Artist Mel Alexenberg
launches cyberangels from Israel to thirty museums throughout the world as
an homage to Rembrandt on the 350th anniversary of his death. These
museums have Rembrandt inspired artworks by Alexenberg in their
collections. At Global Tribute to
Rembrandt are posts for each of the museums and texts on
the impact of digital culture on art by the artist, former art professor
at Columbia University and research fellow at MIT Center for Advanced Visual
Studies.
“He had a vision in a dream. A ladder was standing on the
ground, its top reaching up towards heaven as Divine angels were going up and
down on it.” (Genesis 28:12)
Angels in Jacob’s dream go up from the Land of Israel and
go down throughout the world.
Top image: Rembrandt inspired cyberangels arrive from Israel at the High Museum of Art
from the Israel Museum's Shrine of the Book in Jerusalem, home of ancient Bible scrolls.
Middle image: Cyberangels spiral up from a NASA satellite image of the Land of Israel on a smartphone screen on Mel Alexenberg’s newest book Through a Bible Lens. They launch the book throughout the world from the artist/author’s studio in Israel.
Bottom image: Alexenberg’s lithograph “Digitized Homage to Rembrandt: Day Angels” that has been in the collection of the High Museum of Art since 1987. In tribute to
Rembrandt on the 350th year of his death, his digitized angels
dormant in the museum’s flat files awaken to adorn the cover of the 2019 book Through
a Bible Lens: Biblical Insights for Smartphone Photography and Social Media. They fly from the book cover to the Shrine
of the Book in Jerusalem, Israel, on to Jerusalem, Georgia.