swope art museum newsletter sep 2013 - jan 2014

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Earth, Sky and Water An exhibition series in celebration of “The Year of the River” swope art museum newsletter September 2013 - January 2014 As the Wabash Valley concludes its 2013 “Year of the River” celebration this fall, a series of exhibitions of contemporary art at the Swope Art Museum examines our relationship to the planet that supports us. Three concurrent exhibitions, made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, will be on view in Gallery Three and the Haslem and Hodge Galleries from October 4 through January 4: Between Heaven and Earth; Borders – A Regional Survey; and Taking to Water: Kaz McCue. In November, Flotsam and Jetsam, made possible by Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., will be on view in the Education Gallery. Between Heaven and Earth: Inspirations / September 6–October 19 (Education Gallery) Between Heaven and Earth: Installation / October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Gallery Three) In Between Heaven and Earth, a two-part exhibition, Brooklyn-based artist Jonathan Soard links identity to place and psychol- ogy in his introspective landscapes. Soard, a native of Dana, Indiana, focuses on the west central Indiana landscape adjacent to the Wabash River where the exhaust stacks of the Vermilion County Electrical power plant punctuate the skyline with plumes of steam. This prairie landscape had a profound influence on Soard’s outlook as a young man, for to him the flat horizon line carried metaphoric meaning introduced by his religious upbringing and clearly divided the world in opposite halves. In Soard’s mind the stacks and plumes became a bridge. Returning frequently to the area to care for his aging parents, Soard has recently taken the opportunity to reexamine his relationship to the landscape through painting, no longer seeing opposites but complements. With acknowledgement of the trail of smoke featured in the Swope’s painting, Threshing Wheat, by Thomas Hart Benton, which the artist saw as a young man, the chimneys and plumes in the paintings represent a trail marker leading the way out of the divided land and the human inclination to dominate nature’s forces, as well as energy in the cycle of life. These dramatic, romantic paintings reflect the artist’s musings on religion, life and mortality. Mary Jo Maraldo, Invisible Borders, 1996, earth, glass, steel, wood Borders-A Regional Survey Jonathan Soard, Prairie Power Plant Study #14, 2012, oil on canvas © Jonathan Soard, on loan from Dixie Coates Beckham Between Heaven and Earth (continued on next page)

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Page 1: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

Earth, Sky and Water An exhibition series in celebration of

“The Year of the River”

swope art museum newsletter September 2013 - January 2014

As the Wabash Valley concludes its 2013 “Year of the River” celebration this fall, a series of exhibitions of contemporary art at the Swope Art Museum examines our relationship to the planet that supports us. Three concurrent exhibitions, made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, will be on view in Gallery Three and the Haslem and Hodge Galleries from October 4 through January 4: Between Heaven and Earth; Borders – A Regional Survey; and Taking to Water: Kaz McCue. In November, Flotsam and Jetsam, made possible by Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., will be on view in the Education Gallery.

Between Heaven and Earth: Inspirations / September 6–October 19 (Education Gallery) Between Heaven and Earth: Installation / October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Gallery Three)

In Between Heaven and Earth, a two-part exhibition, Brooklyn-based artist Jonathan Soard links identity to place and psychol-ogy in his introspective landscapes. Soard, a native of Dana, Indiana, focuses on the west central Indiana landscape adjacent to the Wabash River where the exhaust stacks of the Vermilion County Electrical power plant punctuate the skyline with plumes of steam. This prairie landscape had a profound influence on Soard’s outlook as a young man, for to him the flat horizon line carried metaphoric meaning introduced by his religious upbringing and clearly divided the world in opposite halves. In Soard’s mind the stacks and plumes became a bridge. Returning frequently to the area to care for his aging parents, Soard has recently taken the opportunity to reexamine his relationship to the landscape through painting, no longer seeing opposites but complements. With acknowledgement of the trail of smoke featured in the Swope’s painting, Threshing Wheat, by Thomas Hart Benton, which the artist saw as a young man, the chimneys and plumes in the paintings represent a trail marker leading the way out of the divided land and the human inclination to dominate nature’s forces, as well as energy in the cycle of life. These dramatic, romantic paintings reflect the artist’s musings on religion, life and mortality.

