Letters to Afar Opens at the Museum of the City of New York on October 22, 2014

Jun 9, 2014
The YIVO Institute and the Museum of the City of New York present a Video Art Exhibition, Letters to Afar, by Award-Winning Artists Péter Forgács and The Klezmatics

(NEW YORK, June 9, 2014) – The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research and the Museum of the City of New York proudly announce the U.S. premiere of Letters to Afar, a groundbreaking video art exhibition by award-winning artists Péter Forgács and The Klezmatics. The exhibition will be on view at the Museum of the City of New York from October 22, 2014 through March 22, 2015.

Letters to Afar is an immersive video art installation based on home movies made by New York City's Jewish immigrants who traveled back to visit Poland during the 1920s and 30s. The films document poignant family reunions and everyday life in cities and small towns in the years before the Second World War, capturing a culture on the brink. Unknowingly, they also provided a snapshot of the extraordinary autonomy and richness of Jewish life in interwar Poland, and the great diversity of school, youth, self-help and cultural organizations that existed at the time. The installation was created by Hungarian artist Péter Forgács with a haunting soundtrack by the New York-based band The Klezmatics. These "letters" bring to life a lost world in startling and moving detail.

Letters to Afar was commissioned by the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in 2013. This unique multimedia exhibition is based on a YIVO collection of home movies that were digitized with support from the Righteous Persons Foundation in 2006.  

This exhibition is made possible with generous support from the Seedlings Foundation, the Kronhill Pletka Foundation, and the Righteous Persons Foundation.


This fall, the YIVO Institute is pleased to welcome Péter Forgács as its first Artist-in-Residence. During his six-week residency, Forgács will install Letters to Afar, participate in public programs, and perform research for a new work on YIVO.

Location:
Museum of the City of New York
1220 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street
New York, NY 10029
www.mcny.org