Friday, May 19, 2006

Docent Needed: Monday, May 29

Can anyone do a docent shift (or trade a shift) on Monday, May 29 (which is Memorial Day)? An 11 am – 3 pm shift would be best, unless we get two docents.

 

We don’t expect you to be in the galleries, on your feet, for the entire four hours! Please feel free to take a break whenever and wherever you need it – in the ARC, the Untitled Café, the Museum Store, or outside the museum. Just let Visitor Services know where you are, and they will find you if someone requests a docent.

And I will always contact you if there is a tour or other event for which you are needed at a specific time. Otherwise, it is completely up to you to decide when you are most needed and how long you can manage in the galleries.

 

Please reply only if you are available, and I will confirm whether or not you are needed.

 

Thanks for your time!

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

Seattle Times : Glass blower to court: Let me make any glass forms I want


Chihuly news in the Seattle Times today ...

Glass blower to court: Let me make any glass forms I want

By Susan Kelleher
Seattle Times staff reporter

The high artistic and economic stakes in the copyright battle between
glass artist Dale Chihuly and two glass blowers were laid out in stark
terms Thursday when one of the glass blowers asked a court's
permission to continue making lopsided glass forms in any color he
chooses.

Shelton glass artist Bryan Rubino, who was sued by Chihuly last year
for alleged copyright violations, made the unusual request in a
counterclaim filed in U.S. District Court.

The countersuit alleges Chihuly is trying to claim "a monopoly on any
and all glass art that is curved, nested or uses certain kinds of
colors. [Chihuly] cannot use copyright registrations to protect an
idea or process that is so elementary that it would preclude any other
glass artist from working or creating any glass art at all."

To illustrate the potential impact of a court ruling on the question,
Rubino's lawyer, Scott Wakefield, attached images from a dozen glass
artists and studios around the country whose work is both asymmetrical
and colorful like Chihuly's.

Chihuly spokeswoman Janet Makela said the studio would not comment on
that and other allegations in Rubino's counterclaim because it doesn't
discuss litigation.

Chihuly sued Rubino and Redmond art entrepreneur Robert Kaindl in
October, accusing them of copying his designs and selling "knockoffs"
at several local galleries. Last week, Chihuly alleged in court
documents that the two had pored over books of Chihuly's works and
picked out designs that Rubino would make for Kaindl to sell.

Kaindl denied the accusations, and early this month he alleged in
court documents that Chihuly is not involved in conceiving, creating,
designing or even signing a "substantial number" of artworks that bear
the Chihuly name.

Rubino also denies Chihuly's charges and challenges Chihuly's image as
the sole designer of work that bears his name. In the claim filed
Thursday, Rubino says he created or co-authored some of the works that
Chihuly is suing to protect, and that some of the work he did for the
artist was done "without any creative input whatsoever from (Chihuly
Inc.) or Dale Chihuly."

As evidence, Rubino submitted a fax he says he received from Chihuly.
The fax includes sticklike drawings and the following instructions:
"Here's a little sketch but make whatever you want. We'll get
everything up to Tacoma when you're done and I'll try to come down
while you're blowing. Till then, Chihuly."

The fax was dated Dec. 10, 2003, when Rubino was working as an
independent contractor for Chihuly. Rubino collaborated with Chihuly
from 1988 to 2004, both as an employee and an independent contractor.

Rubino is asking the court to declare him a co-author of some of
Chihuly's more famous pieces, and award him profits associated with
those works.

Chihuly acknowledged in his suit that "Rubino worked on virtually
every series created by Chihuly." But he claimed that Rubino signed
away any rights to the work when he was Chihuly's employee, and that
as a contractor, all of the work Rubino made for Chihuly was done
under Chihuly's direction and control.

--
Regards,
Sanjeev Narang

***

email: ask {*at*} eConsultant dot com
<a href="http://www.eConsultant.com">www.eConsultant.com</a>

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Thursday, May 18, 2006

Docent Needed: Friday, June 23 from 1-5

Can anyone do a docent shift (or trade a shift) on Friday, June 23 from approximately 1-5 pm?

 

We don’t expect you to be in the galleries, on your feet, for the entire four hours! Please feel free to take a break whenever and wherever you need it – in the ARC, the Untitled Café, the Museum Store, or outside the museum. Just let Visitor Services know where you are, and they will find you if someone requests a docent.