Mary Jo Maraldo, Invisible Borders, 1996, earth, glass, steel, wood Borders-A Regional Survey

Jonathan Soard, Prairie Power Plant Study #14, 2012, oil on canvas© Jonathan Soard, on loan from Dixie Coates BeckhamBetween Heaven and Earth

(continued on next page)

Page 2: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

(Earth, Sky and Water; continued)

Borders – A Regional Survey / October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Haslem Gallery)

A group of Midwestern artists working in diverse media explores the sociology of geography in the exhibition Borders – A Regional Survey. Co-curated by Mary Kramer, artist and director of Art Spaces, Inc. and Lisa Petrulis, curator of the Swope Art Museum, the exhibition features work that examines the link between national identity and landscape from a contemporary perspective.

In Borders – A Regional Survey, Mary Kramer visualizes the places where past and present border lines rest invisibly in the earth and water, while the sculpted calligraphy of Mary Jo Maraldo gives physical form to language about borders. Nancy Nichols-Pethick’s depictions of historic Harmony State Park, bordered by the Wabash River, are grounded in nature. Canadian native Petra Nyendick explores the theme of borders through the map and grid systems that humans impose upon the land, and Melissa Vandenberg uses mundane materials and images to reveal layers of history and struggle over the boundaries along the Mason-Dixon Line. With the exception of Vandenberg, who resides in Richmond, Kentucky, the artists in Borders – A Regional Survey live in Terre Haute.

Taking to Water: Kaz McCue / October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Hodge Gallery)

An element that has the power to nourish and to destroy, covers 70 percent of the earth and makes up 60 percent of an adult human body, water is the theme of Taking To Water: Kaz McCue, a photographic exploration of the textures and patterns of this essential life-supporting element. Michigan-based artist Kaz McCue uses the close-up lens of his camera to reveal the dynamic quality of water. McCue began seeing these photographic images as psychological landscapes in which water is the vehicle of expression. Isolating water from the landscape and utilizing a range of shutter speeds on his camera, McCue presents abstract compositions that are sometimes unfamiliar and sometimes recognizable as bubbles, ripples and flows. By controlling the light, the water and the camera, McCue has produced colorful abstractions. McCue created the photographs on view in Taking to Water during a three-month residency at the Prairie Center of the Arts in Peoria, Illinois.

Flotsam and Jetsam / November 1, 2013–January 25, 2014 (Education Gallery)

The phrase “flotsam and jetsam” originally meant the floating debris of a wrecked boat or its jettisoned cargo, but has become a more general term to describe unimportant materials and trash. The exhibition Flotsam and Jetsam features the work of three Indiana artists: Sayaka Ganz, of Fort Wayne; Rob Millard-Mendez, of Evansville; and Michael Tingley, of Terre Haute.

The artists in Flotsam and Jetsam find good use for debris scrounged directly from the Wabash and Ohio Rivers as well as material that was rescued elsewhere along the flow of solid waste disposal. Although it has undercurrents of environmental criticism, Flotsam and Jetsam is an optimistic exhibition: the art-ists transform rubbish into wondrous, humorous and even beautiful objects, rarely hiding the original identity of the materials they use.

Check out the Swope’s calendar listings for more details on related events to these exhibitions.

Kaz McCue, Drips and Drabs, 2011 archival inkjet printTaking to Water: Kaz McCue

Nancy Nichols-Pethick, Harmony 004, 2013, pastel drawing Borders-A Regional Survey

Sayaka Ganz, Nova, 2011, reclaimed plastic objects, wire Flotsam and Jetsam

Page 3: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

from the director: new acquisitions

Gifts of art are vital to building the Swope Art Museum’s collection of American art:

from the time that the Museum first opened its doors to the public until now, many

major works have entered the collection through the generosity of donors. Recently,

the Swope Art Museum received three significant works on paper as gifts, donations

that enable the Museum to increase its holdings of prints by American artists.

Ellen Heck is a brilliant young printmaker whose work has already been purchased by

the Cleveland Museum of Art for its collection. A native of Austin, Texas, Heck has a B.A.

in philosophy with honors from Brown University and a B.F.A. in printmaking and painting from the School of the Art Institute

of Chicago. She resides in Berkeley, California.

