West Bend Art Museum (original) (raw)
West Bend Art Museum
(as of 2007 the Museum of Wisconsin Art)
West Bend, WI
262-334-9638
Resource Library articles and essays honoring the American experience through its art:
The Paintings of Otto Bielefeld, essay by Abraham A. Davidson, Ph.D (10/4/06)
Museums Are a Source of Wealth; article by Tom Lidtke (4/15/05)
Kathy Hofmann: Landscape Painting / Larry Jameson: Wood Vessels (6/29/04)
Painted Essays: William Keith's Landscapes of the West (3/17/04)
Midwest Watercolor Society 27th Annual Transparent Watercolor Exhibition (5/22/03)
Francesco Spicuzza An Exponent of Beauty and Light: A Family Collection (10/9/02)
Gerrit V. Sinclair 1880-1955: A Retrospect (8/22/02)
Gerrit V. Sinclair 1880-1955: A Retrospect; essay by Janet Treacy (8/22/02)
Jack Dowd Looks at Diversity and Individualism (2/13/02)
Farm Stories: Studies of a Disappearing Landscape; catalogue essay excerpt (1/14/02)
Helen Farnsworth Mears, essay segment by Laurel Spenser Forsythe (10/26/01)
Jessie Kalmbach Chase, essay segment by Deborah Rosenthal (10/26/01)
Society of Milwaukee Artists, essay segment by Gay Donahue (9/29/01)
Wisconsin's New Art Deal, essay segment by Mary Michie (9/29/01)
A Brush with History, essay segment by James Auer (9/29/01)
Preface to "Foundations of Art in Wisconsin" by Thomas D. Lidtke (9/29/01)
Women's Work: Early Wisconsin Women Artists (9/26/01)
George Raab: Wisconsin Artist, essay segment by Peter C. Merrill (9/21/01)
Prominence in 19th Century Regional Art, essay segment by Thomas D. Lidtke (9/21/01)
Carl von Marr, essay segment by Thomas D. Lidtke (9/20/01)
A Place in History, essay segment by Janet Treacy (9/18/01)
Preface / A Century of Artistic Endeavor, essay by Thomas D. Lidtke (9/19/01)
Wisconsin Art from Euro-American Settlement to 1950, essay segment by Thomas D. Lidtke (9/14/01)
Unveiling of Carl von Marr and Helen F. Mears Works Acquired by The West Bend Art Museum (8/4/99)
1999 Wisconsin Watercolor Society Exhibition (6/7/99)
Beyond the Horizon: Sudlow and Jacobshagen (4/13/99)
Images of a New England Seacoast: 1900 - 1950 (10/27/98)
Early Wisconsin Collection Being Unveiled (1997)
Since 1991, the museum has become widely known throughout the country as the home of the most comprehensive collection of Early Wisconsin Art and the Wisconsin Art Archive -- the primary source for information on early Wisconsin art. The goal is to become one of many regional art museums in the country with a collection chronologically representative of all Wisconsin's visual art media.
The Museum's vision follows an historic pattern of focusing on Wisconsin art that has been in place since it was founded in 1961 with a core collection of paintings by Carl von Marr, one of Wisconsin's most noted late 19th century artists. (Marr was related to the museum's founding Melitta S. Pick family). In 1988 the museum's collection management policy was established, resulting in the assembly of a significant vintage collection of regional art from Wisconsin's golden age of cultural development. That collection was first unveiled a decade later as part of the state's sesquicentennial program in 1998. Since then the reputation of the museum's collections and archives has gained such momentum that today it is the leading source of art and information on this topic.
As of 2007 the museum's collection is relatively small, but tightly focused, with just under 2,000 works of art, representing nearly 300 Wisconsin artists from the timeframe of Euro-American settlement in Wisconsin to around 1950; the archives represent nearly 6,000 artists during the same timeframe. However, art was created in Wisconsin hundreds of years before white settlement and to not acknowledge that or any of the art that was created in contemporary times creates a limited and narrow understanding of Wisconsin art.
The Museum of Wisconsin Art is located at 300 South 6th Avenue in downtown West Bend. See the Museum's website for hours and admission fees.
