Showing posts with label Art Tyler Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Tyler Texas. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

OBJECT OF DEVOTION: MEDIEVAL ENGLISH ALABASTER SCULPTURE FROM THE VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM Exclusive Southwestern Appearance at Tyler Museum of Art




(TYLER, TX) August 30, 2011 – The Tyler Museum of Art is pleased to announce the opening of Object of Devotion: Medieval English Alabaster Sculpture from the Victoria and Albert Museum on view September 4 through November 13, 2011 at the TMA. This is the only scheduled stop in the southwestern region of the United States for this touring exhibition.

 The 60 alabaster panels and free-standing figures in the exhibition are drawn from the world’s largest collection of medieval alabasters, that of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.  Dramatic, and intricately crafted, these pieces are some of the finest examples of the elegant, yet, neglected art form of alabaster sculpture. 

The Exhibition
The sixty prime examples, including a complete set of panels from an altarpiece, have been carefully selected for this exhibition, representing all the major types produced by English sculptors.  The exhibition is organized in six sections:


The Art of the “Alabastermen”
Serving as an introduction to the exhibition, this section includes three works that perfectly represent the best work of the alabasterers: a dramatic, startlingly stylized figure of Saint Christopher carrying an infant Christ and two highly engaging and attractive relief panels, one of the Fifth Sign of the Last Judgment and one of the Adoration of the Magi.



Martyrs and Miracles: 
The Lives and Deaths of the Saints
Saints served numerous roles in everyday medieval society including protecting the souls, well-being, health, and even wealth of believers. Brightly gilded and polychromed carvings of Biblical episodes reflect the color and drama of medieval religious life and belief.  Alabaster images of saints were made for private homes, intended for private worship and comfort. These objects were often affordable – within the reach of “ordinary” people – and the works included here illustrate a folk art aspect of the medium. This is seen in their rougher, less delicate carving; reduced attention to proportion, scale, and perspective; and unsubtle painting techniques – all perfectly acceptable to an audience that was generally less sophisticated in its tastes than wealthier patrons.  The highlight of this section is a small, devotional altarpiece made for a private patron.  It is comprised of an alabaster panel depicting the Trinity, and is set in a beautifully painted wooden casing, complete with doors and painted figures of saints.

Word Made Flesh:  The Life of Christ
Over time, styles and techniques for carving alabaster changed, as did the designs and compositions. This section presents scenes from the life of Christ -- from the Annunciation through to the Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension -- exploring the changes in alabaster production as well as those in Christian iconography. Spanning the years from 1380 through the 15th-century – the zenith of alabaster production -- and on through the Reformation, this stylistic overview includes the delicacy and finesse of late 14th-century sculpture in panels of the Annunciation and the Resurrection.

The Altarpiece: Worshipping at Church Altarpieces played an important role in late medieval devotional practice and public worship. Most alabaster altarpieces took the form of rectangular relief panels designed to be fitted into wooden casings in groups. Providing an impressive and stately focus to this section is a spectacular  set of five panels from an altarpiece that are set into a specially made casing, illustrating how the panels were initially intended to be seen.  In contrast to the folk-art aspects of private devotional alabasters, altarpieces in churches sought to hold the attention of crowds of churchgoers through sophisticated carving techniques and elaborate, multi-episode compositions – particularly apparent in a large and elaborate carving like the late 15th-century Panel of the Betrayal.

Business and Religion: Making and Selling Holy Images
The working methods of the alabastermen and the actual stages involved in the production of reliefs and sculpture – from the mining of the stone and its transport to the artists, to the actual carving of objects and the coloring of them -- are explored in this section. Some works included were selected to show latten (an alloy resembling brass) hooks, and assembly marks on the back. The export trade in alabasters will be explored through two key heads of Saint John the Baptist.
  
While both depict the same subject, the differences in composition and carving are geared toward two different audiences --- one at a higher, more aristocratic end of the market, and the other aimed at customers with less money to spend but just as much desire to furnish their homes with religious images of comfort. Like everything else in their lives, the aristocratic version is more carefully finished, more heavily gilded, and more elaborate. Ironically, it may well be the humbler, simpler version that appeals more to many of us today, with our modern taste for minimalist simplicity.

End of an Era: The Reformation
The Reformation of the 1530s ended the alabaster industry in England as part of its wholesale rejection of religious art.  Workshops quickly sold off their stock to remaining Catholic areas of Europe while, in England, mobs defaced and destroyed much alabaster sculpture.  Examples of defaced and vandalized sculpture are included to illustrate these dramatic social changes and the end of alabaster production in England. In particular, a late 14th-century panel of the Crucifixion bears the scars of Reformist zeal, with the images of Christ and other figures having been violently but methodically “de-faced.”

