Loop Synagogue

Synagoge in Chicago, Illinois, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Chicago Loop Synagogue is an Orthodox Jewish synagogue, located at 16 South Clark Street, in the Loop precinct of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. Completed in 1958,[3] the synagogue is renowned for a stained glass artwork by Abraham Rattner.[1]:72

StatusActive
Notable artworks
Quick facts Chicago Loop Synagogue, Religion ...
Chicago Loop Synagogue
Religion
AffiliationOrthodox Judaism
Ecclesiastical or organisational statusSynagogue
StatusActive
Notable artworks
Location
Location16 South Clark Street, Loop, Chicago, Illinois 60603
CountryUnited States
Loop Synagogue is located in Chicago Loop
Loop Synagogue
Location in the Chicago Loop, Illinois
Coordinates41°52′54″N 87°37′53″W
Architecture
ArchitectLoebl, Schlossman & Bennett
TypeSynagogue
StyleModernist
Established1929 (as a congregation)
Completed1958
Specifications
Site area5,000 square feet (460 m2)
MaterialsGlass, metal (brass and bronze} and concrete
Website
chiloopsyn.org
[1]:104[2]
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The synagogue was founded in 1929 by the United Synagogue of America to serve the needs of Jewish professionals working in Chicago’s downtown business district, providing kosher food and a place to pray during the workday. Following the COVID-19 global pandemic, there were concerns that, due to the exodus of workers from the city center, the synagogue would be unable to sustain its future operating costs.[4][5][6][7]

Architecture and design

The building was designed by architects Loebl, Schlossman & Bennett, who also designed the Richard J. Daley Center.[8][9] Completed in 1958, the synagogue building replaced a synagogue on the same block that had been lost to fire.[2]

A sculpture Hands of Peace by Nehemia Azaz is situated over the entrance doors.[1]:105 The work depicts "priestly hands raised in benediction" (the Priestly Blessing).[10]

Let There Be Light

Abraham Rattner's 30 ft × 40 ft (9.1 m × 12.2 m) Let There Be Light [a] occupies the entire eastern wall of the second-floor sanctuary. It stands in juxtaposition to the "reserved minimalism" of the rest of the interior.[2] The art depicts images from Genesis 1:3 and Jewish religious symbols including a menorah, a shofar and an etrog. Additional influences include kabbalistic symbolism of "the force and the spirit of the ineffable and unknowable power".[11]:114–115

It was described as "[p]erhaps the most beautiful synagogue interior in the United States".[12] Another critic said the glass "bathes the sanctuary in a shower of color, artistically consecrating the space as a place apart from the grey concrete scene on the other side of the glass".[13]

A view of Let There Be Light from the interior of the synagogue.

See also

Notes

  1. Also listed as And God Said, Let There Be Light[11]:112 and The Journey of a Mystic[12]

References

Further reading

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