness, a
heightened awareness and a readiness
to try anything.
"[Schapiro's] every decision sprang
from a lifelong determination to col-
lect, classify and define every kind of
experience that came his way. Not
only did he remember everything that -
had ever come to his notice, but he
also knew its exact place in the general
scheme of things. What he wanted
from life was the quiet hum of undi-
luted celebration, and he got it."

CANDLE

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FOR THE SPIRITUAL SEEKER

My Grandfather's Blessings: Stories of
Strength, Refuge and Belonging by
Rachel Naomi Remen (Riverhead;
$24.95) is a collection of inspiring sto-
ries — based on the teachings of the
author's grandfather, an Orthodox
rabbi and scholar of the Kabbalah —
demonstrating how small acts of kind-
ness change lives, and have the poten-
tial to heal loneliness and isolation.
She writes: "A blessing is a moment

of meeting, a certain kind of relation-
ship in which both people involved
remember and acknowledge their true
nature and worth, and strengthen
what is whole in one another. By mak-
ing a place for wholeness within our
relationships, we offer others the
opportunity to be whole without -
shame and become a place of refuge
from everything in them and around
them that is not genuine. We enable
people to remember who they are."
The author of the best-selling Kitchen
Table Wisdom, Remen is a physician
who has been counseling people with
chronic and terminal diseases for more
than 20 years, and is a professor of
family and community medicine at the
University of California at San
Francisco School of Medicine.
"We bless the life in each other far
more than we realize," she writes. "Many
simple, ordinary things that we do can
affect those around us in profound ways:
the unexpected phone call, the brief
touch, the willingness to listen generous-
ly, the warm smile or wink. We can even
bless total strangers and be blessed by
them. All it may take to restore some-
one's trust in life may be returning a lost
earring or a dropped glove."

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CANDLE #8:
FOR THE MOVIE MANIAC

Guide to Jewish Films on Video by
Larry Anklewicz (Ktav; $24.95) is a
paperback reference guide listing more
than 400 films of Jewish interest made
between 1920 and 1998, from
Marjorie Morningstar (1958) with
Natalie Wood and Gene Kelly and The
Jazz Singer (1927) with Al Jolson (and
the 1952 and 1980 remakes with,
respectively, Danny Thomas and Neil
Diamond) to Dirty Dancing (1987)
with Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey
and Woody Allen's Annie Hall (1977).
Included are silent movies, docu-
mentaries and feature films. For each
film, the author, an attorney and film
buff in Canada, provides a brief sum-
mary and details about the director,
cast, country of origin, language and
running time. All of the films are avail-
able for purchase or rental, and infor-
mation about distributors is included.
"What is a Jewish film, and what
makes a film Jewish?" asks the author.
"Obviously it is not a question of
Jewish actors, producers or directors,
otherwise most Hollywood films
would be Jewish." Films with Jewish
content or story lines or central char-
acters who are Jewish certainly qualify,
but ultimately, notes Anklewicz,
"whether a film is Jewish or not is in
the eye of the beholder."

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83

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