The Legacy
English alabaster art was forgotten or dismissed as ‘folk art’ up until the late 19th century. At that time, the Arts and Crafts movement, both in Britain and the United States, was concerned with ennobling the more modest home of the rapidly expanding middle class, not unlike the work of the “alabastermen.”  Along with heightening an appreciation of medieval technique, the Arts And Crafts movement encouraged our ability to empathize and understand the strange, mystical aesthetics of medieval English alabaster sculpture. 

In continental Europe, artists such as Vincent van Gogh, Paul Cézanne, Georges Braque, Pablo Picasso, and Auguste Rodin also displayed an affinity towards English alabasters.  All share a delight in expression through abstraction, shapes and color, and the creation of dream-like realities.   Later, the fabulously surreal, conceptualized images of English alabaster were to have a profound influence on 20th-century sculpture, particularly on artists working in abstract or conceptual styles. These sculptors conveyed the magnitude and emotion of their subject matter by stylizing and distorting perspective, scale, color, and reality itself.

Today, it is possible to detect the powerful legacy of these anonymous master craftsmen in the work of more recent artists such as Henry Moore and Jacob Epstein, the American-born British Expressionist sculptor. To carve his masterpiece, “Jacob and the Angel,” Epstein actually used a block of English alabaster, quarried from the same part of the country where the medieval artists sourced their alabaster. In North America, traces of the ‘alabasterers’, as medieval writers call them, is evidenced in the work of 20th-century  figurative sculptors like Elie Nadelman. A full illustrated color catalogue published by Art Services International accompanies the exhibition.

Credit Information
The exhibition is organized and circulated by Art Services International, Alexandria, Virginia.
This exhibition is supported by a grant from The Samuel H. Kress Foundation.  His Excellency Sir Nigel Sheinwald, Ambassador of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to the United States of America, is Honorary Patron of the exhibition. All images provided courtesy of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Exhibition support for the presentation in Tyler has been generously provided by Lead Sponsor, Amy and Vernon Faulconer. Underwriter is Dr. Harold and Eleanor Cameron. Patrons are Dorothy and Ben Bridges. Contributor is Mary John Spence. Friends are Rebecca and Gregg Davis, Frances and Tommy Swann, Agnes and Frank Ward, and Caroline King Wylie. Collectors’ Circle Sponsors are Julietta Jarvis Foundation, Inc., Bette King, Robert M. Rogers Foundation and The A.W. Riter Family Foundation. Corporate Member Sponsors are Hibbs-Hallmark & Company, KYTX-CBS 19, Sunny 106.5, The Ranch 104.1, and Greg Strnadel & Wells Fargo Advisors.

About the Victoria &Albert Museum
The Victoria & Albert Museum is one of the world's greatest museums of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. It houses more than 3000 years' worth of amazing artifacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewelry, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Derrick White Carol Benson Art Show Tyler Museum of Art

I headed over to the TMA to see the exhibit of Derrick White and Carol Benson. It looked great really. Though both artists work were completely different, there was a convergence in their love of color. I'm always a sucker for color play, and though it seems a simple concept, a well execution is anything but. If you didn't get a chance to catch the opening, you should definitely see the works it while their up.



















































Friday, July 22, 2011

Two On View: Benson and White at the TMA


 Carol Benson Benson Tapestry

 Derrick White What is


(TYLER, TX) July 21, 2011 – Images of pop icons and vibrant graffiti collide with thoroughly deconstructed objects and subdued tones in the two latest one-person exhibitions to open at the Tyler Museum of Art. Works by Texas contemporary artists Carol Benson and Derrick White will be on view July 24 through September 11 at the Museum in its Bell Gallery. Containment of Thought: Recent Works by Carol Benson and A Little or a Lot: Recent Works by Derrick White comprise works on paper including paintings and collage, as well as three-dimensional artworks.
          
  “Exhibiting works by contemporary Texas artists is an important part of the TMA’s curatorial and institutional vision, and we are proud to include works by Derrick White, one of Tyler’s own artists and educators,” said TMA Curator, Ken Tomio. While works by the two artists are very different, their works similarly employ every day objects and icons. “Carol Benson reiterates common items such as a bowl or the frame of a house many different ways, creating an ongoing study of what is suggested by the structures. Derrick, on the other hand, combines multiple characters and layers bold color and texture to create something that is both immediately recognizable but somehow unexpected.”
           