Child and Mother is part of a series of prints inspired by the aquatints of Mary Cassatt. Entitled The Plus a Century Portfolio,

the series presents psychological portraits of contemporary women and children, a subject common to Cassatt’s work and of

particular interest to Heck as one of three sisters. In Child and Mother, the artist has reversed the relationship found in Cassatt’s

depictions of mothers and children, for the child now plays the role of supporter, both physically and emotionally. To render the

figures, Heck used aquatint and drypoint, the latter a form of etching that creates a softer line of varied thickness. She also

employed color woodcut to create the image’s areas of pure color. Elizabeth Carroll Shearer, who has donated several prints to

the Swope over the years, gave the Museum this beautiful work in honor of Barbara Vogel,

chair of the Museum’s Collections Committee.

Fellow Bay-area artist Beth Van Hoesen achieved national recognition as a printmaker and

exhibited widely during her lifetime. Her work is in the collections of major museums such

as the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of

Modern Art. Van Hoesen graduated from Stanford in 1948 with a degree in fine arts before

studying at the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute) and in

Paris at the École des Beaux Arts de Fontainbleau, the Académie Julian and the Académie de

la Grand Chaumière.

Van Hoesen had a special affinity for animals and achieved an exceptional sensitivity and

accuracy in depicting them. Working from live subjects, she focused on capturing their

specific personalities through meticulous observation. Van Hoesen made at least four preparatory

studies for Buster, a work in which the owl’s direct gaze projects a feeling of self-confidence.

Likewise, the artist made several preparatory drawings for Walt Badger. In contrast to Buster’s

sense of assurance, in Walt Badger, the animal has a startled and somewhat fearful expression

that suggests that the artist surprised the badger in his habitat. The Swope received these

handsome and sensitive prints from the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Trust.

The Swope is grateful to Mrs. Shearer, the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Trust and the

many generous donors of art, past and present, who have helped make the Museum’s collec-

tion truly “the best of American art.”

-Marianne Richter, Executive Director

(top) Beth Van Hoesen (1926-2010), Buster, 1982, etching and hand-colored watercolorGift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Trust, 2013.1.1

(bottom) Beth Van Hoesen (1926-2010),Walt Badger, 1982, nine-color lithographGift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Trust, 2013.1.2

Page 4: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

Swope Art Museum25 South 7th Street

Terre Haute, IN 47807

(812) 238-1676www.swope.org

Museum Hours:Tuesday through Friday 10 am to 5 pmSaturday noon to 5 pmClosed Sunday & MondayAdmission is free.

Calendar of EventsSeptember 2013 through January 2014

SEPTEMBER 2013September 6–October 19 On view: Between Heaven and Earth: Inspirations(Education Gallery)Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

Friday, September 6, 6-9 pmFirst Friday: On the HorizonEnjoy special programming and complimentary treats as you peruse the exhibition Between Heaven and Earth: Inspirations, made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. Try a cocktail from the cash bar while you reac-quaint yourself with old friends at the Swope’s first First Friday of the fall season.

6:30 pm: Gallery talk: Horizons in the Swope’s Collection by Swope Executive Director Marianne Richter

7:30 pm: A video presentation on Between Heaven and Earth by artist Jonathan Soard

Friday, September 20, 11 amAlliance of the Swope Presents: Julia Sermersheim on the Art of Quilting Julia Sermersheim will discuss how the craft of quilting has evolved into the art of quilted wall hangings.The public is welcome to attend!

Saturday, September 28, noon-4 pmFamily Day: My LandscapeIn conjunction with Vigo County Public Library and the Wabash Valley Literacy Coalition, Family Day at the Swope features a thoughtful look at landscape and what it means to each of us. Spend some time in the Museum exploring pictures of special places and then create your very own special landscape.Made possible by Duke Energy Foundation with support from Psi Iota Xi

OCTOBER 2013Wednesday, October 2, noonGreen Artist Lunch and LearnIn collaboration with Art Spaces, Inc. the Swope will host a talk by Seattle-based artist Buster Simpson. Simpson is known nationally for public art that raises community consciousness about social and ecological issues. Visitors are welcome to bring their own lunch; tables will be provided.

