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The Jewish Museum of Maryland building will be closed to the public until February 2025 for the first phase of a capital project. Over the course of the next year, we will take major steps towards growing the JMM from a 20th-century museum to a 21st-century one.
During this time, visitors can explore the virtual gallery websites for JMM original exhibits A Fence Around the Torah: Safety and Unsafety in Jewish Life and My Odessa: Paintings by Yefim Ladyzhensky.
Are you interested in learning more about our collections? Use the buttons below to explore our collections database, review additional resources, check out blog posts about materials from our collections, and learn about donating to our collections!
Meet the team at the Jewish Museum of Maryland! Below you will find contact information for each staff member at JMM. We look forward to hearing from you.
We work hard to capture, preserve, interpret, and convey the meaning embedded in the stories of Maryland’s Jewish communities. Explore these pages to discover not only the stories we tell, but how and where we find, keep, and protect them.
The Museum will require proof of COVID vaccination for all visitors to the Museum. Visitors will be required to wear a N95 or KN95 mask while onsite. The Museum will have a supply of masks on hand for visitors who arrive without one.
JHSM changes its name to the Jewish Museum of Maryland. The new museum building opens with two major exhibitions, “Bridges to Zion: The People of Maryland and the Land of Israel” and “The Eighteen: Paintings by Archie Rand.”
The Jewish Museum of Maryland building will be closed to the public until the summer of 2024 for the first phase of a capital project. Over the course of the next year, we will take major steps towards growing the JMM from a 20th-century museum to a 21st-century one.
At JMM, we tell stories of Jewish Maryland. Our exhibits share stories that will make your students question, laugh, think, and feel deeply – no matter who they are – because stories connect us as a community of learners.
The exhibit chronicles a place of constant change, where people of different backgrounds lived, worked, created community—and came together in the renowned Jewish market known as Lombard Street. The exhibition is currently on display in the JMM’s Shoshana S. and Jerome Cardin Exhibition Gallery.