Both exhibitions were organized by the Tyler Museum of Art.

Containment of Thought: Recent Works by Carol Benson, About the Artist

Carol Benson is a contemporary artist from Fort Worth, Texas who uses everyday objects to communicate her artistic message. By reducing an item to its most basic line and shape, the artist suggests rather than imposes meanings on her viewer. Benson’s work often focuses on the fundamental structure of a subject. Her house paintings show physical layers, from the skeleton of a frame to washes of bright color that cover the structure, suggesting a layering of thought and significance. 

Born in Baytown, Texas, Benson earned her MFA in Painting and Drawing from Texas Christian University. Her professional experience includes both solo and group exhibitions across Texas, New Mexico and New York. Influenced by simplicity, Benson attempts to recreate an experience of first-time exploration through her work as an artist.

A Little or a Lot: Recent Works by Derrick White, About the Artist

Derrick White is an artist based in Tyler and art professor at Tyler Junior College. His artwork includes sculpture and paintings, and is typically characterized by a fusion of brush strokes, mixed-media collage, and screen-printing. Interplay between people and objects often contribute to the dynamic composition typical of his art.

The artist earned his BFA and MFA from the University of North Texas. White’s art has been shown in exhibitions across Texas, and he has garnered various awards and recognition over his years as a professional artist. As a child, White drew cartoon characters and pop icons. His current work employs an experimental mix of colors, shapes and images and ranges from the playful to the unusual. 

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Head ‘Em Up and Move ‘Em Out! Western-Themed Family Day at the Tyler Museum of Art



 
            (TYLER, TX) July 5, 2011 – Round up the kids and drive them to the Tyler Museum of Art this Saturday, July 9, for a wild west-themed Family Day from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Heroic cowboys from classic films featuring characters like The Lone Ranger and super stars like Roy Rogers as seen in the exhibition Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark will inspire children to create their own western wonders. This Family Day event is sponsored by the Sam Roosth Foundation, and is free and open to the public. 

“This month, kids will be inspired by larger-than-life characters that their parents may remember from their own childhoods,” said Ken Tomio, TMA Head of Education. “Families will enjoy Remember When, because the exhibition gives parents an opportunity to reflect on their own memories and then share those stories with their children.” The exhibition features over 500 items including 1940s and 50s era movie posters representing popular film genres like Westerns, Horror Films and Science Fiction, as well as pop culture memorabilia and historical items from World Wars I and II.

Free art activities have been designed by Museum educators to encourage children to draw inspiration from the exhibition and create artworks that reflect what they have seen. This month, children can create their own trusty steeds using modeling clay and design their very own superhero masks. Kids will also learn to sketch out their very own western adventures by creating comic-strip style storyboards. Family Days are offered on the second Saturday of the month and are always free of charge.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Superheroes at the TMA! Create Your Own Super Human Story During Family Day




(TYLER, TX) June 6, 2011 – The summer of superheroes and movie memories kicks off at the Tyler Museum of Art this Saturday, June 11, during the Museum’s free Family Day event held in the classroom from 2­–4 p.m. Kids will learn to create their very own superhero characters through art activities designed to reflect all the fun and excitement of the exhibition of vintage movie posters and memorabilia, Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark.

“This is a great opportunity for parents to channel their children’s excitement over the summer’s blockbuster films like X-Men First Class and The Green Lantern into creative expression,” said Ken Tomio, TMA Head of Education. “We have prepared art activities that will broaden the kids’ understandings of how characters are created and how storylines are developed, as well as further develop artistic skills like drawing.”

Saturday’s activities include “Superhero Storyboards,” where children can create their own adventures and sketch plots out onto a comic strip-style storyboards. Art educators will be on hand to help children design their very own superheroes, complete from super power to costume design using drawing, color, and of course, imagination. Finally, participants will learn to create the quintessential superhero accessory, the mask!

“We encourage parents to take their children through the gallery and explore the incredible vintage movie posters included in Remember When. This exhibition offers parents an opportunity to take a walk down ‘Memory Lane’ and share their own memories with their children,” said Mr. Tomio. Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark includes over 500 items ranging from 1940s and 50s era movie posters and memorabilia to historical items from World Wars I and II.