October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014On view: Borders – A Regional Survey(Haslem Gallery)Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014On view: Taking to Water: Kaz McCue(Hodge Gallery)Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014On view: Between Heaven and Earth: Installation(Gallery Three)Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

Friday, October 4, 6-9 pmFirst Friday: String/ DivisionDivide your attention between classical music and an artistic talk about borders at the opening for three exhibitions: Taking to Water: Kaz McCue; Borders – A Regional Survey; and Between Heaven And Earth: Installation. Enjoy a nibble from the hors d’oeuvre plate or have a drink from the cash bar.

6:30 pm: Sharilyn Spicknall presents: Violins & Violas, Splendid Strings

8 pm: Let’s Talk about Borders, a discussion of the invisible geographi-cal and political borders that affect our daily lives from the perspective of the artists in the exhibition Borders – A Regional Survey

Friday, October 18, 11 amAlliance of the Swope Presents: Susie Dewey book reviewMrs. Dewey will review the book One for the Books by Joe Queenan. Queenan has written columns for major newspapers and appeared on many TV shows. He shows a wide range of interest in his writings. The public is welcome to attend!

NOVEMBER 2013November 1, 2013- January 25, 2014On view: Flotsam and Jetsam(Education Gallery)Made possible by Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.

Friday, November 1, 6-9 pmFirst Friday: BorderlandsListen to poems about immigration, migration, borders and home by writers from Indiana’s border regions with the Indiana Poet Laureate. View the exhibition Flotsam and Jetsam while you mingle with friends over a cocktail from the cash bar or a bite from the complimentary snack table.

7 pm: In collaboration with the Indiana Arts Commission (IAC) and State Poet Laureate, Karen Kovacik, the Swope presents the last in a series of four public readings entitled “The Borderlands Project”

8 pm: Meet the 2012-2013 Indiana Poet Laureate, Karen KovacikMade possible by the Frederick R. Benson Trust, First Financial Bank

Friday, November 15, 11 amAlliance Presents: Michael Tingley: Creating Sculpture from Found ObjectsTingley spent many years in New York City as a graphic designer for numerous magazines and is now a full-time artist. The public is welcome to attend!

Saturday, November 16, noon-4 pmFamily Day: The River RocksHave you ever gone wading in the river? There are all kinds of interest-ing shells and rocks and ripples in the sand and water. Discover river-related images in the Swope and then create a project inspired by one of them.Made possible by Duke Energy Foundation with support from Psi Iota Xi

Friday, November 22, noonNew Play Reading Lunch and LearnIn collaboration with the Indiana State University Theater Department, the Swope will host readings of short new plays by ISU students. Each play pre-sented is inspired by a work of art.

DECEMBER 2013Friday, December 6, 5-9 pmFirst Friday: Making MerryCome in out of the cold and into the world of art during the 5th Annual

Miracle on 7th Street. Join in the fes-tivities at the Swope! Meet the artists of Flotsam and Jetsam or rest your feet as you learn how to recycle junk into festive ornaments. Enjoy holiday treats and a nip from the cash bar.

All night: Art and craft demonstra-tions and hands-on projects featuring holiday ornaments and other fun things fashioned from found items and other materials. Included will be projects inspired by the exhibitions Flotsam and Jetsam and Taking to Water: Kaz McCueMade possible by Garmong Construction Services

JANUARY 2014Friday, January 3, 6-9 pmFirst Friday: RenewalSurround yourself with art for an evening of relaxation and renewal after the rush of holiday festivities. Enjoy liquid libations from the cash bar and complimentary snacks with your friends as you take advantage of the chance to delve deeper into the exhibition Flotsam and Jetsam.

6:30 pm: A video interview with Flotsam and Jetsam artist Sayaka Ganz

7:30 pm: View a time-lapse video showing the development of a work of art by Flotsam and Jetsam artist Michael Tingley

All night: Discover what the New Year has in store for you with a Tarot card reading by Crystal White

Friday, January 17, 11 amAlliance Presents: Steve Letsinger: Overview of 2013 “Year Of The River”Letsinger will review how the year evolved and the many events and people involved in making it a very exciting year.The public is welcome to attend!

Saturday, January 18, noon-4 pmFamily Day: BookwormAre you a bookworm? Do you like to read books? Explore the art in select children’s literature and then make your own bookworm bookmark.Made possible by Duke Energy Foundation with support from Psi Iota Xi

Page 5: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

Exhibition ScheduleSeptember 2013 through January 2014All exhibitions are free and open to the public.

