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Meditative
Space at HealthCare Chaplaincy, New
York City. 2001
Created
by Tobi Kahn
Tobi
Kahn

According
to the art critic
Dore Ashton, Tobi
Kahn's art "unites
our perception of
the material with
our memory." This
is only fitting
for a man whose
Jewish heritage
permeates all aspects
of his work. Whether
in his mysterious
paintings, reminiscent
of biological and
geographical formations,
or in his sculptures
of sanctuaries and
sacred monumental
pieces, or in the
design of furniture
and ambient space
for a hospital meditation
room, Kahn's work
draws us into meditation.
As Ted Prescott
puts it, Kahn's
art causes us to
dip into the "deep
wells within us
where longing and
memory intermingle."
The Philadelphia
Inquirer calls
his work "perfectly
balanced between
extremes of abstract
and representational....
having an uneasy
mixture of authority
and idiosyncrasy--and
sometimes just a
bit beyond human
reach."

Tobi
Kahn's Current
Projects "Right
now I'm
working
on creating
a chapel
for
Jane Owen and
the Blaffer
Trust in
New
Harmony, Indiana.
It's a
free-standing
building
in
the same vein
as HealthCare Chaplaincy
Meditative
Space I
did
in New York.
I'm also
working
on a meditative
room, a
small,
free-standing
portable
space
that will travel
the world."

Meditative
Space at HealthCare Chaplaincy,
New York
City, 2001.
"My
show Avoda
will continue
to travel the
country during
the coming year.
Through October
it's at the
Jewish Museum
of Kansas City;
in November
and December
it will be at
the University
of Rhode Island,
and in January
and February
it will be at
the Chase/Freedman
Gallery at the
JCC of Greater
Hartford in
Connecticut.
[For details
on Avoda,
call 212-624-9238.]
I also have
a show called
Microcosmos
at the Yeshiva
University Museum
in New York
City this November
14 through January
26. For 2003
I have a couple
more shows scheduled:
one called Sky
and Water Paintings
at the Neuberger
Museum in
May, and a show
of landscape
paintings at
the Cape
Musem of Fine
Arts in
Dennis, Massachusetts,
from July 17
to September
7."
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Ykhon,
2001.
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Moea,
2001.
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Biography...
Tobi
Kahn is internationally
acclaimed as a
painter and sculptor.
His work has been
shown in over
40 solo exhibitions
and over 60 museum
and group shows
since he was selected
as one of nine
artists to be
included in the
1985 Guggenheim
Museum exhibition,
New Horizons in
American Art.
Kahn's paintings
and sculpture
have been the
subject of an
extensive bibliography
in art magazines,
catalogues and
newspapers since
the early 1980s.
A museum exhibition
of over a decade
of his work, Tobi
Kahn: Metamorphoses,
curated by Peter
Selz, traveled
to eight museums
from 1997 through
1999, including
the Weatherspoon
Museum, Greensboro,
and the Museum
of Fine Arts,
Houston. An 84-page
illustrated catalogue
of the exhibition
includes essays
by Dore Ashton,
Michael Brenson
and Peter Selz
(University of
Washington Press).
Works by Kahn
are in the collections
of major institutions
throughout the
United States,
including the
Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, NY; Jewish
Museum, NY; Museum
of Fine Arts,
Houston, TX; Weatherspoon
Art Gallery, Greensboro,
NC; Edwin A. Ulrich
Museum of Art,
Wichita, KS; Colby
College Museum
of Art, Waterville,
ME; Rose Art Museum,
Brandeis University,
Waltham, MA; and
Skirball Cultural
Center, Los Angeles,
CA. Corporate
collections include
Swiss Bank Corporation,
NY; Chase Manhattan
Bank, NY; Prudential
Insurance, NY;
Dreyfus Corporation,
NY; Salomon Brothers,
NY; Skadden, Arps,
Slate, Neagher
& Flom, NY;
Exxon Corporation,
Miami, FL; and
Fidelity Investments,
Boston, MA.

Ahlom,
2001.
Kahn's
commissioned outdoor
sculpture includes
Shalev,
for Jane Owen
and the Robert
Lee Blaffer Trust,
New Harmony, IN;
and two Holocaust
memorial gardens,
in Tenafly, NJ,
and La Jolla,
CA. His commissioned
installations
include Eyda,
seven paintings
for Mitchell and
Company, Boston,
MA; and The
Twelve Tribes
and Creation
of the World,
for the Jewish
Family Congregation,
South Salem, NY,
through a Nathan
Cummings Foundation
grant; as well
as numerous private
commissions.
In March 1999,
Avoda: Objects
of the Spirit,
an exhibition
of Kahn's ceremonial
objects curated
by Laura Kruger,
opened at Hebrew
Union College,
NY, and will travel
for five years.
Other Judaica
commissions include
the Museum of
Jewish Heritage,
Battery Park City,
NY.
In December 1999,
Kahn designed
an installation
of nine "Sky and
Water" paintings
for the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery's
Landscape at the
Millennium exhibition,
curated by Douglas
Dreishpoon.
In November 2000,
a solo exhibition
of Kahn's paintings
and works on paper,
curated by Mark
White, opened
at the Edwin A.
Ulrich Museum
of Art. It will
travel to four
other venues.
The exhibition
will include a
catalogue, Metaphor
and Transport:
Tobi Kahn and
the Aerial View.

Nadirh,
1995.
In
May 2000, Kahn
received the Outstanding
Achievement Award
in fine art as
an alumnus of
Pratt Institute.
In March 2001,
Heads, a solo
exhibition of
Kahn's early work,
opened at Pratt,
curated by Peter
Selz and accompanied
by a catalogue.
Kahn's handmade
toys have been
included in museum
shows across the
country. He has
also designed
sculpture sets
for theater productions,
including Jonah
and The Song
of Songs,
both by composer
Elizabeth Swados,
and for work by
choreographers
Gus Solomons and
Muna Tseng.
In November 2001,
a meditative room
created by Kahn
was inaugurated
as a permanent
installation at
HealthCare Chaplaincy in
New York City.
In November 2002,
a solo exhibition
of Kahn's paintings
based on creation,
will open at the
Yeshiva University
Museum in Chelsea,
New York. In May
2003, an exhibition
of Kahn's "Sky
and Water" paintings
opens at the Neuberger
Museum in Purchase,
New York.
Kahn is currently
creating a chapel
commissioned by
Jane Owen and
the Blaffer Trust
to be constructed
in New Harmony,
Indiana. He is
working with the
architect to design
the building,
which will consist
of one large room
of his murals
and two side chapels
of his paintings
and sculpture.
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| Jama,
2001. |
Nahn,
2001. |
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