Google Book Searches conducted in 2008 and 2013 by Traditional Fine Arts Organization (TFAO) located the following brochures, catalogues and gallery guides published on paper in connection with the Museum and with a topic of American representational art. The list may not include all relevant publications. Titles are listed by date of publication, with most recent listed first. Information on publications may be in error or incomplete. Titles may be followed by links to related essays published by Resource Library. SeeDefinitions for more information on finding brochures, catalogues and gallery guides using TFAO's website.
In Celebration: The Life and Art of Ruth Grotenrath, by Susan J. Montgomery. University of Wisconsin Press, Apr 5, 2011 - 141 pages. Google Books says: "In Celebration details the life and art of Ruth Grotenrath (191288), an American artist whose work spanned the middle fifty years of the twentieth century. Tracing Grotenrath's influences and methods of working -- from her earliest American Regionalist paintings and WPA murals to the colorful still lifes that captured the imagination of her many fans and patrons-Susan Montgomery depicts the artist's unique perceptions of her intimate environment and her efforts to reflect the vibrant beauty of the world around her. Her best-known works are sensual, bountiful floral still lifes."
In the Moment: The Life and Art of Schomer Lichtner, by Susan J. Montgomery. University of Wisconsin Press, 2011 -183 pages. Google Books says: "In the Moment is a visual account of the life and art of Schomer Lichtner (19052006), a much-celebrated artist working in the American Midwest. Susan Montgomery draws on archival materials and interviews with Lichtner and others to trace the development of his long and productive career, which began in the first decade of the twentieth century and continued until his death at the age of 101. The 350 images in this book span more than seventy-five years of artwork, including paintings, sculptures, theatrical sets, greeting cards, and drawings."
Spicuzza, an Exponent of Beauty and Light: A Family Collection, By Thomas Lidtke. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 2002. 4 pages. Essay by Thomas D. Lidtke.
Gerrit V. Sinclair, 1890-1955: A Retrospective: West Bend Art Museum, August 14-September 29, 2002, By Gerrit Van W Sinclair, Janet Treacy,. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 2002. 30 pages see Gerrit V. Sinclair 1880-1955: A Retrospect; essay by Janet Treacy (8/22/02)
Women's Work: Early Wisconsin Women Artists, West Bend Art Museum, October 3-November 11, 2001, By Heather Boright.. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 2001. 72 pages
Wisconsin Art History: Early Wisconsin Craftmasters: West Bend Art Museum, May 30-July 1, 2001. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 2001. 12 pages
Wisconsin Painters & Sculptors, Wisconsin Artists in All Media: Centennial Exhibition. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 2000. 29 pages
Wisconsin Art History: A Chronology of Wisconsin Art and History to 1950. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 1998. 18 pages
Foundations of Art in Wisconsin: A Wisconsin Sesquicentennial Exhibition in Honor of the State's Founding Cultural Figures and Organizations. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 1998. 46 pages see Preface to "Foundations of Art in Wisconsin" by Thomas D. Lidtke (9/29/01)
My Life: An Autobiography, By John Marr,. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 1998. 20 pages
Collecting the Art of Wisconsin: The Early Years. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 1996. 5 pages
George Raab: Prominence in 19th Century Regional Art. Published by West Bend Art Museum, 1994. 28 pages. Google Books says: "West Bend Art Museum, June 8-July 17, 1994 ; Springfield Art Association of Edwards Place, July 30-September 4, 1994." George Raab: Wisconsin Artist, essay segment by Peter C. Merrill (9/21/01)
Carl Von Marr: American-German Painter, by Thomas Lidtke. West Bend Gallery of Fine Arts, 1986 - 116 pages
Book information courtesy of Google Books.
Why was this sub-index page prepared?
When Resource Library publishes over time more than one article concerning an institution, there is created as an additional resource for readers a sub-index page containing links to each_Resource Library_ article or essay concerning that institution, plus available information on its location and other descriptive information.
See our Museums Explained to learn about the "inner workings" of art museums and the functions of staff members. In the exhibitions section find out how to get the most out of a museum visit. See definitionsfor a glossary of museum-related words used in articles.
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Resource Library is a free online publication of nonprofit Traditional Fine Arts Organization (TFAO). Since 1997, Resource Library and its predecessor Resource Library Magazine have cumulatively published online 1,300+ articles and essays written by hundreds of identified authors, thousands of other texts not attributable to named authors, plus 24,000+ images, all providing educational and informational content related to American representational art. Texts and related images are provided almost exclusively by nonprofit art museum, gallery and art centersources.
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