And I will always contact you if there is a tour or other event for which you are needed at a specific time. Otherwise, it is completely up to you to decide when you are most needed and how long you can manage in the galleries.

 

Please reply only if you are available, and I will confirm whether or not you are needed.

 

Thanks for your time!

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Docent Shifts Available: Mondays Summer Shift

Starting on Memorial Day which is Monday, May 29, Tacoma Art Museum will be open on Mondays until Labor Day. That means that there are four docent shifts available:

®    Monday Week B, 10 am – 2 pm starting May 29

®    Monday Week B, 1 – 5 pm starting May 29

®    Monday Week A, 10 am – 2 pm, starting June 5

®    Monday Week A, 1 – 5 pm starting June 5

 

If you are interested in taking on or switching to one of these shifts, please let me know!

Since we now have less docents than shifts, we could also change the Monday shift times to do more of a mid-day shift if you prefer that.

 

The summer exhibitions – Essence of Line: French Drawings from Ingres to Degas, Between Clouds of Memory: The Ceramic Art of Akio Takamori, and Roy Lichtenstein: American Indian Encounters – should be popular and busy, so it is important that docents are available for all shifts.

 

And we don’t expect you to be in the galleries, on your feet, for the entire four hours! Please feel free to take a break whenever and wherever you need it – in the ARC, the Untitled Café, the Museum Store, or outside the museum. Just let Visitor Services know where you are, and they will find you if someone requests a docent.

And I will always contact you if there is a tour or other event for which you are needed at a specific time. Otherwise, it is completely up to you to decide when you are most needed and how long you can manage in the galleries.

 

Thanks for your time!

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

 

Tomorrow = 05/18/06 = Third Thursday = Art Walk


Hello Fellow Docents and Interesting People,

It's going to be 75 degrees tomorrow and the sun will set at 8:42pm
... if you have the time and the inclination, come by for some coffee
and art and conversation.

***

A gentle reminder that this month's Docent Coffee / Third Thursday
coffee will be at Cutters Point Coffee, 5:00pm + with the same "No
Agenda" and same "No RSVP Required" policy as always!

Day: Third Thursday
Date : 05/18/06
Place : ** Cutters Point Coffee **
Time: 5:00pm +

The museums will be open free and late; the galleries will be open; we
can take the train to the theater district. No agenda is good freedom.

No RSVP; Just show up!

--
Regards,
Sanjeev Narang

***

email: ask {*at*} eConsultant dot com
<a href="http://www.eConsultant.com">www.eConsultant.com</a>

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Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Monet's waterlilies at Orangerie--from NYT

 Paris's Jewel-like Orangerie, Home to Monet's Waterlilies, Reopens, Polished and Renovated
Ed Alcock for The New York Times

While the Orangerie museum was rebuilt around them for six years, Monet's waterlily paintings, too large to move, had to remain in place in the oval rooms built for them in 1927.

 
Published: May 16, 2006

PARIS, May 14 — Over the last six years, as the Musée de l'Orangerie underwent a $36 million renovation and expansion, its most valued treasure, the eight tranquil paintings of Monet's large-format waterlily series, remained trapped inside a noisy and muddy building site.

Ed Alcock for The New York Times

The waterlilies at the Orangerie are some of Monet's most abstract.

There was no alternative. While the museum's Walter-Guillaume collection of Impressionist paintings traveled the world, the waterlilies could not be detached from the walls where they were installed in 1927, one year after Monet's death. Construction — and demolition — had to take place around them.

To protect the paintings from water, heat, dust and vibrations, they were sealed inside reinforced boxes, each attached to an alarm system. Even so, "On one or two occasions, because of vibrations, the waterlilies began screaming, and the workers had to drop tools," noted Olivier Brochet, the project's chief architect,

With the work completed this month, curators were at last able to relax: the "Nymphéas," as the paintings are known here, emerged no worse for the wear. And on Wednesday, a good four years behind schedule, this museum on the western edge of the Tuileries gardens reopens to the public.

