Opening
Hours:
Monday - Friday
10am - 5pm
Saturday
11am - 5pm
THE MUSEUM WILL BE CLOSED:
Christmas Day
(Friday, Dec.
25)
New Year's Day
(Friday, Jan.
1)
Admission:
Members - Free Adults -
$5.00 Seniors - $4.00 Military -
$4.00 Family (2 Adults & all Children) -
$10.00 Children Under 12
- Free Students with ID - Free Groups 10 or more - $3.00 each
First
Friday Trolley Hops And Exhibition Openings Are Always
FREE!
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We offer a wide range of exhibitions throughout
the year featuring local, regional and national artists. Exhibitions in our Mary
and Al Shands Gallery generally run for three months while exhibitions in the
Steve Wilson Gallery and Lindy and Bill Street Gallery run two months. We have
an ongoing selection of works from our Permanent Collection in the Brown-Forman
Gallery, which is located adjacent to the Education Center on the 3rd
floor.
2009 Water Quilts: John M. Walsh III Collection
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| Location: | Shands Gallery |
| Date: | Saturday, October 17, 2009 - Saturday, December 19, 2009 |
| Time: | 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM |
Event description: |
The theme for the 14th
Annual Festival of Faiths, which runs from November 5 14, 2009, is Sacred Water: Sustaining Life. The
Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft is teaming up with the Center for
Interfaith Relations to present Water Quilts from the Collection of Jack Walsh.
Introduction:
John M. Walsh
III has been collecting contemporary art quilts since the early 1990s, and
now has about 70 quilts in his collection. Guided by the astute eye of curator
and author Penny McMorris, who teamed with Michael Kile in the mid-1980's to
produce the exhibition that gave the art quilt its name, Jack has acquired
important pieces by many top artists and also commissioned new work from people
that he and Penny have felt would benefit most from his support. The Walsh
collection now includes key pieces by such well known artists as Pauline
Burbidge, Nancy Crow, Wendy Huhn, Michael James, Joan Lintault, Therese May, Jan
Myers-Newbury, Joan Schulze, Susan Shie, and Pam Studstill, as well as
remarkable works by artists who are far from being household names in the quilt
world, such as Terese Agnew, Kyoung-Ae Cho, Lou Cabeen, Anne Kingsbury, John
Lefelhocz, and Julie John Upshaw.
Jack says, 'The defining event in my
life as a collector was and continues to be having the opportunity to be guided
by Penny McMorris. Shortly after Penny and I decided to collaborate, she invited
me to spend a day of orientation in the world of art quilts. We spent eight
hours looking at slides covering the careers of fifteen artists. This was a key
step in the development of my appreciation for the history and breadth of this
medium. At the end of that day, I began to have a feel for the wide range of
creative approaches different artists brought to their work. I started to
understand the art quilt as offering unique opportunities for expression beyond
other media such as painting, sculpture and printmaking. [And it left] no room
for any doubt about the difference between art quilts and other quilts. This
really is a new artistic medium.'
Because Jack runs a water treatment
business and owns property with a waterfall he has loved since childhood, quite
a few of the quilts in his collection have water themes. Some, like Lenore Davis
Florida Surf, Karen Perrine's Forest Flowing, Catherine
McConnell's Vermont Swimmers, and Wendy Huhn's Acid Rain, seemed
tailor made for the collection, but Jack also has commissioned several artists
to make quilts with water as their theme.
This sharing is
typical of Jack Walsh. He generously loans pieces whenever museums or artists
request them for exhibitions, and he loves nothing better than sharing his
passion with friends and business associates. Jack says the intention of his
collection is to document the art quilt movement through the best work available
and adds, 'Penny and I look for innovation, for pieces that are real works of
art, not just clever constructions, and for pieces where quilting is a
significant part of the work. We look for work by people who are quilters.'
Penny and Jack are always in search of emerging artists who are pushing the
envelope in different ways, and they will follow any lead they uncover. They are
constantly on the lookout, networking, visiting shows, reading quilt, art and
craft journals, staying in contact with artists, looking at artist's websites,
and keeping their ears to the tracks. They have found some of the most unusual
and expressive quilts in the collection by looking beyond the major quilt
exhibitions and outlets.
The artists included
in the exhibition include:
Terese Agnew, Sue
Benner, Rachel Brumer, Pauline Burbidge, Ellen Anne Eddy, Gayle Fraas, Tim
Harding, Wendy Huhn, John W.
Lefelhocz, Terese May, Ruth B. McDowell, Katie Pasquini-Masopust, Karen
Perrine, Joy Saville, Joan Schulze, Duncan Slade, Petra Soesman and Catherine
Stanton.
Sponsored
by:
Mr.
and Mrs. Owsley Brown II
Mr. Dave Caudill and Ms. Joann Harrison Mr. & Mrs.
George Fisher
Ms.
Donna Hall
in memory of Mary Shands
Mr. Rick Heath and Ms. Merrily Orsini
Mr.
Daniel D. Maye
Mr. Tom Moran and Ms. Ellyn Crutcher
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Remmers
Mr.
Arturo Alonzo Sandoval Dr. and Mrs.
Mark Slaughter
Mr. John M. Walsh III
Ms. Ann Wells
in memory of Mary Shands
Dr.
Kenneth and Shelly Zegart
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Exhibitors
• Benner, Sue
• Lefelhocz, John W.
• McDowell, Ruth B.
• Saville, Joy
Images From Event
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