July 8 to October 8, 2017
WILD fabrications
They Came to Washington: The First Ambassadors
Instinct Extinct: The Great Pacific Flyway
She Sang Me a Good Luck Song: California Indian Photographs of Dugan Aguilar
IN THE CONSTRUCTION ZONE: MENDOCINO COUNTY ASSEMBLAGE ART
GOLD FEVER! UNTOLD STORIES OF THE CALIFORNIA GOLD RUSH
MENDOCINO QUILT ARTISTS: A FIBER PERSPECTIVE
GRACE HUDSON: PAINTER OF THE POMO PEOPLE
DAYS OF GRACE: GRACE HUDSON IN HAWAII
MODERN TWIST: CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE BAMBOO ART
May 30–August 30, 2015
An exciting international exhibition, Modern Twist: Contemporary Japanese Bamboo Art featured the work of professional bamboo artists living in Japan, whose evocative, sensual, and sculptural pieces explore innovations in bamboo art since the mid-twentieth century. The artworks were chosen by Dr. Andreas Marks, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, from the collections of the Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture in Hanford, California. It was traveled by International Arts and Artists, Washington, D.C.
To more closely tie Modern Twist to our collections and mission, at the Grace Hudson Museum we added 12 Pomo baskets to accompany the 38 Japanese art pieces on display. Taken from our own holdings, and those of other lenders, the Pomo baskets provide interesting similarities and contrasts to their Japanese counterparts. Both basketry traditions are world famous, and mastering them requires decades of meticulous practice in harvesting and preparing native plant materials, and in constructing finished pieces. Modern Twist featured examples of both Japanese and Pomo pieces by master weavers that together span over one hundred years of textile arts.
Bamboo is a quintessential part of Japanese life, and its emergence as a sculptural art form has religious and cultural roots. The Japanese have used this extraordinarily strong and flexible grass for centuries–for everything from functional objects to ceremonial baskets, and for the vases, tea scoops, ladles and whisks that serve an important place in the Japanese traditions of flower arranging (ikebana) and tea gatherings (chanoyu and senchadō). It is a challenging medium, with less than 100 professional bamboo artists in Japan today.
Modern Twist brings 17 of these artists to North American audiences, including two men deemed “Living National Treasures” by the Japanese government in recognition of the excellence of their work. These National Treasures–Katsushiro Sōhō and Fujinuma Noboru–are joined by visionary artists Matsumoto Hafū, Honma Hideaki, Ueno Masao, Uematsu Chikuyū, Nagakura Ken’ichi, Tanabe Chikuunsai III, Tanabe Yōta, Tanabe Shōchiku III, Tanioka Shigeo, Tanioka Aiko, Honda Shōryū, Mimura Chikuhō, Nakatomi Hajime, Sugiura Noriyoshi, and Yonezawa Jirō.
It was a rare opportunity at the Grace Hudson Museum to experience groundbreaking levels of conceptual, technical, and artistic ingenuity both in bamboo art, and in the striking examples of our own local Pomo basketry.
The exhibition was generously supported by the E. Rhodes & Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, Nomura Foundation, Japan Foundation,
Los Angeles, and the Snider Family Fund.
IGNITE!: THE ART OF SUSTAINABILITY
March 21 through May 17, 2015
A dynamic exploration of California’s ecological issues by leading contemporary artists from six regions throughout the state, this exhibit examined natural and human forces that have shaped California’s current landscape. Artists included: Kim Abeles, Charles Bello, Robert Dawson, Sant Khalsa, Judith Lowry, Linda MacDonald, Ann Savageau, Kim Stringfellow, Penelope Gottlieb, Newton Harrison & Helen Mayer Harrison, Gyongy Laky, Luke Matjas, and Daniel McCormick. Ignite! was a traveling exhibition from Exhibit Envoy, in conjunction with the California Association of Museums’ Green Museums Initiative and funded by The James Irvine Foundation. Support for its Ukiah venue was provided by the Sun House Guild.
