?..:' Above: Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959), Congregation Beth Sholom in Elkins Park, a suburb of Philadelphia, was the last work by the great American master. He died shortly before the official opening. Wright was a designer not just of buildings but of furnishings as well. Far left: The Wilshire Boulevard Temple in Los Angeles, on the Register of National Historic Buildings, was designed by architect A. W Edelman, presumably a descendant of the rabbi with the same name who conducted the first Jewish services in Los Angeles in 1854. Left: The interior of the Wilshire Boulevard Temple is unique for its Warner Memorial Murals, painted by Hugo Bailin (1879-1956). Bailin was a stage designer, writer, and silent movie producer and director. The murals, which cover the base of the sanctuary's 100-foot dome with imagery of the Old Testament, were sponsored by the motion picture Warner Brothers — Jack, Harry and Abe. PIEUITERFUL N ALAN ABRAMS Special to the Jewish News 311 5/31 2002 68 • of every Jewish congregation can claim its synagogue was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, arguably America's most pre-eminent architect. But members of Congregation Beth Sholom in Elkins Park, a northern suburb of Philadelphia, have earned those bragging rights. And when Michigan-based architectural photographer Laszlo Regos read about Beth Sholom, he knew he had to add it to the portfolio of American synagogues he is photographing to prepare for even- tual book publication. "My goal is to produce a coffee-table book with quality photographs," said Regos. So far, he has photographed 15 syna- gogues in such cities as Detroit, Pittsburgh, Las Vegas and Washington, D.C., as he travels across the country on commercial photo assignments. In the next few weeks, he'll be adding synagogues in Savannah, Miami and Miami Beach to the collection. Next month, Regos, 53, hopes to photo- LEJ graph New York's Central Synagogue, built in 1872 by the Prussian-born Henry Fernbach, thought to be the first practicing Jewish architect in the United States. Regos was surprised to learn that no one has published a photographic history of America's historic synagogues before. "I am using a book called Synagogues of the United States by Oscar Israelowitz as my main source," he said. "It is a pretty good architectural and his- torical overview, but the photography in it is terrible — mainly black and white pho- tos from archives and amateurish snap- shots, besides renderings and floor plans. "What I am doing is putting together a collection, and after that I will try to impress a writer and a publisher with it," Regos continued. "I want to do it with class, not just publish it." An Unexpected Find When he finds a synagogue he wants to photograph, Regos writes a letter in advance and gets permission. But some- times, he just gets lucky. "Last fall," he said, "I had been working in the Upper Peninsula and drove by this small and beautiful synagogue in Hancock. It is called Temple Jacob, and there was a phone number on the door. I called, and they gave me permission to shoot the next day." Regos learned that Temple Jacob had been built in 1912. It was constructed in classic synagogue design of the era, and is believed to be modeled after a synagogue in Detroit or Chicago. He was unable to dis- cover the name of the architect. "The temple was named after Jacob Gartner of [Hancock's] Gartner Department Store," Regos said. "At one time there were more than 200 member- families. Now they conduct services only on the High Holidays." Photographing the Frank Lloyd Wright- designed Beth Sholom was probably the closest Regos has come to duplicating his day job. He photographs commercial buildings and residences around the world on commission from their architects as well as from design firms. His commercial work has been included in books such as the recently published