Ellen Rothenberg: ISO 6346: ineluctable immigrant
@ Spertus Institute
610 S Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60605
Opening Thursday, February 1st, from 5:30PM - 7:30PM
On view through Sunday, April 22nd
Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership has commissioned a site-specific installation by internationally-acclaimed, Chicago-based artist Ellen Rothenberg. Entitled ISO 6346: ineluctable immigrant, it will be on view beginning February 1, 2018, in the Instituteâs main floor Gallery. With this work, Rothenberg prompts visitors to consider connections between past and contemporary issues of migration. The project is inspired by objects and documents that Rothenberg uncovered in the Spertus collectionâas well as research she pursued in Berlin at Germanyâs largest refugee camp, currently housed in the monumental Tempelhof Airport, a disused site that was originally designed and built by the Nazis.
Rothenberg has titled the installation ISO 6346 after the international standard for identification and marking of shipping containers, such as those being used to house refugees at Tempelhof. Images of these containers will appear in dialogue with materials from the Spertus collectionâsuch as passports, birth certificates, comics, and photographsâthat represent earlier Jewish immigration and movement. The word âineluctableâ in the exhibition title (meaning: inescapable, unavoidable) was first used in print in 1623, notably at the same time as the words “immigrateâ and “migration.”
ISO 6346: ineluctable immigrant will open with a reception with the artist on Thursday, February 1, 5:30 – 8 pm. Spertus Institute is located at 610 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. The exhibition is free and open to the public, Sunday-Wednesday 10 am – 5 pm, Thursday 10 am – 6 pm, and Friday 10 am – 3 pm. The installation will be on view through April 22, 2018.
This exhibition is organized by Ionit Behar, Spertus Institute’s Curator of Collections and Exhibitions.
Said Behar: âEllen Rothenbergâs project is significant on many levels. Photographs of archival documents and objects from the Spertus collection are juxtaposed against images of the construction of one of the largest refugee settlements in Germany. The exhibitionââwith a focus on the current crisis of migration and the forces of global capitalismââfinds deep historical echoes in the Spertus Instituteâs archive and collection.â
âMy research began with an initial foray into the collections and archives at The Spertus Institute,â explained the artist, Ellen Rothenberg. âObjects, documents, photographs relating to individual diasporic histories are interleaved with various profiles of Jewish institutions established and active here in Chicago. What was striking was the historical reverberations within the collection to our contemporary condition. One of the first objects I encountered in the collection was a Mexican passport and immigration identity papers for Sonia Kominsky, a Russian Jewish seamstress born in Kiev who entered the United States in 1926. It contains a racialized description of her person detailing religion âIsraelitaâ (Jewish), hair color ânegroâ (black), âeyebrows bushy,â and skin âblancaâ (white). What was immediately resonant was her route from Mexico to the United States, a route which has become increasingly contested, a politicized border defined and interrupted by the rhetorical projection of a âwall.ââ
All the programs are free. Reservations can be made online at spertus.edu
About the artist
Ellen Rothenbergâs installations and public projects often employ the iconography of social movements, using archival documents to examine the mechanisms underlying contemporary political engagement. Her workââarchitecturally scaled installations, public projects, performance, collaborations, and writingââuncovers histories embedded in the present, adding layers of meaning beyond the conventions of historical objects.
Ellen Rothenbergâs work has been concerned with the politics of everyday life and the formation of communities through collaborative practices. Influenced by the social and political actions of the 1960sâincluding the civil rights, anti-war, and feminist movementsâshe immerses herself in research, particularly feminist histories of labor and social action. With an emphasis on communities and collaborative practices, she often partners with historians, forensic scientists, research librarians, archivists, and material fabricators.
Rothenbergâs work has been presented in North America and Europe at institutions including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; the Museum of London, Ontario; The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco; the Neues Museum Weserburg, Bremen; Royal Festival Hall, London; and the Brukenthal National Museum, Sibiu, Romania. Her awards include fellowships from the Bunting Institute Fellowship of Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies at Harvard University, Illinois Arts Council, Massachusetts Artist Foundation, and NEA as well as grants from CEC Artslink, the Charles Engelhard Foundation, LEF Foundation, and NEA Artists Projects. She has worked in collaboration with the Chicago Torture Justice Memorial Project, Future Force Geo Speculators, and Chelen Amenca, Romania. Rothenberg teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she was recently appointed an inaugural Faculty Research Fellow of the Institute for Curatorial Research and Practice.
Exhibits at Spertus Institute are made possible in part by the Harry and Sadie Lasky and Charles & M.R. Shapiro Foundations. Public Programs are made possible in part by the Poetry Foundation.
An exhibition publication containing a conversation between artist Ellen Rothenberg and curator Ionit Behar and an essay by Berlin visual arts curator Bettina Klein, along with exhibition images, is being produced and will be available for free at Spertus Institute during the exhibition. This publication is made possible in part by the Goethe-Institut Chicago.
Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership (610 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago), offers dynamic learning opportunities, rooted in Jewish wisdom and culture and open to all. Graduate programs and workshops train future leaders and engage individuals in exploration of Jewish life. Public programsâincluding films, exhibits, speakers, seminars, workshops, and concertsâtake place at the Institute’s Michigan Avenue facility, in the Chicago suburbs, and online. More information can be found at spertus.edu.
Spertus Institute is a partner with the Jewish United Fund in serving our community.
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