Glenn Lowry - Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Transcription
Glenn Lowry - Minneapolis Institute of Arts
1 2 May 2015 SAVE THE DATE May 14, 2015 Glenn Lowry “In Between Places: Contemporary Art and the Middle East” Ticketed Luncheon Following THE FRIENDS LECTURE SERIES | THURSDAY, May 14 | PILLSBURY AUDITORIUM, 11 A.M. Sponsored by the Mark and Mary Goff Fiterman Lecture Fund Glenn Lowry “In Between Places: Contemporary Art and the Middle East” For nearly 20 years, art historian Glenn Lowry has directed New York’s Museum of Modern Art, the most influential modern art museum in the world. He came to MoMA as an acclaimed specialist in Islamic art. Lowry returns to his scholarly roots for this lecture. Contemporary art in the Middle East can be seen as the continuation of the historical tradition or as a radical break with the past; as a market driven phenomenon fueled by the wealth of a new Gulf-based clientele; or as a searing critique of the social and political conditions of the region often made by artists living in a diasporic condition. Dr. Lowry will explore how a number of artists from this region, including Wael Shawky, Shirin Neshat, Walid Raad, Rania Stephan, and Shahzia Sikander, navigate these complicated and highly charged issues through their varied practices that range from film-making and photography to painting and animation. Dr. Lowry became the sixth director of the Museum of Modern Art in 1995. He has significantly developed the Museum’s holdings in all mediums, adding entire collections of contemporary drawings, Fluxus, Conceptual Art, and the archives of Frank Lloyd Wright. A strong advocate of contemporary art and artists who are shaping art, he has overseen acquisitions by artists such as Matthew Barney, Louise Bourgeois, Richard Serra, Gerhard Richter and Robert Rauschenberg. Dr. Lowry’s initiatives include the successful merger of The Museum of Modern Art and P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center (now MoMA P.S. 1). He also established the Contemporary and Modern Art Perspectives in a Global Age Initiative (C-MAP), a research program for the exchange of knowledge and ideas among arts experts around the world. He is currently leading a renovation and expansion project that will offer visitors a more welcoming and participatory experience and unprecedented access to MoMA’s collections and programming. Dr. Lowry received his B.A. from Williams College and an M.A. and Ph.D. in art history from Harvard University. He began his career as the first director of the Joseph and Margaret Muscarelle Museum of Art at the College of William and Mary. He was curator of Near Eastern Art at the Smithsonian Institution’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art. He was also director of the Art Gallery of Ontario. Following the lecture by Dr. Lowry, please join the Friends in the Target Reception Hall for a delicious spring luncheon of mixed greens, grilled chicken, roasted beets, Moroccan spices, pickled onion, candied pecans, manchego and sherry vinaigrette. A tequila Lime Tart with orange whipped cream will complete the menu. You may request a vegetarian option when you reserve. Call (612) 870-6323 today to reserve your luncheon space. The cost is $25, and all reservations must be received by May 8. 9 p.m., May 8. Ticketing for Friends Annual Meeting and Lecture May 14, 2015 Thursday, May 14, the Friends Annual Meeting will be held before the lecture presented by Dr. Glenn Lowry. The meeting will begin at 10:40 with only twenty minutes to impart a year’s full of Friends highlights, as well as announce the new slate of board of directors for 2015-2016. Free tickets are available for Pillsbury Auditorium seating. Doors will open for Ticket holders at 10:00 a.m. All must be seated by 10:30 to insure our speaker his full allotted time. The Friends Annual Meeting will begin promptly at 10:40. Guests without tickets may attend a live broadcast of the meeting and lecture in overflow seating in the Wells Fargo Community Room on the first floor. Seating in Pillsbury Auditorium is currently full. Tickets are available for Friends members on the 15th of each month preceding the lecture. General ticketing is available to the public beginning the 17th of the month. A Letter from Friends President Pamela Friedland I look back at the last two years of my life and of course recall all the personal fortunes in my life such as moving into a new home my husband and I helped design and welcoming our first grandchild Greyson, into our lives. This would certainly be