At first glance, the Orangerie, standing across from the Musée du Jeu de Paume, its near-identical twin, looks largely unchanged. Yet, not for the first time, it has undergone a radical makeover, notably the addition of underground galleries for the Walter-Guillaume collection.

Built in 1852 to house an orange grove, with a glass facade facing south across the Seine, the Orangerie was used to billet soldiers on leave from the trenches during World War I. After the armistice of Nov. 11, 1918, the French prime minister, Georges Clemenceau, invited his friend Claude Monet to display his large-format nymphéas there.

Monet had been working on them since 1914 in a spacious studio added onto his Normandy home in Giverny. And he would continue painting these vast canvases until his death at 86. The following year, 1927, eight were finally installed in two specially designed oval-shaped rooms in the Orangerie.

Waterlilies dominated the last 30 years of Monet's life.

"These landscapes of water and reflection have become an obsession for me," he wrote to a friend in 1909. "It is beyond my strength as an old man, and yet I want to render what I feel." In total, he painted some 250 oils of the vegetation in and around the Japanese-style lagoon at Giverny.

They are to be found in major museums around the world, as well as at the Musée d'Orsay and, prominently, at the Musée Marmottan-Monet, both in Paris. Yet the Orangerie series is unique, not least because of its size: each painting is two meters, or six and a half feet, tall. If lined up side by side, the works would measure 91 meters, or 298.5 feet, in width. They are also conceived so that the four in one gallery represent sunrise, and the four in the other evoke dusk.

Most striking, though, is how these paintings, particularly those of dusk, come close to abstraction: it is as if this master of Impressionism had chosen to leap beyond post-Impressionism, Fauvism, Cubism and other new movements and prepare the way for Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko more than two decades later.

After World War II, Monet was himself somewhat out of vogue. And in the 1960's, when Juliette Walter sold the collection of her first husband, Paul Guillaume, to the French state, no one thought it odd to alter the Orangerie to accommodate those 144 paintings. Twice married and twice widowed, Mrs. Walter also named the collection after her second husband, Jean Walter.

It was at this point that the 328-foot-long rectangular Orangerie was given a second floor, one that blocked the natural lighting intended for the nymphéas. For a while, at least, the newly arrived works by Renoir, Cézanne, Picasso, Matisse, Modigliani, André Derain and Chaim Soutine became the stars of the museum.

Today, however, with Monet one of the art world's biggest draws, the new renovation was aimed at restoring the museum to the way he had imagined it. The second floor was demolished so that once again the nymphéas enjoy natural light, which, with the changing weather, seasons and hours of the day, constantly alters their mood.

Mr. Brochet, the architect, said unexpected problems arose because, despite the Orangerie's elegant neo-Classical exterior, it was in fact constructed shoddily. "It was thrown up quickly, without proper foundations," he said. "I have just been in Shanghai. They would have torn it down and rebuilt it properly. But that would not be possible here."

A fresh complication was posed by the discovery of remnants of a 16th-century city wall in the area assigned to the new Walter-Guillaume galleries. This led to a prolonged bureaucratic squabble over how the wall should be treated: in the end, a 30-foot section has been preserved and is now incorporated into the design.

In these new galleries, natural light floods a wide corridor where oils by Renoir and Cézanne are given pride of place. Other rooms are devoted to more modern masters like Picasso and Matisse. The museum's collection of works by Soutine is arguably the best in Paris.

Still, for all the extra space gained, what perhaps matters most is that the Orangerie is once again a shrine to Monet and his beloved waterlilies: anyone lucky enough to be alone with the nymphéas is invited to meditate, perchance to dream.


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Monday, May 15, 2006

Fw: Review-a-Day: Writings on Art

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: 05/14/2006 11:00 PM
Subject: Review-a-Day: Writings on Art


Today's Review From
Christian Science Monitor

Writings on Art
by  Mark Rothko

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An Artist's Own Words
A review by Christopher Andreae

Those soft-contoured, light-infused zones of weighty color, sometimes
looming toward the viewer, sometimes moving away, offering access
yet denying it -- the traits of Mark Rothko's classic paintings
are unmistakable.