JULES TAVERNIER: ARTIST & ADVENTURER
The Illustrations
January 10–March 8, 2015
Jules Tavernier: Artist & Adventurer–The Illustrations, featured selected work from a larger show organized by the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, California in 2014, and presented both there and at the Monterey Museum of Art. At the Grace Hudson Museum the show focused on the wood engravings that Tavernier created with artist Paul Frenzeny on a coast-to-coast sketching assignment for Harper’s Weekly in 1873-1874.
An illustrator, landscapist, genre painter, and visionary, nineteenth-century artist Jules Tavernier (1844–1889) was born in France but became one of the American West’s foremost talents. Though his career was brief, his intense creative energy spawned unique works in a variety of media, including engraving, oil, watercolor, and pastel. In painting, he employed techniques ranging from densely layered glazes built up in the manner of the old masters to the swift, fresh brushwork popularized by France’s Barbizon painters and, at times, the Impressionists.
In his own day, Tavernier’s works broadened perceptions about what was considered paintable. The transcontinental illustrations he made with Paul Frenzeny brought images and details of the West into American parlors everywhere and resulted in iconic paintings of American Indian life. In Monterey, California, he discovered and advanced new subject matter, leading followers away from grand, sweeping vistas toward the more intimate and emotional portrayal of nature that he had learned in France. In San Francisco, his studio became a bohemian artistic center, and he helped to found and lead the city’s arts organizations. Heading even farther to the west, in Hawaii he broke new ground by painting dramatic scenes of fiery volcanoes, before passing away in Honolulu at the age of 45.
Jules Tavernier: Artist & Adventurer–The Illustrations is accompanied by a full-color catalogue and features essays by Scott A. Shields, Ph.D., the Crocker’s chief curator and associate director, Claudine Chalmers, Ph.D., and Alfred Harrison, Jr. of the North Point Gallery in San Francisco.
DAYS OF GRACE: CALIFORNIA ARTIST GRACE HUDSON IN HAWAII
September 6 through December 28, 2014
This landmark exhibit brought together–for the first time ever–
many of the existing paintings and sketches that the Museum’s namesake artist made in 1901 during a restorative stay in Hawaii. It featured Hudson’s seldom-seen portraits of Native Hawaiian and Asian women and children, plus charming landscapes and seascapes. These were supplemented by Hawaiian artifacts Grace collected, her letters to and from family members during her sojourn, and photos she took of her surroundings.
Included were rare works from other painters in Hawaii that Grace met while there, including Helen Whitney Kelley; Theodore Wores; Charles Furneaux; D. Howard Hitchcock; illustrator Charles Bradford Hudson (no relation to Grace or her husband, John); and Harold Meade Mott-Smith. An extensive catalog was developed in tandem with the exhibit and is available in the Museum Gift Shop. This exhibit was co-curated by Karen Holmes, Grace Hudson Museum Registrar & Carpenter Family Historian, and Sherrie Smith-Ferri, Grace Hudson Museum Director.
GROWTH RINGS: A RETROSPECTIVE OF COLLEGE OF THE REDWOODS FINE WOODWORKING PROGRAM GRADUATES
June 7 through August 17, 2014
The College of the Redwoods Fine Woodworking Program in Fort Bragg, California, started in 1981 when a group of Mendocino woodworkers persuaded well-known author and studio furniture maker, James Krenov, to teach his methods to students in a nine-month-long course. The resulting Fine Woodworking Program has been recognized by the woodworking community around the world for the excellence of its students’ work, their craftsmanship, sensitivity, and quality of personal expression.
The Grace Hudson Museum presented “Growth Rings,” an invitational and juried exhibition to feature pieces from College of the Redwoods Program graduates currently living and working within the Redwood Empire region.