Family Days are offered on the second Saturday of the month, and are free of charge. Light refreshments are provided in the classroom. Also on view is A Legacy of Love and Freedom: Quilt Paintings by Sedrick Huckaby, which includes the colossal painting titled A Love Supreme, considered by many to be the artist’s magnum opus.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Tyler Museum of Art: First Friday Tour with Dr. Clark “Remember When” with the Collector



         
   (TYLER, TX) June 2, 2011 – Take a stroll down “Memory Lane” during a free guided tour of the Tyler Museum of Art exhibition Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark. Dr. Clark will lead visitors through the exhibition offering insight into his personal collection of vintage movie posters, collectibles and historical items. Admission to the exhibition is free, and the tour begins at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum’s North Gallery.

“Most of the items included in this colossal exhibition are extremely rare examples,” said Ken Tomio, Curator of the Tyler Museum of Art. “Dr. Clark has spent decades searching for each piece, working with other collectors and through special auctions to refine his collection. Remember When is a unique and impressive presentation of materials which the public would normally not be able to enjoy at one time.”

The exhibition is the sixth in the Museum’s Tyler Collects series and contains over 500 items. Dr. Clark says that his fascination with movie posters stems from his high school job, when he worked for Interstate Theatres in Paris, Texas. His primary duties included changing out the movie posters and the theatre’s marquee. Over his thirty years of collecting, Dr. Clark has expanded his focus to include various items from the 1940s and 50s that recall prominent moments in American history as well as personal childhood memories. Visitors to the exhibition will see a collection of rings that children could receive by sending in cereal box tops, watches bearing favorite characters like Gene Autry and Dick Tracy, and baseball cards featuring some of the game’s greatest players including Babe Ruth, Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle. 

First Friday Tours are offered free of charge each month and usually last under an hour. Visitors are invited to stay for lunch at the Museum Café where they can enjoy a special lunch selection prepared just for First Friday. Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark will be on view through Sunday, August 14, 2011.

Exhibition support has been generously provided by Lead Sponsor, Harold and Rosemary Beaird. Supporting Sponsors are Grant, Catharine, Clark and Sara Faulconer; Joe and Betty McMahan; Cecil and Bernie Ward, and Sherilyn and Patrick Willis. Sponsors are Citizens 1st Bank; James and Donna Culver; Susan and Ron Donaldson; Betsy and Elmer Ellis; Verna and George Hall; Tom and June Lowery; Gail and Harry Wallace, and Sam and Carrie Wolf. Collectors’ Circle Sponsors are Byars Foundation and Sheryl Rogers Palmer. Corporate Member Sponsor is Southside Bank. Media Sponsor is Tyler Morning Telegraph.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

“The Art of Film” Stewart Smith Describes Pop Culture Through the Perspective of Film Tyler Museum of Art


“The Art of Film”
Stewart Smith Describes Pop Culture Through the Perspective of Film

            (TYLER, TX) May 18, 2011 – Enjoy a delightful collision of film, history and pop culture during the final installment of the Tyler Museum of Art’s Spring Lecture Series featuring special guest speaker Stewart Smith, Arts and Entertainment Editor for the Tyler Morning Telegraph, on Tuesday, May 24. “Let’s Go to the Movies: The Art of Film and Progression of Pop Culture” will begin at 5:30 p.m. in the Jean Browne Theatre located on the Tyler Junior College Campus. The lecture is free for TMA Members, $7 for adults, and $5 for students and seniors.

            Mr. Smith will take a cue from the Museum’s current exhibition Remember When: Marvels & Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark which includes over 500 examples of vintage movie posters and memorabilia, historical items, and sports collectibles. Originally from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Mr. Smith earned his degree in Journalism from Sam Houston State University and came to work for the Tyler Morning Telegraph in 2007. Since 2009, Smith has worked as Arts and Entertainment Editor for the newspaper, and he writes and edits the weekly Marquee.

            “When we began planning this exhibition, we immediately thought of Mr. Smith because of his expertise in the area of film,” said Ken Tomio, TMA Head of Education. “Vintage movie posters and memorabilia form the core of this exhibition, and so his talk is going to take a very interesting look at the narrative inherent within Dr. Clark’s collection.”

            Smith says his lecture will focus on the evolution of film from the 1940s and 50s, which is the focus of the exhibition, and today’s blockbuster hits. “It's fascinating to me to be able to examine the various ways that our entertainment industry has evolved and, by extension, the ways that the popular culture has responded to that evolution,” said Smith. “What I want to do with this talk is to highlight some of the specific ways in which the film industry has responded to and reflected the changing times.” Smith will compare and contrast films represented in Remember When like Sergeant York with current films like The Green Zone in order to demonstrate cultural shifts in perception of war and military action.

