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The Kentucky Museum of Arts + Design presents
A
Tribute to Rude Osolnik
Enter The Show
An
Exhibition of Contemporary Turned Wood
Wood turner Rude Osolnik was a
leading figure in the contemporary craft field and it is fitting
that the first major exhibition in our new facility be a tribute to
his life and work.
Considered
to be one of the fathers of contemporary wood turning in America,
Rude Osolnik is something of a folk hero. Although an
accomplished woodworker, Osolnik’s greatest impact was in
woodturning. A composer on the lathe, he first wedded classical form
and proportion to modern simplicity. In so doing, he updated a
long-practiced craft. His simple, hourglass candlesticks earned the
Award of Good Design from the Furniture Association of American in
1955. The 1960s saw him working with plywood to make bowls, and
experimenting with the natural-edge on green-wood turnings.
Osolnik was widely admired as one of the finest wood turners and
educators in America. His workshops and seminars were in demand
around the world. The United States Government presented the Queen
of England one of his bowls. Joan Mondale chose some of his work to
be displayed in the White House Celebration of Christmas. His bowls
and signature candlesticks are collector’s items and his pieces
are in the permanent collections of the Renwick Gallery of the
Smithsonian, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Atlanta’s High Museum
and the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, The Yale Museum,
The J.P Speed Art Museum, The Kentucky History Museum, The Mayo
Clinic and many other fine institutions.
Contemporary woodturning
came into its own during Osolnik’s lifetime. The shift from
utilitarian to artistic turning was a pioneered by the likes of Rude
Osolnik, Mel Lindquist, Bob Stocksdale, Edward Moulthrope and was
taken further by artists such as David Ellsworth, Virginia Dotson,
Giles Gilson, Michelle Holzapfel, Craig Nutt, John Jordan and Del
Stubbs.
This exhibition will
feature a selection of Osolnik’s work from private collections. It
will be complimented by new work from more than fifty artists who
were his contemporaries or established their careers during his
lifetime. These are the artists who are at
the cutting edge of contemporary woodturning and whose collective
body of work will make up the museum objects and heirlooms of the
future. We view the exhibition as an opportunity to introduce our
audience to the work of some of the finest craft artists in the
world
We plan a series of demonstrations, lectures and
workshops around the theme, inviting some of the finest artists in
the field to participate.
Link
to Osolnik Family Website.
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