Image: Michael Burns, Big Butter, 2014, Graduate Piece
Alaskan Yellow Cedar, Teak and Boxwood. Shellac and Wax Finish
ARTISTS LOOK BACK: MENDOCINO COUNTY ART ASSOCIATION TURNS 60
March 29 through May 25, 2014
More than eighty works by seventy-seven artists were displayed in this juried retrospective exhibit which also looked back on the rich contribution made by the Mendocino County Art Association to the visual arts in Mendocino County. Special historical displays and recorded interviews highlighted the artist demonstrations, lectures, and art exhibitions provided to the community throughout the Association’s history.
NATURE’S BELOVED SON: REDISCOVERING JOHN MUIR’S BOTANICAL LEGACY
January 25 through March 16, 2014
In the spirit in which John Muir embraced the botanical world,Nature’s Beloved Son: Rediscovering John Muir’s Botanical Legacy traced the famed early environmentalist’s travels through North America and presented digitally restored images of the actual plants that he held in his hands, carried in his pockets, and preserved as specimens. This traveling exhibition was produced by Exhibit Envoy and was based on the Heyday Books publication of the same name.
Image: Bleeding Heart (Dicentra spectabilis)
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT: ARCHITECTURE OF THE INTERIOR
November 2, 2013 through January 5, 2014
This exhibit of high-quality reproduction drawings and photos of famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright’s interiors, furnishings, and household objects, offered a view into Wright’s creative concepts. Organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, D.C., in cooperation with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, Scottsdale, Arizona, it was supplemented by Wright-designed furnishings, sculpture, house plans, and objects selected by the Grace Hudson Museum.
Image: Edward E. Boynton House, Dining Area
Rochester, New York, 1908
Photograph
Courtesy of Paul Rocheleau
MILFORD ZORNES: A PAINTER OF INFLUENCE
August 10, 2013 through October 13, 2013
(See the October 2013 issue of American Art Review for more
on Zornes and the exhibit at the Grace Hudson Museum.)
This exhibit featured the exceptional work of James Milford Zornes (1908-2008), who preferred the term “painter” to “artist” when describing himself. An inspired American watercolorist, he saw himself as the common man sharing his subjects with the public. This painter’s work spanned nine decades and his travels took him around the world, painting and teaching as he went. While he painted in several mediums, he developed an international reputation based on his watercolor landscapes. His rhythmic, direct, simplified style of brushwork remains an important influence on watercolorists, especially the workshop students from Milford’s fifty years of art instruction. This exhibit was organized by the Grace Hudson Museum and curated by Maria and Hal Baker, Milford’s daughter and son-in-law.
POINTS OF ENCOUNTER: CATHERINE WOSKOW AND LARRY THOMAS
May 25, 2013 – July 28, 2013
This exhibition featured recent work by two master Mendocino County artists, Catherine Woskow of Ukiah and Larry Thomas of Fort Bragg. Both use abstraction and action painting techniques to create their engaging art. Each work shown was a response to a personal encounter–whether looking inward to the imagination or experienced in the natural landscape.
Points of Encounter took its name from a quote by Larry Thomas in the catalogue for his 2012 one-man show, Larry Thomas Coastal Echoes, at the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art. There he refers to his regular coastal walks near his home:
Whether it’s a walk along the ocean or a hike in the mountains or adrift on a river, each encounter with the landscape is unique even if repeated on a regular basis. These to me are points of encounter–moments to be savored and remembered, moments of dramatic sensation to be recorded and remembered….
In his studio, Larry creates his personal response to environmental qualities of the encounter which “filter into the work consciously and unconsciously.”
In viewing the Head Series by Catherine Woskow, the viewer is exposed to a similar, but totally internal methodology. Her point of encounter is the idea for a portrait and her exploration of the subject involves the painting of 10 to 20 underlying heads before reaching the final image. The act of painting is a primal message of the work. As she revealed in her artist’s statement, to achieve all this she too relies on the conscious and unconscious:
I am acutely conscious of the different sources of my inner dialogue: From my head? From my body? The head: chaotic thought, most often directed by violent contradiction. The body: intuitive guidance, more or less relief from thought.
This exhibit was organized by the Grace Hudson Museum.