 “I love the sense of history that is present within the exhibition. It is a veritable time capsule that captures a wonderful, bygone spirit of cinema that will likely never exist again.” Tickets may be purchased prior to the lecture from the Visitor Services desk at the Museum, or at the door by cash or check only.

Remember When: Marvels & Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark is on view at the Tyler Museum of Art from May 8 through August 14, 2011 and is the sixth exhibition in the “Tyler Collects” series, organized by the Museum to showcase private collections belonging to residents of Tyler. The exhibition comprises over 500 objects ranging from vintage movie posters to historic memorabilia collected by Dr. Clark, who is a reconstructive plastic surgeon in Tyler. This exhibition was organized by the Tyler Museum of Art, and admission is free.

Exhibition support has been generously provided by Lead Sponsor, Harold and Rosemary Beaird. Supporting Sponsors are Grant, Catharine, Clark and Sara Faulconer; Joe and Betty McMahan; Cecil and Bernie Ward, and Sherilyn and Patrick Willis. Sponsors are Citizens 1st Bank; James and Donna Culver; Susan and Ron Donaldson; Betsy and Elmer Ellis; Verna and George Hall; Tom and June Lowery; Gail and Harry Wallace, and Sam and Carrie Wolf. Collectors’ Circle Sponsors are Byars Foundation and Sheryl Rogers Palmer. Corporate Member Sponsor is Southside Bank. Media Sponsor is Tyler Morning Telegraph.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Downtown Tyler Art Gallery

Exhibit Opening picture and artists list

New exhibit at Gallery Main Street


Transcendent Light: Photography
an exhibit at Gallery Main Street
  
Opening Reception
Thursday, May 19, 2011
4:30 - 6:30 p.m.

Gallery Main Street
110 West Erwin
Downtown Tyler

Light refreshments will be served.





New exhibit at Gallery Main Street


Transcendent Light: Photography
an exhibit at Gallery Main Street
  
Opening Reception
Thursday, May 19, 2011
4:30 - 6:30 p.m.

Gallery Main Street
110 West Erwin
Downtown Tyler

Light refreshments will be served.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Fantastic Family Day Fun! A Multi-Arts Celebration of Sedrick Huckaby at the TMA


  
(TYLER, TX) May 10, 2011 – Dance, theatrical performance and free art activities are among the exciting items on the agenda for the Tyler Museum of Art’s Family Day this Saturday, May 14 from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. The special event combines a selection of performances showcasing multiple artistic disciplines and the talents of local performers in addition to the TMA’s usual second Saturday program of art activities. The event is free, and so is admission to current exhibitions, A Legacy of Love and Freedom: Quilt Paintings by Sedrick Huckaby, and also Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark.
             
“We want to reflect the connective message of the exhibition of Sedrick Huckaby’s quilt paintings, and so we have organized an event that brings a variety of artistic expressions together in a common venue, with a common message,” said TMA Head of Education, Ken Tomio. The performances have all been arranged to reflect themes and ideas suggested by Huckaby’s works, and the program will begin with a performance by members of the Tyler Junior College Academy of Dance at 2:00 p.m.
             
Dancers Shelby Anderson, Emma Brookshire, Molly Coleman, Catherine MacPherson, Haleigh Roberts, and Natalie Sampson will perform a routine choreographed by Ashlee Persing to “One Man’s Dream,” by Yanni. Following their performance, local educator Mary Evangeline Hill will perform a scene from Ma Rose by Cassandra Medley. The final portion of the program will be a performance of Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” by pianist Charles Praytor. “This is a great opportunity to enjoy the artistic talents of some of our local performers, and we hope families will plan on spending the afternoon at the Museum,” said Mr. Tomio.
             
Art activities will be offered during the full two-hour event in the classroom. Children will learn to make their own quilt squares using tissue paper and other materials. Kids can also try their hands at “Big Painting,” during which participants will learn special techniques employed by artists like Sedrick Huckaby who paint on a large scale. Light refreshments will be made available for Family Day participants. No reservations are required.
           
In addition to the activities and performances, the winners of the 2nd Annual Nature Photography Contest, which was held at Camp Tyler’s Earth Day on April 17, will be announced. Contest winning photos will be on view, and all other submitted photos may be picked up by the participating photographers.
             
A Legacy of Love and Freedom: Quilt Paintings by Sedrick Huckaby is on view in the Bell Gallery and includes large-scale paintings of quilts by Fort Worth artist Sedrick Huckaby. Of the works included in the exhibition, A Love Supreme is considered to be the artist’s monumental magnum opus and is an astonishing 80 feet long. Also on view is Remember When: Marvels and Memories from the Collection of Dr. James Clark in the Museum’s North Gallery. This incredible exhibition of over 500 items includes vintage movie memorabilia, war and historical items, and sports collectibles from the 1940s and 50s and is being shown as part of the Museum’s Tyler Collects series.
           
