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What’s wrong with our museums and how to fix it

Jewish culture is more vibrant than ever but one writer argues that our museums are just not up to scratch

February 8, 2016 08:14
Stunning: The Fallen Leaves exhibition at the Jewish Museum in Berlin, Germany

By

David Herman,

David Herman

6 min read

There are serious problems facing Jewish museums and galleries in Britain today. Some problems are practical: the wrong location, small numbers of visitors, not enough money. Others are more about the state of Jewish culture and identity. Should Jewish museums be about the past, tradition and religion (Judaica), or the Holocaust which so dominated Jewish identity in the 1980s and 90s, or a positive story about migration, assimilation and rising prosperity? In other words, who do Britain's Jews think they are today and what kind of story do we want to tell ourselves (and others) about Jewish culture?

The best international Jewish museums seem to find this more straightforward. The Jewish Museum in Berlin, for example, had enough state and city support to get one of the world's most exciting and innovative architects, Daniel Libeskind, to design the Holocaust extension which instantly became a huge tourist attraction. Polin, Warsaw's new Jewish history museum, has been a huge success because it was bold, ambitious and like Libeskind's Berlin Museum told a compelling and tragic story which again has attracted tourists. The Jewish Museum in New York is set in a wonderful town-house on the Upper East Side and has sufficient space to combine traditional exhibits with more contemporary art, photography and film. All three museums have big financial backing, great locations, big tourist footfall and are must-see places. Above all, they have a strong sense of identity and purpose. None of this applies to Britain's Jewish museums.

These international Jewish museums have several things in common. They all have excellent central locations. The best of all, of course, is New York's Jewish Museum off 5th Avenue, at the heart of the Upper East Side's famous Museum Mile, just a short walk from the Met, the Guggenheim and the Frick. Polin is the most evocative location of all, on the site of the former Warsaw Ghetto, facing the monument to the Warsaw Ghetto Heroes.

They all have excellent exhibitions obviously. The New York Museum is currently showing three different exhibitions: Andy Warhol's famous portraits of Elizabeth Taylor and Marilyn Monroe, Stieglitz's great immigration photograph, The Steerage (1907), and an exhibition of Soviet film and photography. Last year Vienna's Jewish Museum had a superb exhibition about the history of the Ringstrasse, the heart of fin de siècle Vienna and home to many of Vienna's most famous Jewish families.