Archive for September, 2010
(Posted on Jewlicious.com)
Elke Reva Sudin, one of the artists featured in the “Punk Jews” article I wrote for The Jewish Week a few months back, let me know today that she and her husband Saul are launching a unique new venture — SUDINmagazine — a magazine unifying Jewish art from all over the world.
The non-profit magazine, which will come out annually, launches this Chanukah and is fiscally sponsored by Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Also published alongside the yearly print book will be a website with “more constantly updated material, like a central place that’s not affiliated or discriminatory,” according to Sudin. They’re expecting to include a ton of video, cover art events and get people from Jewish communities around the world to contribute their thoughts and artwork, she says.
To accomplish all this, however, the Sudins are aiming to raise $5,000 to finance their project.
Watch Elke and Saul’s appeal here:
Can Heeb Still Shock Online?
With the Internet awash in outrageous images — from porn to boogieing IDF soldiers in the hotbed of Hebron — can a racy Jewish magazine whose stock in trade is shock value have the same impact solely online?
That’s the question this week following the announcement that Heeb Magazine — known for its covers featuring Roseanne Barr in Hitler attire, a sexualized image of Jesus and a pig trouncing a loaf of challah — has shut down its print edition.
After nine years of entertaining readers and riling adversaries, Heeb will operate solely in its recently re-launched online form, but editors promise that its shock value will be as strong as ever — if not stronger. Newly appointed editor-in-chief Erin Hershberg, a blogger who’s been a huge fan of Heeb since its inception, intends to include more food stories, music reviews and what she calls “goy columnists.”
“The print world has lost its shock value because of the Internet anyway,” Hershberg told The Jewish Week. “Heeb has to change its tune, and if anything my intent is to keep it low-brow but also to keep in a lot of high-brow and keep a play between the two.” Continue reading…
