Yaacov Agam
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Yaacov Agam, a maser of kinetic art and the son of a rabbi, has
pioneered a form of visual art influenced by the Jewish conception
that reality is not static and cannot be represented in a graven
image. His images are in a state of ``constant becoming'' --- they cannot
be seen in their totality and any one time or from any one position.
Agam's works are exhibited in the world's leading museums, including
the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Hirschhorn Museum, Washington,
D.C.; and Pompidou Center, Paris. His one-man exhibits have been
featured at the Guggenheim Museum in New York' the National Museum of
Modern Art in Paris; and the Tel Aviv Museum in Israel. His
monumental creations grace numerous public places and institutions
worldwide. Agam has also designed a variety of original Torah arks
and stained glass windows for synagogue sanctuaries, as well as
religious items such as mezuzot and tallitot.
Agam wished to make his vision a reality and design an entire
synagogue --- exterior and interior --- based on the ideas expressed
here.