“Aleph” is an artist’s meditation on life, death, mysticism, politics, and pop culture. In an eight-minute loop of film, Wallace Berman uses Hebrew letters to frame a hypnotic, rapid-fire montage that captures the go-go energy of the 1960s. Aleph includes stills of collages created using a Verifax machine, Eastman Kodak’s precursor to the photocopier. These collages depict a hand-held radio that seems to broadcast or receive popular and esoteric icons. Signs, symbols, and diverse mass-media images (e.g., Flash Gordon, John F. Kennedy, Mick Jagger) flow like a deck of tarot cards, infinitely shuffled in order that the viewer may construct his or her own set of personal interpretations. The transistor radio, the most ubiquitous portable form of mass communication in the 1960s, exemplifies the democratic potential of electronic culture and may serve as a metaphor for Jewish mysticism.
Release Date: January 01, 1966
May 04, 1993
May 04, 2002
May 04, 2003
January 30, 2016
May 04, 2005
May 04, 2004
October 29, 2020
October 29, 2021
September 01, 2015
October 31, 2018
January 01, 1996
January 01, 1998
June 16, 2021
November 11, 2022
April 27, 1968
April 27, 1968
April 28, 1970
April 27, 1973
April 29, 1975
April 29, 1975