The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Free Family Day with Sculpture at the Tyler Museum of Art


Children Learn to Sculpt Like a Master!
Free Family Day to Focus on 3-D Art at TMA

            (TYLER, TX) April 5, 2011 – Children will love the opportunity to become master sculptors this weekend at the Tyler Museum of Art. Families are invited to participate in the Museum’s free Family Day, which lasts from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the classroom on Saturday, April 9. This month’s activities are designed to reflect techniques used by artists in the exhibition The Cornish Art Colony: Giants of America’s Gilded Age with a focus on works of sculpture. Family Days are always free and offered on the second Saturday of the month.

            Children can participate in several different activities this month, including various works in sculpture and relief using modeling clay and model magic, or create their own wearable art including silly hats and headdresses. Members of the education department will present a story time with passages reflecting the characters of the Cornish Art Colony, and myths and legends represented in the exhibition.

            “This program is an incredible opportunity for parents to enjoy an afternoon with their children in a setting of enrichment and learning,” said TMA Head of Education, Ken Tomio. “The activities are designed by the education staff to be fun and exciting for the children, while also imparting lessons in art technique and history with hands-on, participatory activities. What better way to learn about sculpture, than to view a work in the gallery, and then create your own moments later!”

            The Cornish Art Colony: Giants of America’s Gilded Age was co-organized by the Tyler Museum of Art and the Parrish House Museum, Plainfield, New Hampshire. Guest curator of the exhibition is Alma Gilbert-Smith, Director of the Parrish House Museum. Signature Supporter is John R. Williford, co-Trustee, Jean & Graham Devoe Williford Charitable Trust. Underwriter is Thomas C. Campbell, co-Trustee, Jean & Graham Devoe Williford Charitable Trust. Friend is Sheryl Rogers Palmer. Collectors’ Circle Sponsors are Marilyn & Lanier Richey and Joyce & Bill Pirtle.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is supported by its Members, Tyler Junior College, and the City of Tyler, and is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Guest Speaker to Describe Manor Life in England Deborah Gage at the Tyler Museum of Art




     TYLER, TX (April 4, 2011) – This Friday, the Tyler Museum of Art will present Ms. Deborah Gage, art historian and dealer, who will give a lecture titled “A Ribbon of Life: Firle Place, Sussex, Home of the Gage Family for 500 Years” beginning at 11:00 a.m. in the TMA Classroom. Ms. Gage, who was born in Zambia in 1950, grew up in Kenya and the United States, and completed her education in England. She attended the Study Centre of the Fine and Decorative Arts at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
           
The focus of her talk will be her family’s ancestral home, the celebrated Firle Place located in southern England’s South Downs. During her lecture, Ms. Gage will describe her family’s associations with Firle, and also the difficulties her prominent recusant family experienced through the Catholic persecutions from the 1560s to the early eighteenth century – which resulted in vibrant traditions such as the bonfire society that continues today. The talk will focus upon highlights of the architecture and collection, including recent research, elaborating on the theme of the Museum’s spring fundraiser, La Table des Artistes, “Manor House.”

Ms. Gage has the responsibility of the care of the collection at Firle Place and is the family historian and the curator of the collection. She founded The Charleston Trust, which was established in 1980 to save Charleston Farmhouse, on the Firle Estate, and home of the British artists, Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant. She was over-all coordinator of the appeal and restoration, which was referred to as “one of the most difficult and imaginative feats of restoration current in Britain”. The house, contents and its garden were opened to the public for the first time in June 1986.
       
     In addition to her responsibilities at Firle Place, Ms. Gage sits on the Getty Paintings Council, California, is on the advisory board of the Edith Wharton Restoration/The Mount in Massachusetts and The Royal Oak Foundation, in New York and is also a board member of the Michael L. Rosenberg Foundation in Dallas. She is a member of the executive committee of the French Porcelain Society, a non-executive director of AXA Art Insurance, UK, and sits on the panel of judges for the annual Art Newspaper/AXA Museum Catalogue Award. Ms. Gage is also a trustee of New Towner Cultural Centre in Eastbourne, East Sussex: this new museum designed by internationally acclaimed architect Rick Mather, will rank as a significant contribution to 21st century architecture in southern England.  Ms. Gage also sits in a dual capacity on the Kenya and US boards of the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy.

