Inspired by the holiday of Sukkot, a Jewish holiday celebrating the harvest, The Contemporary Jewish Museum has built its own sukkah (meaning "booth" or "hut") for gathering and community building in its Koret Taube Grand Lobby. Six local artists will each inhabit the Sukkah Studio as an open studio for one day between October 14-20, providing an inviting space for the artists to share their practice with visitors and work with interested people to make something together.
On Tuesday, October 15, sculptor Mari Andrews, who makes abstract objects from natural and elemental materials and wire, will lead a participatory activity involving wire, faux gold, silver and copper leaf, and natural materials.
Free
Presented by Contemporary Jewish Museum
Inspired by the holiday of Sukkot, a Jewish holiday celebrating the harvest, The Contemporary Jewish Museum has built its own sukkah (meaning "booth" or "hut") for gathering and community building in its Koret Taube Grand Lobby. Six local artists will each inhabit the Sukkah Studio as an open studio for one day between October 14-20, providing an inviting space for the artists to share their practice with visitors and work with interested people to make something together.
On Tuesday, October 15, sculptor Mari Andrews, who makes abstract objects from natural and elemental materials and wire, will lead a participatory activity involving wire, faux gold, silver and copper leaf, and natural materials.
Free
Presented by Contemporary Jewish Museum
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