BANGOR – The University of Maine Museum of Art will present the second half of a two-part exhibition, “A Legacy of Collecting: 1983-Present,” beginning Friday, Dec. 7.
“A Legacy of Collecting” showcases the museum’s permanent collection. The exhibit celebrates the 5-year anniversary of the museum’s relocation downtown at 40 Harlow St.
The first exhibition focused on the formative years of the museum’s permanent collection, 1946-1982, under founding director Vincent A. Hartgen. The second half of the exhibition series focuses on additions to the collection by the four directors who followed Hartgen.
Two major gifts helped shape the collection after 1983 – the gift of 43 objects by American artist William Gropper and 305 works from the collection of 1938 alumnus Robert Venn Carr Jr. Each of these gifts concentrated primarily on what had by this time become the principal focus of the museum’s collection – works on paper.
Sophie Gropper’s gift of her husband’s works includes a number of important drawings made for reproduction in magazines such as Harper’s and Vanity Fair.
As a collector, Robert Venn Carr Jr. amassed a robust collection of American, German and English prints. His vision encompassed benchmark examples of printmaking. These include important works such as German painter Georg Baselitz’s large portrait of his wife Elke, “Akt im Lehnstuhl (Nude in Arm Chair),” which the artist carved into floor vinyl, inked by hand, and then printed.
Other examples from the Carr Collection include museum favorites Mick Jagger by Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein’s nod to German Expressionism “Reclining Nude.”
The Museum of Art moved to Bangor in December 2002 and embarked on an active exhibition program that focused on photography. Included in the exhibition are works by Manuel Alvarez Bravo and George Tice, acquired after their solo exhibitions.
Since its relocation, the museum has programmed exhibitions highlighting artists who work in Maine.
Included in “A Legacy of Collecting” are works by Maine artists Paul Caponigro, Jonathan Bailey, Sam Cady, Jessica Gandolf, Bernard Langlais, Jocelyn Lee, Melville McLean, Alex Katz, Melonie Bennett and Barbara Sullivan.
Also on display are works by celebrated artists Berenice Abbott, Eugene Atget, John Marin, Neil Welliver, Max Beckmann, Richard Diebenkorn, Pablo Picasso and Yvonne Jacquette, as well as a multi-panel work by Los Angeles artist Charles Garabedian, and an unusual installation in the museum’s stairwell of work by John Baldessari.
The museum is located at 40 Harlow St. Museum hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday. Admission is $3, free to members and UMaine students. For information, call 561-3350.
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