Between Heaven and Earth: InspirationsReception Friday, September 6, 6–9 pmOn view September 6–October 19 (Education Gallery)AND

Between Heaven and Earth: InstallationReception Friday, October 4, 6–9 pmOn view October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Gallery Three)

In Between Heaven and Earth, a two-part exhibition, Brooklyn-based artist Jonathan Soard links identity to place and psychology in his introspective landscapes. Soard, a native of Dana, Indiana, focuses on the west central Indiana landscape adjacent to the Wabash River. These dramatic, romantic paintings reflect the artist’s musings on religion, life and mortality.

Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

Borders – A Regional SurveyReception Friday, October 4, 6–9 pmOn view October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Haslem Gallery)

A group of Midwestern artists working in diverse media explores the sociology of geography in the exhibition, Borders – A Regional Survey. Co-curated by Mary Kramer, local artist and director of Art Spaces, Inc. and Lisa Petrulis, curator of the Swope Art Museum in Terre Haute, Indiana, the exhibition features work that examines the link between national identity and landscape from a contemporary perspective.

Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

Taking to Water: Kaz McCueReception Friday, October 4, 6–9 pmOn view October 4, 2013–January 4, 2014 (Hodge Gallery)

An element that has the power to nourish and to destroy, covers 70 percent of the earth, and makes up 60 percent of an adult human body, water is the theme of Taking To Water, a photographic exploration of the textures and patterns of this essential element. Michigan-based artist Kaz McCue uses the close-up lens of his camera to reveal the dynamic quality of this life-giving liquid. McCue created the photographs on view in Taking to Water during a three-month residency at the Prairie Center of the Arts in Peoria, Illinois.

Made possible by the HSC Group at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

Flotsam and JetsamReception Friday, November 1, 6–9 pmOn view November 1, 2013- January 25, 2014 (Education Gallery)

The exhibition Flotsam and Jetsam features the work of artists who create assemblages from found and discarded materials scrounged directly from the Wabash and Ohio Rivers. Although it has undercurrents of environmental criticism, Flotsam and Jetsam is an optimistic exhibition: the artists transform rubbish into wondrous, humorous and even beautiful objects, rarely hiding the original identity of the materials they use.

The exhibition features the work of three Indiana artists:Sayaka Ganz, from Fort Wayne, creates animals from reclaimed household plastic items; Rob Millard-Mendez, of Evansville, builds boats from debris found on land and in the Ohio River; and Michael Tingley, of Terre Haute, makes intentionally useless things with materials fished out of the Wabash River.

Made possible by Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.

Kaz McCue, Turbulence Over Orange, 2011, archival inkjet printTaking to Water: Kaz McCue

Petra Nyendick, History of the Grid: New City Hall, 2010, mixed media on acrylic Borders – A Regional Survey

Jonathan Soard, Power Plant Stack Study, gouache on black paper, 2012© Jonathan SoardBetween Heaven and Earth

Page 6: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

Become a First Friday Fan!First Friday of the month, 6–9 pmCan’t make it to the Swope during the day? Come visit us from 6 to 9 pm on the first Friday of every month from September through May. Spend some quiet time investigating new exhibitions or participate in special activities and programs each month. New this year: the First Friday Fan card. Visit six times or more from September through May and receive a special gift!

Swope Family DaySelect Saturdays: 12 noon–4 pmSeptember 28, November 16, January 18, March 15Swope Family Days offer an informal opportunity to explore the museum and make art together! Every Family Day highlights several works of art with questions and projects for the whole family to think and talk about together. Each visit and project is different. Join us for ten minutes or all afternoon. Children of all ages are welcome with an adult. Details are listed in the Swope calendar.

Sponsored by Duke Energy Foundation with support from a grant from Psi Iota Xi

Lunch and Learn October 2 and November 22, 12 noonThis October the Swope is collaborating with Art Spaces, Inc., and the Indiana State University Theater Department for a special noontime series. Break out of your usual lunchtime routine and enjoy presentations on art and theater at these inter-institutional events. Lunch and Learn events are free and open to the public; tables will be provided for those who bring their lunch. Details are listed in the Swope calendar.

