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Texas Influenced Collection Demonstrates a Global Connection:
TMA Showcases “New Works”
TYLER, TX (December 21, 2009)—Stop by the Tyler Museum of Art during
the first part of 2010, and you will discover a selection of the
Museum’s latest acquisitions. But New Works: Highlights from the Permanent Collection
does more than simply present a sampling of significant pieces recently
obtained by the TMA; the exhibition tells a tale of a growing and
vibrant institution that has, since 1971, cultivated the community’s
interest in the visual arts and developed an extensive permanent
collection that is both interesting and important. New Works: Highlights from the Permanent Collection opens Wednesday, December 22, 2009 and remains on display in the Museum’s North Gallery through Sunday, May 23, 2010.
A museum’s permanent collection defines the very essence of the
institution. It gives the museum meaning and purpose, and becomes a
lasting legacy for past, current and future generations. The Tyler
Museum of Art’s permanent collection has been rapidly growing in recent
years in step with the institution’s exhibition and education programs.
The collection was begun in tentative steps during the Museum’s second
year, and in 1987, the decision was made to form a permanent
collection. Works of art gifted to the Museum prior to that date were
“retroactively” accessioned, and a formal collecting plan was
developed, focusing on contemporary Texas art, but also including works
from 19th century to the present.
Over the ensuing 36 years, the permanent collection of the TMA has seen
periods of great advancement, including a gift of Mexican folk art from
Laura and Dan Boekman. Today, the Laura and Dan Boeckman Collection of
Mexican and Latin American Folk Art is one of the largest collections
of its kind in the United States. Other works of art continue to be
gifted to the Museum and others have been selected for purchase with
funds donated by benefactors. Such individual—and in some case,
organizations and foundations—became vital partners in forming the
collection and in defining the Museum’s character and purpose. When
visitors arrive at the TMA and walk through New Works, they will begin
to know the personality of the Tyler Museum of Art as envisioned and
made reality by founding members and continuing supporters of the
Museum.
New Works: Highlights from the Permanent Collection
presents a wide variety of visually stunning works of art. There are
three Collectors’ Circle selections included in this exhibition:
Vincent Falsetta, Untitled (CL 05-3) from 2007, Sedrick Huckabee, Big Mama’s Room from 2008, and Mark Messersmith, Those Who Believe
from 2009. These three works express varying degrees of abstractions
associated with different representational qualities; along with Karl
Umlauf’s The Slag Pullers and Franklin Willis’ The 7th Year Harvest, both acquired in 2008, they are particularly noteworthy paintings in the exhibition.
While there are works by such artists as Josef Albers, Al Held, Robert
Motherwell, Clayton Pond, and Edward Zucca who are associated with
other regions of the country, both Falsetta and Huckabee are Texas
artists as well as many others in the exhibition. Some among them, such
as painters William B. Montgomery, Karl Umlauf, and Ancel Nunn;
sculptors Piero Fenci, and James Surls; and photographer Skeet McAuley
have strong East Texas and even Tyler connections.
All of the pieces included in New Works: Highlights from the Permanent Collection
are not only visually pleasurable to the visitor, but also are concrete
testaments to the ever-widening web of goodwill and relationships that
link this Museum in Tyler to a much wider community. In addition to the
Museum’s own purchases, it has been individuals, institutions and
corporations across the nation that have gifted these works. TMA
Curator, Ken Tomio, believes that it is the collection of the TMA that
ties the Museum to the global community in the most profound and
practical way. “In the same manner that our lives—and art and
culture—are connected to the global community, the Museum is connected
to the wider world,” said Mr. Tomio.
The Tyler Museum of Art now holds over 1200 works in its permanent
collection with many more hundreds in long term and permanent loans.
The rapid growth in the permanent collection is one of the most
compelling reasons behind the Museum’s plans to construct a new
building. “We have an outstanding facility in our current building, but
the Museum has grown so unbelievably fast that we simply no longer have
enough space to foster the growth the way we should—and must continue
to do,” TMA Director Kimberley Bush Tomio said.
Plans for a new Tyler Museum of Art building are underway, and
construction will begin once a certain percentage of the necessary
funds are raised. In the meantime, the Museum remains committed to
showcasing items from the permanent collection in addition to
organizing and hosting traveling exhibitions. “We will ensure that our
permanent collection will continue to grow and reflect the role of the
Museum as a vibrant and relevant institution in this community,” Ms.
Tomio said.
SPECIAL EVENTS
Saturday, January 9,
the TMA will offer a free Family Day from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Visitors
will enjoy a free art activity focused on themes presented in New Works: Highlights from the Permanent Collection
as well as self-guided art tours and light refreshments. Family Days
are offered free of charge at the TMA every second Saturday..
Sunday, January 24,
Stephen Vollmer will present a lecture titled “Folk Art: Language and
Identity” from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the TMA Classroom. The event is
free and open to the public. Light refreshments are served and all
visitors are encouraged to tour the exhibitions.
Thursday, May 20,
artist Vincent Falsetta will offer a lecture on abstract art from the
Tyler Museum of Art’s Classroom, from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. Visitors may
observe an example of Falsetta’s artwork which is included in New Works: Highlights from the Permanent Collection.
This
exhibition was organized by the Tyler Museum of Art. Collectors’ Circle
Sponsors are the Julietta Jarvis Foundation, Inc., Joyce & Bill
Pirtle, Sheryl Rogers Palmer, and the A.W. Riter, Jr. Family
Foundation. The Tyler Museum of Art is supported by its members, Tyler
Junior College, and the City of Tyler.
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 visitwww.tylermuseum.org.
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