enough to fill anyone with happiness it would seem. But I have had the good fortune of continued fulfillment by leading the Friends of the Institute through an incredible two years. Doing it with the most loyal, diligent, and genuinely warm group of board members I have worked alongside, has so greatly added to these successful two years. Seeing our Office Administrator Kate Smith everyday, has given me great support and introduced me to someone with the most amazing smile ever and incredible competency to boot! Our Friends Lecture Series has enjoyed a year of tremendous success. As the auditorium fills each month, our members have learned an incredible amount about so many different art topics. We continue to be grateful to the Mark and Mary Goff Fiterman Fund for its generosity in supporting this enormous endeavor. We look forward to a stellar lineup, beginning once again this September. Our Transportation Fund this year is spending nearly $17,000 for 90 buses bringing almost 4,500 schoolchildren through our doors for guide-led tours. Our goal in the next year is to offer transportation to older children also, exposing and capturing their future interest in the arts. We continue our long tradition of decorating the front MIA lobby with lovely fresh flowers weekly calling upon the generosity of the Harris/Phelps Fund. This year, like so many others, we generously provided via our Friends Endowment for Education Fund over $80,000 to the Learning and Innovation Department, allowing them the proper outreach to the community the museum prides itself on. Our Children's Fund works closely with this department also targeting specific projects. Perhaps Friends is most proud this year of speaking up first to become one of the MIA's three top Presenting Sponsors honoring the museum’s 100th Birthday Year. We are proud to say we have now paid off $250,000 of our $500,000 gift to the museum! We have our members to thank for helping raise this kind of money. Your belief in our mission, tireless support of our fall fundraisers and our annual community favorite Art in Bloom, as well as countess volunteer hours, allows us to be this generous. This organization is nonexistent without all of you, not only your time, financial support, but personal interactions so important to the success of a volunteer organization. We certainly have the MIA staff to thank also. Our partnership with everyone in the museum is cherished and enjoyed. I leave you all in great hands as Connie Sommers takes over as president in July. I certainly hope I may speak for all of you, as we plan to bop into the Friends office often to see Connie and Kate, and continue to be a part of the growth and success of the Friends. With very warm wishes, Pamela Friedland The Gift of Art in Bloom The 32nd Art in Bloom was a welcome gift to the community. It was made possible because of the outstanding volunteer efforts of more than 500 volunteers! Thank you to our dedicated Art in Bloom Committee which has been planning all year. Thank you also to the volunteers who worked tirelessly to ensure that all the events and activities ran smoothly. Much appreciation goes to the Pedestal Floral Artists and the Commercial Florists for their beautiful arrangements and displays. They captured our imaginations and delighted us with their creativity! Kudos to Kate Smith, Friends Office Administrator, for her hard work and superlative organizational skills, along with all the efforts of the Friends interns, Caroline Byrd and Kaitlin Gross. What great support they provided! We thank Friends President, Pamela Friedland, for her valuable guidance throughout the planning process and we also acknowledge the amazing support of our Art in Bloom Advisors, Carolyn Dahl, Betsey Whitbeck, and Carol Burton Gray. Our appreciation would not be complete without thanking the hardworking staff of the MIA who worked with us to help ensure that Art in Bloom would be successful. We could not have done it without their topnotch teamwork. In closing, we are pleased that Art in Bloom raised much needed funding to support transportation for K-12 students to come to the MIA. A big thank you to all the volunteers who helped make the 32nd Art in Bloom so successful! JeanMarie Burtness and Arna Yetter Art in Bloom 2015 Co-Chairs Lead Sponsor: Honorary Chairs: Teresa Pfister and Joan T. Smith Generous support provided by Gabberts Design Studio & Fine Furniture, Lakewood Cemetery, Martha Head, Nordic Ware, SpartanNash, Lucy and Bob Mitchell, and Tom and Lynn Schaefer. Additional support provided by E.M. Birt, Edina