We live in a time when News brings immediate and unrelenting attention to difficult problems.  Approaching these problems requires information but solving them –something more…something like resourcefulness, discernment, creativity and imagination.It is therefore not surprising that today the word imagination is ubiquitous, commanding its power in places as diverse as names of schools and selling advertisements, and also in The Museum of ImaJewnation.

The idea for the museum arose from three sources.  One, in a book called the YiddisheKop Creative Problem Solving in Jewish Learning, Lore &Humor, author Rabbi Nilton Bonder suggests that  “Jews have had a critical mass of experience that has taught them that impossibilities are transient.”   This empowering observation was expressed again when Larry King asked  “Are you an optimist?”  and Jon Stewart answered, “I’m Jewish.”  The second, from a lecture presented at a conference called Creativity and Madness which suggested that artists and scientists tackle the same questions,  often with the artist preceding the scientist , expressing  the ideas not yet formulated into words.   In the book Art and Physics, Parallel Visions in Space, Time and & Light, author Leonard Shlain writes, “…Imagine literally means to make an image…art can be understood as the preverbal stage of a civilization first contending with a major change in its perception of the world (page 18).  The third, from my understanding that the wisdom of Judaism lies in its constant conversation…and all the ideas noted and preserved. The Museum seeks to create exhibits of this ongoing conversation.

The ambition of this museum is to engage people’s imagination and encourage their interaction withJewish culture- its ritual objects and behaviors, its texts and stories, its history and legends, its chants and music, its commandments and customs.  The mission of the museum is to encourage people to respond to challenging questions by creating artworks using an element of Jewish culture as the source of inspiration.

The Museum of ImaJewnantion is a place where flights of mind come to rest for a while in the form of artworks in any medium.   Without a permanent address, exhibits can arise where and whenever a question is posed and a host facility is found.  The premise of the project is that the artist/creator and the artwork/creation are inextricably bound together and that the making of art can elicit the empathy and  strengthen Jewish identity.