Alliance of the Swope PresentsThird Friday of the month (except December), 11 am The Alliance was formed in 1952 to benefit the Swope and to promote the study and enjoyment of art. As part of their monthly meetings the Alliance presents talks and demonstrations by artists, designers and historians. Meetings are held on the third Friday of each month, September – May (excluding December). Following the group’s monthly meeting, the Alliance presentations begin at 11 am and are open to the public. Details are listed in the Swope calendar.

Annual Wabash Valley WinnersThis summer the Howard E. Wooden, Sr. Memorial Grand Prize in the 69th Annual Wabash Valley Juried Exhibition was awarded to Bosco Takes A Ride, an oil painting by Nancy Kruse of Carmel, IN. One more award will be tallied and announced at the close of the exhibition. The People’s Choice Award, sponsored by the Alliance of the Swope, gives visitors a chance to voice their opinions by casting a ballot at each visit to the exhibition. Look for an announcement of the winner on the Swope Facebook page. This annual exhibition is made possible by First Financial Bank

A First Friday performance by the Indiana State University Flute Choir led by Joyce Wilson.

A lively presentation given by Mrs. Susie Dewey at an Alliance of the Swope Presents talk.

Nancy Kruse’s Bosco Takes a Ride; recipient of the Howard E. Wooden, Sr. Memorial Grand Prize at the 2013 Wabash Valley Juried Exhibition.

Families contributed to a map of Terre Haute during one of last season’s Family Days.

Page 7: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

Sheldon’s Legacy Donations, thank you!

Founder of the Swope Art Museum,

Michael Sheldon Swope (1843-1929)

Sheldon’s Legacy donations are contributions to the Swope’s annual fund

and provide invaluable support for the Museum’s

operations.

Mary Ellen AdamsMs. Virginia AndersonBruce & Margie AnshutzBallyhoo TavernDoris BennettBrent & Lexy BilslandFrank & Marlene BilyouShirley A. Bishop in memory of Jean FreedDan & Cheri BradleyDavid & Kathy BrentlingerChristy Brinkman-RobertsonBenicia & Adam BroekerMr. & Mrs. Robert R. BrownBarbara H. BruceMichael D. BuzashMary Ann CarrollColleen ChestnutJohn Chironna, Jr. in memory of Mildred ChironnaHelen CrockettSheron Dailey & Tom TuckerRon & Marsha DanielsonTom & Laura DeverRolanda & John DinkelRob & Mary DotiMs. Carole E. DreherP.J. & Peter Ekstrom

Ms. Patricia EngellandDr. Andrew Farber in memory of Dr. Charles KimJanet & Frank FraembsThomas & Connie FrancisJohn P. Gedrick IIIMrs. John T. Gelder, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Douglas GillespieRobert & Donna GreenMarcella F. GuthrieKathy & Lew HacklemanJane A. HadleyJonathan J. HarrisJerry & Paula HochstetlerCathleen HoganCharles & Nancy Jarrett in honor of David and Kathy BrentlingerDr. & Mrs. Don JennermannTom KirchnerRoxine KoenigRon & Shelia LeachJames & Beth LevineMr. & Mrs. Robert MartinPatrick P. MartinHarold & Malinda MedskerDr. Robert MeisselJoAnna Metzger

Jennifer & Vince MilnesJerry & David MitchellMs. Vera I. MorozovaJohn & Rebecca MurrayFred & Nancy NationChris & Tonya PfaffPlumbers & Steamfitters Local #157Ted & Eileen ProseRonald ReevesAndrew C. RiggsKevin & Emily Runion in memory of Eleanor CramerStephanie Salter & Bill FenoglioMs. Mary C. SchafferElizabeth Carroll Shearer in honor of Mary Ann CarrollDr. & Mrs. Randall StevensMrs. John A. TempletonTerry & Beth TevlinPhyllis Dye Turner in honor of Laurette McCarthySuzanne & Milt VanReedMrs. Barbara A. VogelAllen & Cheryl WhiteMr. & Mrs. Bert WilliamsMary Jane Wynne

Docent ProgramThe Swope Docent Corps was formed in 1968 and is made up of volunteers with an enthusiasm for art and people. Docents are available, with advance notice, for guided tours of the Museum. A minimum of two weeks lead time is suggested when requesting a docent-led tour.