Eye Physicians & Surgeons, Olson Law Firm, Caldrea, Helen W. Leslie, Mary Grau, Patty and Sam McCullough, D’Amico Catering, Acendas, Len Busch Roses, Susan Arndt, JeanMarie Burtness, Pamela Friedland, Julie Holland, Katie Remole, Connie Sommers, Arna Yetter, Maxine Wallin, B.T. McElrath Chocolatier, and Prism Research. Media Partner: Friends-Only Lecture Day Tour Please join us for the final pre-lecture tour of the 2014-2015 lecture series on Thursday, May 14. The tour is titled Heaven on Earth: Arts of Islam and will complement the lecture “In Between Places:Contemporary Art and the Middle East,” presented at 11:00 by art historian Dr. Glen Lowry. Space is limited and these popular tours fill quickly, so reserve with Friends-Only Events co-chair Diane Skrien (651)-222-0054 or [email protected]. Tour participants will receive tickets and reserved seats for the 10:40 Annual Meeting and the 11:00 lecture. The tour begins promptly at 10:00 a.m. in the MIA’s Third Avenue lobby across from the security desk. Friends-Only Art and Architecture in Duluth June 17-18, 2015 Journey to Duluth for an insider’s tour lead by renowned Architect David Salmela. Tour his home and office, several stunning homes, the only University of Minnesota Platinum Lead Certified Building, The UMD Bagley Classroom Building and the award winning Hawksboots Sustainable Manufacturing Facility. “Salmela's buildings resolve a central question of our time: how to balance the various extreme positions that characterize contemporary architecture and culture. Salmela accomplishes this by juxtaposing opposites: modernist and traditional forms, open and cellular plans, large and small scales, familiar elements used in unfamiliar ways. His projects range from a small stand-alone sauna to commercial spaces visited by thousands of people, and his buildings, mostly situated in the upper Midwest, have become nationally and internationally known.” Tom Fisher, Dean, University of Minnesota College of Design Enjoy touring the fabulous, historic Glensheen Mansion and gardens on the shore of Lake Superior. The exclusive Friends tour will be lead by Glensheen Director Dan Hartman. Dan tells us that he has the keys to places rarely seen by the public…what an opportunity to see hidden gems! We’ll also hear from the staff of Hess Roise Historical Consultants about the vast art and decorative art collections at the mansion. “…here’s the amazing part, the collection is intact. The top hat in the closet? That was Chester Congdon’s. The letters in the desk drawer? Those were written by Clara. The sheets in the linen closet? Organized by the Congdons’ 2nd floor maid nearly 100 years ago. And that’s just inside the mansion …” Check out these links for a peek at what’s in store http://www.salmelaarchitect.com http://www.architectmagazine.com/architects/david-salmela-architect.aspx http://www.hawksboots.com https://glensheen.wp.d.umn.edu Tour Fee: $158 Includes motor coach, two lunches, one dinner, admission to Glensheen, and 6-guided tours. Hall House designed by Architect David Salmela Step 1: Registration: Tickets go on sale May 4th Call the museum, open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. (Thursday 9 a.m. to 8:45p.m.), Saturday 10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. and Sunday 11 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. at (612) 870-3000. This is a Friends only event and space is limited Registration Deadline: Friday, May 29th Step 2: Hotel: Pay on your own. Call Fitgers Inn or the Sheraton Duluth to make a reservation Fitgers Inn: $174.99 plus tax $23.40 total of $198.39 Same rate for all rooms. Limited number of rooms with two beds. Most rooms have one King bed, or one Queen bed. Call for reservations: 218-722-8826 or toll free 888-348-4377 ID: “Friends of the Institute Retreat” Includes Complimentary Continental Breakfast, High Speed Internet, 24-hour Fitness Center, discounts at Fitger’s shops and restaurants. Special room rate available until Friday, May 29th Sheraton Duluth Hotel: $159 plus tax $21.27 total of $180.26 Same rate for single and double rooms. Ample supply of two bed rooms if you plan to share a room. Call for reservations: 218-733-5660 or toll free 800-325-3535 “Friends of the Institute” Lakeside views, Fitness Center with heated indoor pool, whirlpool. High Speed Internet. Breakfast is available at your expense in Restaurant 301 Special room rate available until Sunday May 24th Activity Level: This tour is moderately active. You’ll be on your feet standing and walking for up to 1-1/2 hours. You’ll