Admission to the lecture is complimentary for La Table attendees, $7 for TMA Members, and $10 for non-members. Reservations are requested and may be made by calling the Museum.

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

David Adickes Art Exhibit Tyler Texas Gold Leaf Gallery

The TJC Wise Auditorium Art Gallery presents Collections - an exhibition of collected works from Derrick White through April 21, 2011 Art Tyler Texas



Gallery hours Monday - Friday 9:00 a.m. -  7:00 p.m. 

Works from regional and national artists, colleagues, friends and former students make up this assortment of selected art pieces from the collection of Derrick White.  “I’ve had the benefit of buying, trading and being gifted some outstanding artworks by talented artists over the years.  They deserve to be exhibited and seen.”

Throughout my years of teaching I have had the honor and privilege of working with some of the most talented students and meeting some very interesting visiting artists.  In my effort to commemorate these experiences often times I’ve had the good fortune of obtaining artworks by bartering, buying, trading and receiving them as gifts.  The pieces in this exhibition cover a span of 20 years in my art career, the last 10 spent at Tyler Junior College.  The show has been curated to showcase the mediums of painting and printmaking. 

Artists include: Dale Andrews, Amber Draschil, Justin Edwards, Jessica Greene, Charles and John - The Amazing Hancock Brothers, Daniel Hays, John Hitt’s friend Mike, Paul Jones, Anna Krafve, David Maldonado, Cierra McGuckie, Heather Osburn, Tiffany Petty, Sean Starwars, Mike Stephens, Josh Tamez, Shae Taylor and Debbie Willbanks.


Do you have hurt feelings because your artwork is not included?  You
are not alone:


Friday, March 4, 2011

Downtown Tyler Texas Artwalk

The Downtown Tyler ArtWalk is a collaborative effort of the City of Tyler Main Street Department, Gallery Main Street and the Downtown Tyler Arts Coalition, and sponsored by  the Downtown Coffee Lounge. 

East Texas Artists can participate in the next art walk by checking The Main street site then filling an application online.   

Here are some pictures I took from this past Artwalk.


 
Anup Bhandari

 Lisa Rachel Horlander
www.lisarachel.com
www.lisarachel.etsy.com

Briana Sutton
www.Brianasutton.com

 June Epp


Joan Iverson
http://www.dallasartsrevue.com/members/I/Iver/JIverson.shtml

 Jonathan Syltie
www.Jonathanstltieart.com

Kim Hill 

 Dolph Miller


Lady in the Window Lum Newburn IV


This Years Artists Included 

Visual Artists
1. Michal Durham
2. Joe Nichols
3. Lisa Rachel Horlander
4. DTAC Film Group
5. Joan Iverson
6. Dave Berry
7. Dana Cargile
8 . Briana Sutton
9 . June Epp
10. Michelle Kidd
11. Marilyn Sparks
12. Emile Stewart
13. Janice Manning
14. Sarah Kolac
15. Kayla Valek
16. Hannah Joy Davidson
17. Shawni Nix
18. Jonathan Syltie
19. Jeanne Miller
20. Cissy Boyd
21. Monty Graham
22. Dolph Miller

Performance Artists
23. FLYkids
24. Loretta Callen
25. Rambellwood

Monday, February 28, 2011

Regional High School Students' Works on View at the Tyler Museum of Art


7th Annual High School Art Exhibition
Opening at the TMA Sunday, March 6

(TYLER, TX) February 28, 2011 – Join us in celebrating the creative abilities of over 70 students from 9 local schools during the Tyler Museum of Art’s 7th Annual High School Art Exhibition, March 6­–27, 2011. The event coincides with Youth Art Month and offers local high school students the opportunity to have their original works of art shown in a true museum exhibition. The public is invited to join student artists and their friends and families for a free reception and awards ceremony at 2 p.m. on Sunday, March 20. Light refreshments will be served in the Museum lobby, and special art activities will be provided in the TMA Classroom. The exhibition is sponsored by Kay Arms.

“We look forward to this event as one of our most important annual endeavors,” said TMA Head of Education, Ken Tomio. “By participating in this exhibition, high school students are able to not only enjoy the excitement of having their art installed in a true museum setting, but to also build their resumes towards a future in fine arts. We believe that by offering this type of opportunity, we may be able to help support these young artists’ future activity in the arts as well as to encourage their artistic expression and creativity.”