We salute Elizabeth Art, Lou Barbin, Amanda Davis, Jerry Hochstetler, Cyndee Jenkins, Maury Miller, Barbara Schmitt, Kathlyn Dinkel-Taylor and Barbara Weber for logging over 100 tour hours last season. In addition to the yearly Vigo County fifth grade field trips, the docents welcomed students from area high schools and universities, as well as groups of every age from various community organizations.

New recruits are always welcome. If you have extra time, enjoy engaging people in conversation and have an interest in learning about American art history, membership in the Docent Corps may be for you. Classes geared toward the annual fifth grade tour program begin in January and continue through early April. Classes are held on Wednesdays, 10 am to noon, nearly every other week, with additional exhibition previews. Fifth grade tours occur each April and May and are made possible by Terre Haute Savings Bank.

For more information contact Elizabeth (Lisa) Petrulis, Swope curator, at [email protected] or (812) 238-1676 extension 12.

Marilyn Wheeler Pendergast New Acquisition GalleryDedicated in 2010 to honor the late Marilyn Wheeler Pendergast, former President of the Board of Managers, the new Acquisition Gallery presents highlights of the growing and changing Museum collection. Recent gifts and purchases rotate periodically throughout the year in the space, located in the second-floor elevator lobby of the Swope.

Page 8: Swope Art Museum Newsletter Sep 2013 - Jan 2014

Museum Boards & StaffBoard of Managers1Richard Shagley, PresidentMary Ann Carroll, TreasurerKathy Brentlinger, Secretary

Officers of the Board of OverseersMurray Pate, PresidentTerri Conley, Vice PresidentPatrick Martin, Secretary

Board of OverseersWieke van der Weijden BenjaminMayor Duke BennettAlexa BilslandL. Cheri BradleyPatrick CahillAnna Lee Chalos-McAleeseCindy CoxLisa Cutter, President, Alliance of the SwopeSheron DaileyAmy Demchak, Art Hoppers RepresentativeCarol EtlingNorma Evans, EmeritaMissy FindleyScott FrancisPatrick GoodwinBernice HelmanTerry HoganHelen IslesSue JarvisCliff LambertSteve Letsinger, Curator & Representative of the President, Rose Hulman Institute of Technology

Harriet McNealBecky Miller, Executive Director for Advancement & Representative of the President, Ivy Tech Community CollegeDavid MitchellRebecca MurrayNancy NationKerri OberleEileen ProsePatrick RalstonAl RuckriegelStephanie SalterTeresa ShafferRichard Shagley IIMary ShepherdVirginia (Ginger) SmithPhyllis Dye Turner, EmeritaBarbara VogelStephanie WelshJohn WilkinsonRichard (Biff) Williams, Vice President & Provost, & Representative of Daniel J. Bradley, President, ISUJohn Wright

Museum StaffMarianne Richter, Executive DirectorElizabeth Petrulis, Curator of Collection & ExhibitionsMichelle Adler, Development AssistantJenna Lanman, Collection & Website ManagerKristi Finley, Office & Publications Manager

Become a volunteer!The Swope Art Museum

is always seeking friendly volunteers to lend a hand.

Opportunities include:Office Assistance

Data EntryVisitor Services

ResearchEvent Planning

MarketingBecoming a DocentLibrary Assistance

and other activities...

If you are interested in volunteering, please contact the Swope Art Museum at (812) 238-1676 or via email at [email protected]. Volunteers need not be museum members. High School and University level internships are also available.

The Swope Art Museum is located in downtown Terre Haute, Indiana at 25 South 7th Street between Ohio Street & Wabash Avenue.

Free two-hour street park-ing is available on Wabash Avenue and Ohio Street, or visitors may park in the Skygarden parking facility directly behind the Museum.

Admission to the Swope is free.

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Museum Hours:Tuesday through Friday 10 am to 5 pmSaturday noon to 5 pmClosed Sunday & Monday

Mission Statement:

The Sheldon Swope Art Museum exists to collect, preserve, exhibit, and interpret the best of American art, with special emphasis on painting and sculpture of the first half of the twentieth century and on Wabash Valley artists past and present.

Mission Statement adopted by the Joint Boards, January 15, 1996