be climbing stairs at most tour sites. There is no passenger elevator at Glensheen. Help with luggage is available loading and unloading the bus and at the hotel. Travel on a bus with comfortable seating and a toilet. Special Diet? : Vegetarian meals are available. Let us know. Call Kate Smith in the Friends office (612) 870-3045 by Friday, May 29th MIA Parking: Cars may be left overnight on June 17th in the Museum Parking lots. Regular fees apply. If you plan to leave your car over night, please call Kate Smith with your license plate numbers at 612-870-3045. We’re looking forward to a fun, interesting and invigorating view of Duluth Art and Architecture. Please join us! Collection Connection Hudson River School Artists in Arkansas? Who knew? Bring on the Yellow School Buses! I recently visited Crystal Bridges, the American art museum founded by Alice Walton. The museum designed by Moshe Safdie, opened in 2011 and it is well worth a visit. Set over a body of water, it is architecturally quite stunning. From inside the museum, one can see the water and outdoor environment as one walks the hallways between the galleries. The restaurant is also set over water, and is very open and filled with light. A large metallic gold colored Jeff Koons heart hangs from the ceiling and reflects the interior of the restaurant. The collection covers painting and sculpture from colonial times to present day. One of my favorite galleries at the museum consists of an extensive collection of Hudson River school artists. Several of the artists in our MIA collection are represented so I got to see works by old familiar friends such Jasper Cropsey, Thomas Moran, and Albert Bierstadt. One of the gems in the collection is Asher Durand’s Kindred Spirits, a painting he made in homage to Thomas Cole after Cole’s death. Walton purchased it from the New York Public Library in 2005 when the library sold it to raise money for its endowment fund. Many New Yorkers were not happy about the sale. Walton’s deep pockets also allowed her purchase of Georgia O’Keeffe’s Jimson Weed (White Flower No.1) in 2014 for 44.4 million dollars, the highest price ever paid for a painting by a female artist. The museum’s modern collection also includes some of our MIA artists such as Marisol, Grace Hartigan, Larry Rivers, Roy Lichtenstein, Nick Cave, and several others. To complete my day at the museum, I walked outdoors around the grounds and saw several outdoor sculptures by Mark di Suvero, Robert Indiana, and Paul Manship. They were surrounded by flowering red buds, magnolias, and peach trees. A spring visit to Crystal Bridges was just what I needed after a Minnesota winter. The Friends of the Institute plays a key role in bringing students to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Our Transportation Fund, an endowed fund, annually awards MIA transportation grants to Twin Cities public and private schools. This school year, the Fund, bolstered by additional funding from the Friends, extended grants totaling $16,835 to 54 schools. The Friends’ generosity will allow approximately 4,500 students in grades K-8 to take advantage of tours of the MIA’s outstanding permanent collection and special exhibitions. As a Friend of Institute member, you helped make this happen! The Transportation Fund grant application for schools K-8 will be available in August on the MIA website at http://new.artsmia.org/discover/school-tours/. Transportation Fund Co-chairs, Joan Kampmeyer and Mary Bachhuber Catch Up On The Lectures You’ve Missed All lectures from the Friends Lecture Series are now available to watch online. It provides easy access to all lectures both past and present. http://new.artsmia.org/third-av/#/lectures Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Article by Laura Miller, Art Adventure Guide MAY AT THE MIA May floral arrangements at the Visitor & Member Services Desk are created by Arts and Flowers. Please call the Friends office for more information about our florists. NEW MEMBERS GIFTS TO THE FRIENDS Anne-Edmee Carayon Dianne Defresne Dr. Eugene and Joanne Di Magno Jennifer Koehl Jan Malmaquist Carol Randall In Memory of Lucille Franke, Linda Boelter's Mother and Carrie Kilberg's Grandmother. Friends President Pamela Friedland Newsletter Editors Terry Edam Barbara Scott Office Administrator Kate Smith Friends Office (612) 870-3045 Friends Fax (612) 870-6315 Friends E-mail [email protected] MIA Info (612) 870-3000 MIA Ticket & Phone Center (612) 870-6323 Friends Web Site artsmia.org/friends Live Lecture Videos new.artsmia.org/thirdav/#/lectures