painting of Polish refugee children
"Refugee Children, Poland" by Maurycy Minkowski (1881–1930) is part of the new Magnes exhibit “Flowing through Time and Tradition.” The painting, inspired by the 1905 Bialystok pogrom, focuses on a child holding a vessel to evoke the "thirst and solitude caused by human conflict," according to the Magnes. (Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life)

Updated Sept. 4

Water — it’s a fundamental part of life, and also an element with deep connections to Jewish tradition. From the creation of the world to the flood, from the parting of the Red Sea to the intimate ritual of the mikvah, and even the Atlantic crossings of immigrants to America, water has been key.

The ways in which water interacts with Jewish life is the theme of the new exhibit at the Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life in Berkeley, which opened Aug. 28. “Flowing through Time and Tradition” is on view through May 2026.

It’s a topic with breadth.

Water is “there from the beginning, the beginning of the beginning, before the creation,” said Achinoam Aldouby, associate curator at the Magnes, who designed the exhibit.

Jonah and the Whale in Haifa Port
“Jonah and the Whale in Haifa Port” (1978) is the work of Eugene Abeshaus, an emigre from the Soviet Union who was permitted to leave for Israel in 1976. In the painting, he merges the Biblical story of Jonah with the emigrant experience. (Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life)

Sixty-five objects from the Magnes’ own collection trace the theme of water via both its symbolic power and its function in Jewish ritual. These range from the prosaic, such as a glass water jug, to the evocative — a soapstone panel carved in a Cyprus detention camp with a scene of a ship.

“I love that the show has content for people who have deep knowledge about Jewish life, Jewish practice, and also content for people who are learners,” said Hannah Weisman, executive director of the Magnes. “It really doesn’t depend on prior knowledge to engage, invite reflection, offer points of comparison between your own life and the things that are on view.”

The artifacts and fine art pieces on display range from the 16th to the 20th century and come from places as diverse as India, Cyprus, Russia, Israel, Belgium, Syria, Egypt and the U.S.

An open Jewish prayerbook
A siddur in the exhibit is open to a page about tashlich, the Rosh Hashanah ritual of “casting off” the previous year’s sins into water. (Aaron Levy-Wolins/J. Staff)

The exhibit is divided into four themes around the role of water in Jewish life: believing, sustaining, cleansing and displacing. But the topic was chosen, Aldouby said, by outgoing Magnes head curator Francesco Spagnolo, who left the organization in July after 20 years to pursue other curatorial and advising positions, including with the National Museum of Italian Judaism and the Shoah.  

“He handed it to me — this is my first year here — as a way, I think thoughtfully, for me to really learn the collection,” said Aldouby, who comes to the Magnes from the Tower of David Museum in Jerusalem.

The Magnes is in a time of transition, with both Spagnolo and longtime registrar Julie Franklin stepping down. The organization has launched a search for a new head curator, and Weisman said she expects to see a new person in the role by spring. But life at the Magnes is not on hold in the interim, she said.

“We also are moving along with all of our initiatives in the meantime,” she said. “We’re not pausing our work for that search.”

Tashlich, Israel by Natan Heber
Here is a detail of “Tashlich,” circa 1970, by Natan Heber (1902-1975). (Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life)

The gallery is open to visitors during public hours, as usual with no admission fee, only a suggested donation. Groups can also contact the Magnes for a guided tour.

For Aldouby, having visitors to the gallery interact with the exhibit is crucial to her concept.

“The gallery is 50 percent the exhibition and the other 50 percent is the people that come in and the stories that they bring,” Aldouby said.

“Flowing through Time and Tradition” includes discussion prompts, listening stations with music and even a map of the world where people can stick notes showing where their ancestors lived.

Aldouby said it was a challenge to narrow down the selection for the exhibit, considering the Magnes collection is full of objects that speak to the theme. But some pieces were an immediate “yes” for her.

Soapstone carving
This soapstone carving was created by Zeev ben-Zvi in a Cyprus detention camp in 1948. It reflects the experiences of the thousands of Holocaust survivors who boarded overcrowded ships to reach Mandatory Palestine but were stopped and sent to British detention camps in Cyprus. (Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, Sibila Savage Photography)

One is the oil painting “Refugee Children, Poland,” by Maurycy Minkowski.

“There was something very powerful in this image,” Aldouby said. “Something in the gaze. The child looks at you, but not exactly at you.”

She said the painting was a representation of the aftermath of the Białystok pogrom in 1906, in which Polish mobs looted Jewish homes and buildings.

“I felt it was a very powerful image of thirst,” she said. “Physical thirst, communal thirst or social thirst for connection.”

It’s only one of the many objects that, while connected by the theme of water, also show the vast range of the Magnes collection, which includes art, ritual objects and documents.

“The uniqueness of the collection,” Aldouby said, “is that it holds Jewish stories, Jewish objects, daily objects and art from different communities across the world.”

“Flowing Through Time and Tradition”
Through Dec. 11 and then Jan. 12–May 14. At the Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, 2121 Allston Way, Berkeley.

Update on Sept. 4: The first name of Magnes executive director Hannah Weisman has been corrected.

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Maya Mirsky is the managing editor of J. She lives in Oakland and previously served as culture editor at J.