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Conference turris::womannotes-v1

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 1 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V1 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:873
Total number of notes:22329

269.0. "Nat'l Museum of Women in the Arts" by LDP::SCHNEIDER () Fri Apr 03 1987 11:56

Associated Press Thu  2-APR-1987 17:18                         Women's Museum

   Museum Dedicated To Women In The Arts Is Unveiled
                           By DONNA CASSATA
                        Associated Press Writer

   WASHINGTON (AP) - A museum dedicated to women artists generally
forgotten by the nation's major museums and galleries was unveiled
Thursday amid calls for greater recognition of women's
contributions to the history of art.
   The National Museum of Women in the Arts, which opens officially
on Tuesday with an inaugural exhibition titled ``American Women
Artists 1830-1930,'' was previewed for members of the media,
including some who noted recent criticisms of a museum devoted
solely to the work of women.
   ``Unfortunately, for whatever reason, there are less than 5
percent of all works in museums that are done by women,'' said
Wilhelmina Holladay, who came up with the idea of a women's museum
and got the financial backing.
   ``Our hope is that through exhibitions, programming, publishing
and our advance study center we can establish women artists and
make them well known so they will be included.''
   The museum is the brainchild of Mrs. Holladay and her husband,
Wallace, who 20 years ago, after discovering the works of 17th
century artist Clara Peeters in Europe, found no mention of her, or
any other women artists, in standard reference books.
   The two set out to collect the works of women artists,
accumulating a vast number of paintings and sculptures. Five years
ago, they considered donating their extensive collection, but
instead decided on a museum devoted to women artists.
   Mrs. Holladay raised nearly $17 million, including a $1.5
million donation from Martin Marietta and $500,000 from United
Technologies. With the assets, she purchased a six-story
Renaissance Revival building, a former Masonic Grand Lodge, and the
collection had a home.
   The inaugural exhibition includes the works of two of the more
famous women artists: Georgia O'Keefe and Mary Cassatt.
   Among O'Keefe's works on display are three oil paintings,
``Spring,'' ``City Night,'' and ``Ranchos Church - Taos.''
   Cassatt, an American impressionist who did most of her work in
Paris, is represented by two paintings, ``Woman and Child
Driving,'' and ``Susan on a Balcony Holding a Dog.''
   Eleanor Tufts, a professor at Southern Methodist University,
guest curator of the exhibtion, said women artists have been given
second-class status.
   ``I've been going for 20 years to basements of museums around
the world, finding works of women artists, and now they're here in
one museum,'' she said.
   The exhibition also highlights the works of women artists not as
well-known, including Sarah Miriam Peale, a member of the
``Painting Peales,'' Lilly Martin Spencer and Cecilia Beaux.
   The museum's state gallery exhibits works from Kansas, including
paintings by men, and plans to exhibit works from North Carolina
and Texas. But the museum's overall focus remains the work of women.
   When asked to define the mueseum's ``raison d'etre,'' a phrase
Mrs. Holladay used frequently, she said: ``To celebrate and educate
about the achievements and contributions of women in the arts.''
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
269.1APEHUB::STHILAIREFri Apr 03 1987 14:572
    I'd love to spend a day browsing through it.
    
269.2NISYSI::KINGSupport the right to arm bears!!!!Fri Apr 03 1987 17:476
       Re: 1 Lorne, I have 3 pictures of Renior famous Dancing Paintings.
    I took them before the guards came up and grab my camera. No one
    told me that you wen't suppose to take pictures. Next time I'm in
    maynard I bring them for you to see.
    
                       REK
269.3where?SUPER::MATTHEWSDon't panicMon Apr 06 1987 20:275
    I'm about to visit DC -- anyone know where this museum is? 
    
    (If not, I guess I can check the newspaper when I get there.)
    
	    					Val
269.413'th & NY Ave NWMANANA::MCKEENDon't take NH for granite!Tue Apr 07 1987 01:5310
    The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) is located at 13'th
    and New York Ave., N.W. in Washington, DC.  The building is the
    former headquarters of the Masonic Grand Lodge of the National Capital,
    and is located just east of the White House.  For further information
    about the museum, call (202) 337-2615.
    
    Val, if you get a chance to visit the museum, I (we, in WOMANNOTES)
    would LOVE to hear about it.
    
