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The story of Adam and Eve powerfully retold in photographs, from an unexpected viewpoint With his last book, Travels with Van Gogh and the Impressionists, Neil Folberg - already well known as a photographer of landscape and architecture - took his work in a surprising, and successful, new direction, using costumed actors and carefully arranged settings to reconstruct the milieux of some of the world's most beloved artists. Serpent's Chronicle represents a further evolution of Folberg's interest in staged photography: here, the images form a continuous narrative, namely, the story of Adam and Eve, as seen through the eyes of the Serpent. For this ambitious exercise in pictorial storytelling, acted by modern dancers and set in a wild Mediterranean valley, Folberg draws upon the full range of his artistic resources as a photographer in color and black and white, and of the landscape, the human figure, and even the night sky; the result, according to ARTnews, is a series of "lush depictions" that use "subtle anachronism, metaphor, and theatricality to memorable effect." To memorable effect and, one might add, in a spirit of serious spiritual inquiry; Folberg's imaginative retelling of the story, based on an ancient oral tradition and accompanied by a poetic text, addresses the profound questions inherent in the biblical account. For instance, how could there be a state of paradise with only one human inhabitant? And how could conflict be avoided if there were two? Presenting Adam and Eve as Everyman and Everywoman, in a time and place at once archetypal and contemporary, Folberg shows us that the story of Eden is the true prototype of every human relationship and endeavor.
For nearly two millennia, from the year 70 until the founding of
Israel in 1948, the Jewish people were without a homeland. But
wherever they wandered in the great Diaspora they continued the
tradition of building synagogues as refuge for their beliefs and
testament to their strength and accomplishments as a people. And "I
Shall Dwell Among Them" considers the spiritual, architectural and
cultural significance of these structures. It is the first study to
document the synagogues with both scholarly depth and photographic
excellence. "Among the phenomena Neil Folberg detected in his
search for historic synagogues was that wherever Jews
settled--whether in Morocco, Hungary or the American South--the
designs of their temples reflected the prevailing style of the
environment. But it is the building's power to evoke spirituality
that comes across most forcefully in his photographs."
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