The 7th Annual High School Art Exhibition will showcase both two and three-dimensional pieces, which will be installed in the Museum’s Bell Gallery. The works have been selected for entry into the exhibition by the students’ teachers. Prior to the opening of the exhibition, the pieces will be judged by a panel of jurors selected by the TMA curatorial staff from local college art departments. Jurors include Chris Stewart, chairman of the visual arts department at Tyler Junior College; Curtis Watson, professor of art at Texas College; and Merrie Wright, ceramicist and assistant professor for the University of Texas at Tyler.

The five most outstanding exhibition entries as determined by the jurors will be selected to receive Merit of Honor Awards, with recipients to be named at the March 20 awards ceremony. Each student whose work was selected for the exhibition will receive a certificate of participation and a one-year student membership to the Tyler Museum of Art. This year, the TMA will continue its “Up and Coming” category, which was created in 2010. Participating schools have been invited to select a work of art from one freshman, sophomore and junior student and submit the work for exhibition.

New This Year
For the first time, the exhibition will also have a “Viewers’ Choice” award, which will be announced during the March 20th reception. Voting begins on the opening day of the exhibition and will be closed at 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, March 19. Ballots will be available in the Bell Gallery.

In order to create added dimension to the High School Art Exhibition, the Museum invited Michael Pianta, a past participant of the exhibition, to serve as assistant exhibition designer this year. Mr. Pianta will assist Museum staff in the exhibition design and installation of artworks, and he will also provide guidance to interns selected to participate in the installation process. “Michael is a practicing artist who has worked with the TMA exhibition department on several occasions since graduating college at the University of Texas at Tyler,” said Mr. Tomio. “We hope that this will become a permanent aspect of the high school exhibition experience so that students like Michael may return to the Museum for continuing opportunities and also to mentor students who have followed in their footsteps.”

Participating Schools & Student Artists
         
   All Saints Episcopal School: (Millie Piwonka and Dede Smith, Instructors) William Baker, Sydney Booth, Cambridge Bosworth, Stephen DeCarlo, Ryan Dwyer, Baxter Easley, Hillary Hancock, Kate Hill, Jennifer Johnson, Neiman Johnson, Cassidy Loving, Ally McMann, and Lindsey Stewart.
             
Bishop T. K. Gorman High School: (Lisa McGehee, Instructor) Jacob Becker, Madelin Ann Camp, Jacob Johnson, Philip Morley, Zachary Norris, Aza Pace, Madeline Ryder, Mary Schwarzbach, and Miles Zeorlin.
        
    Hallsville High School: (Jeannie Davis, Instructor) Anthony Eason, Kathryn Ortiz, Tia Owens, Sarah Pattullo, Matt Smith, Samantha Thompson, and Kristy Whitehurst.
           
Henderson High School: (Jodi Waggoner, Instructor) Brooke Moore.

John Tyler High School: (Marilyn Coler, Instructor) Sarah Branin, Racheal Correno, Gabrielle Pringle, and Jazmin Solis.

Lindale High School: (Walter James, Instructor) Chloe Parra.
             
Overton High School: (Cassie Bayless, Instructor) Dena Baker, Davida Harris, Shianne Lugenbell, Avery Lee Nevendorff, Shelbi Proctor, Michael Shelton Rogers, Alexandria Starke, and Reggie Thompson.
         
   Robert E. Lee High School: (Linda East, Linda Keane, and Elizabeth Lade, Instructors) Ronnie Alley, Tyler Banks, Paige Chamness, Michael Esbay, Evelyn Galindez, Rebecca Hoffman, Jeremi McGuire, Brandi Prince, Robert McKay Rands, Mary Helen Reuter, Sergio Soto, Sabrina Wang, and Alicia Zavala.
           
Whitehouse High School: (Lisa Kendall and Christine Killian, Instructors) Kelsey Bailey, Alexandra Callaway, Mariah Caserez, Nathan Denning, Maddison Hartgraves, Amber Jones, Courtney McKay, Haneen Momani, Eduardo Ocampo, Alison Peck, Jacqueline Yost, and Jacob Ziegler.

Up & Coming
The following students will have works on view in the Up & Coming section of the exhibition: Jacob Johnson (Bishop T. K. Gorman High School), Gamaliel Mendoza (John Tyler High School), Chloe Parra (Lindale High School), and Norma Gonzalez (Whitehouse High School).

The Tyler Museum of Art, accredited by the American Association of Museums, is located at 1300 S. Mahon Ave., adjacent to the Tyler Junior College campus off East Fifth Street. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. (The Museum is closed Mondays and major holidays.) Lunch is available in the Museum Café from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and the TMA Gift Shop is open during Museum hours. For more information, call (903) 595-1001 or visit www.tylermuseum.org.
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