    					Karen.
269.5I have a brochure...WAGON::RITTNERFri Aug 28 1987 20:069
    I saw the building last January when I was in DC for a tradeshow
    (wasn't open yet). It's very impressive! I received a brochure about
    the museum this week along with membership information (I joined).
    If anyone is interested in a copy of the info I received feel free
    to send me mail and I'll xerox and (interoffice) mail you a copy...
    
    Elisabeth
    
    node WAGON::RITTNER
269.6Madge TennentNEXUS::CONLONSat Mar 12 1988 01:3174
    	In the early 1970's, a friend took me to a reception at the
    	Tennent Art Foundation's Gallery in Honolulu, where his
    	Grandmother's paintings were on permanent display.  (She
    	had only recently passed away at the time of this reception.)
    
    	The following is an article from "Honolulu" Magazine (reprinted
    	without permission) about Madge Tennent's works that can be
    	seen in the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington
    	D.C.
    
        
    	       "Among Her Peers:  Madge Tennent in Washington"
    			    
    					by Arthur Tennent
    
    	    Not that I really have any doubts in the matter, but it
    	    is reassuring to hear various cognoscenti declare from
    	    time to time that Madge Tennent's indigenous and univer-
    	    sal art would easily stand the test of time anywhere. 
    	    The most recent expression of those sentiments came from
    	    the staff of the newly formed National Museum of Women in
    	    the Arts in Washington, D.C.  The museum had requested a
    	    Madge Tennent oil to include in its collection of works
    	    from many of the most famous women artists, past and present.
    	    An opportunity not to be missed, our Tennent Art Foundation
    	    trustees agreed to send Tennent's magnificent, life-size
    	    "Local Color" to the museum on a permanent loan basis.
    
    	    At the June 29 gala opening of the museum's permanent
    	    collection, the painting, with all its distinct Hawaiian
    	    flavor, placid symmetry and vibrant colors, created quite
    	    a stir.  Also arriving for the opening were Tennent's
    	    stunning Hawaiian royalty portraits from the Rheem Collection
    	    of Santa Barbara.  The beauty of these portraits, which
    	    I was privileged to see at a private showing, lies in 
    	    synthesizing fine likenesses with the unique touch of
    	    Tennent's highly personal art.
    
    	    That the Washington museum thought highly of "Local Color"
    	    was evident too from its being placed in a most advantageous
    	    spot, the first artwork to be seen, in fact, as you enter
    	    the modern art section.  For a neighbor, "Local Color" has
    	    Elaine de Kooning's "Bachus #3."  It was Elaine de Kooning
    	    (American, 1920-   ) who calmly noted amid the initial
    	    uproar over the notion of a woman's museum that while inclu-
    	    sion in an all-woman museum would have seemed patronizing
    	    25 years ago, now it makes a certain sense in that museums
    	    have too long neglected women artists.
    
    	    One furthur word on "Local Color":  It was painted in 1934,
    	    at the height of Tennent's definitive style, in which
    	    beautifully orchestrated color combines with strong lines
    	    to acheive striking results.  Such is the degree of Tennent's
    	    bold originality that she chose to leave the masterpiece
    	    unsigned.  The same applies to all her later oils, including
    	    the near-legendary "Two Sisters" at our State Capitol and
    	    the luminous "Ehu Bride" at the Hawaii State Library.
    
    	    Besides housing works of such formidable luminaries as Georgia
    	    O'Keeffe, Mary Cassatt, Berthe Marisol and, oh yes, Madge
    	    Tennent, the National Museum of Women in the Arts boasts
    	    a handsome Renaissance-style building that was, ironically,
    	    formerly a men-only Masonic Lodge.  Its six stories have
    	    been renovated and lavishly appointed to suit the elegant
    	    taste of the museum's president, Wilhelmina Holladay.  The
    	    dynamic Holladay was the driving force behind the museum's
    	    acquiring, before opening, a membership of 72,000 and better
    	    than $15 million in contributions.
    
    	    There's no small satisfaction in knowing that some 500,000
    	    visitors are expected to pass through the NMWA's doors
    	    annually.  The timeless quality of Madge Tennent's art has
    	    never been more apparent than now -- worthy of a centennial
    	    celebration in 1989 of the artist's life.