They suggest a deep silence -- the noiseless intensity of paint-resting-on-surface
like contained condensation. Perhaps it is this quietness that,
until recent years, has persuaded people that Rothko himself had
somehow chosen to avoid words and explanations. But it has also
taken years for his writings to surface. The publication of his
book The Artist's Reality: Philosophies of Art only took place
in 2004 -- 34 years after he died and more like 64 years after
he actually wrote it.

It is now plain that this American artist did not, after all,
opt for monkish verbal abstinence, even when he started to produce
his expressively mute classic paintings.

Writings on Art is the latest evidence of his revealingly eloquent
ways with words.

This is not to say that he found it easy to convey in words the
essence of paintings that he strongly felt were themselves entirely
communicative. But they involved a new painterly language, and
those who wrote about them, even appreciatively, resorted to art
terminologies that inevitably missed the point.

The difficulties he himself had in finding word-equivalents for
his paintings show up clearly in a series of elusive letters written
to the critic and exhibition organizer Katharine Kuh in the mid-1950s.
Her hope of publishing written interviews between the two of them
never materialized, so this correspondence (though nothing she
wrote to him is included) is a fascinating glimpse of why it didn't
happen.

"From the moment I began to collect my ideas," he wrote her, "it
became clear that here was not a problem of what ought to be said,
but what it is that I can say."

It would seem that even if others often misunderstood his paintings,
he still trusted their capacity to communicate directly with people
better than words could. He confessed an "abhorrence for forewords
and explanatory data. And if I must place my trust somewhere,
I would invest it in the psyche of sensitive observers who are
free of the conventions of understanding. I would have no apprehensions
about the use they would make of these pictures for the needs
of their own spirits. For if there is both need and spirit there
is bound to be a real transaction."

Such an attitude intriguingly links this collection of his writings
to the earliest of his essays, which are about art education.
Rothko's "ideal teacher ... of creative art activity ... must
possess the sensibility of an artist," he wrote in 1941. "Art
must be to him a language of lucid speech inducing the understanding
and exaltation which art properly inspires."

In an address to the Pratt Institute in 1958 he was still making
the point: "I have never thought that painting a picture has anything
to do with self-expression. It is a communication about the world
to someone else. After the world is convinced about this communication
it changes. The world was never the same after Picasso or Miro.
Theirs was a view of the world which transformed our vision of
things."

So, inarguably, did Rothko's.

Perhaps Rothko, even more than artists who have been much less
articulate, was still, in the final analysis, caught between the
impossibility of explaining on the one hand and the need to explain
on the other.

He told the writer John Hurt Fischer: "A painting doesn't need
anybody to explain what it is about. If it is any good, it speaks
for itself...." But this remark was aimed at "presumptuous" art
critics trying to interpret what can't be interpreted rather than
at his own rather revealing attempts to explain. What he had to
say, in fact, makes surprisingly good reading.

Christopher Andreae has been writing for the Monitor since the
1960s. He lives in Glasgow, Scotland.

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URGENT: Docent Needed for General Tour: Sunday, May 21 at 2 pm

Can anyone do a general museum tour on Sunday, May 21 at 2 pm?

 

The tour is for a group of 20 to 40 people from Jewish Family Services.  

Deborah Cornett is scheduled to docent on that day, but a group this large requires a second docent.

                                                                                                                                                                                          

Please reply only if you are available, and I will confirm whether or not you are needed.

 

Thanks for your time!

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

REMINDER: May 18 Gallery Talk by Elizabeth Brown

 

Thurs. May 18, 6:00 pm – GALLERY TALK: Roy Lichtenstein and American Indian Encounters
Join Henry Art Gallery’s Chief Curator, Elizabeth Brown for a lively gallery discussion about Lichtenstein’s revolutionary approach to abstraction and his unique references to Native American art motifs and objects.

 

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

 

Re: Alexie Sherman - another view


Dear Friends,
For some insight on a Native American poet/author's point of view - check
out Alexie Sherman. His movie, 'Smoke Signals" is also quite entertaining.

shermanalexie.com
http://www.fallsapart.com/

Regards,
Roxanne Peterson

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Magna definition

 

According to Rock, “Magna” is a brand name, and he forwarded the following two definitions for it:

  1. Trade name for a manufacturer's line of artists' straight acrylic colors & their isolating varnish.
  2. Paint in the form of pigment ground in an acrylic resin w. solvents & plasticizers

 

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!