I spent two days photographing the Temple Emanu-El on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Although the main sanctuary of Temple Emanu-El is impressive because of the sheer volume of uninterrupted space, highly detailed mosaics and intricately patterned ceiling painting compete with the large architectural gestures.
Adjacent to the sanctuary is a smaller chapel featuring Moorish arches and columns. The gem-studded ark, mosaic arch, and Tiffany window above, are spectacular.
I climbed up to the organist’s loft and framed a shot of the chapel’s chandeliers through one of the cuttouts in the wall. It’s my “Casablanca” shot I told the architect from Beyer Blinder Belle, the firm that led the restoration of the temple. The main sanctuary is open to the public, and tours of the synagogue are also available.
Official temple website
nyc-architecture.com
Hi Brian,
I found your spectacular images of Temple Emanu-El online which led me to your site. In a film I’m doing,a recent interviewee speaks of going to Kindergarten and growing up at Temple Emanu-El. Do you sell an unexclusive right to use one or two of your images? They are incredible and brilliantly convey the architectural beauty and grandeur of that special building. In San Francisco there is another wonderful Temple Emanu-El in Pacific Heights.
Kind regards, Marjorie