28
JULY–OCTOBER 2016

Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

J U L Y – O C T O B E R 2 0 1 6

Page 2: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

Edward Burtynsky, Cerro Prieto Geothermal Power Station, Baja, Mexico, 2012. Digital chromogenic print. Photo © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Metivier Gallery, Toronto / Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles.

Page 3: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

LEONARDO DA VINCI ONCE SAID THAT WATER IS THE DRIVING FORCE OF ALL NATURE. FLEXIBLE AND YIELDING, WE THINK OF WATER AS SOFT, FLUID, INDEFINITE. BUT WHEN ALL THOSE TINY, SEEMINGLY INSIGNIFICANT DROPS JOIN TO BECOME A RUSHING FORCE, THERE IS SIMPLY NO LIMIT TO ITS TRANSFORMATIVE POWER. IT’S A METAPHOR FOR A GREAT MANY THINGS IN THIS WORLD, FROM ELECTIONS TO THE WAVE AT A BALLGAME. AS HUMAN BEINGS, WE HAVE THE CAPACITY TO ACCOMPLISH GREAT THINGS WHEN WE COME TOGETHER, UNITED BY A SINGLE PURPOSE, INSPIRED BY A SHARED VISION. WE INVITE YOU TO COME HERE, TOGETHER, AND FIND YOUR INSPIRATION. THE POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS.

Page 4: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

4

CONTENTS.JULY – OCTOBER 2016

Phoenix Art Museum Board of Trustees 2016 – 2017

CHAIRMANMike Cohn

VICE CHAIRMANRose Papp

TREASURER Tony Astorga

SECRETARY Adam Singer

Alvan AdamsTony AstorgaRyan BacklundPeter BankoAlice BazlenDebbie BergeMichael BillMatthew BolandJohn BoumaDonald BrandtJo BrandtDrew Brown*Amy Clague*Mike CohnJoan CreminDenise DelgadoJacquie Dorrance*Eileen ElliottMark FeldmanErin GogolakRichard GoldsmithMichael Greenbaum*Paul GrovesMeryl Haber, MDDiane HalleNancy HanleyLila Harnett*Jon Hulburd

Tim JonesJane JozoffEllen KatzKen KendrickJoe LampeSharron LewisDavid LindnerJudy LinhartDennis Lyon*Garrett McKnightPatricia NolanDoris OngRose PappJim PattersonSteve Rineberg*David RousseauDeanna SalazarJay SchlottSuzanne SeligAnn SinerAdam SingerAngela SingerRaymond SlomskiMark TarbellGary TookerMeredith von ArentschildtBill Way

* Honorary Trustee

T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S

5 Letter from the Director

6 The Checklist

8 Edward Burtynsky: Water

10 Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic

12 Horatio Zabala: Mapping the Monochrome

14 Ducks, Eggs, and Fish: Works by Martin Fan Cheng

15 On View

16 Spotlight: Transformative Gift

19 Palette

20 Acknowledgements Circles of Support Corporate Council

22 Why I Give

23 Planned Giving

24 The Museum Store

26 Museum News

Images clockwise: 1. Kehinde Wiley (American, b. 1977). Shantavia Beale II (detail), 2012. Oil on canvas. Collection of Ana and Lenny Gravier. © Kehinde Wiley. (Photo: Jason Wyche, courtesy of Sean Kelly, New York) 2. Horacio Zabala, Hacha. Reconstrucción (Axe, Reconstruction)(detail), 1972-1998, Iron ax, printed map, wood base. Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York and Buenos Aires, and Estudio Giménez-Duhau. 3. Image photographed in Phoenix Art Museum by Mark Peterman. 4. Image courtesy of Palette Restaurant at Phoenix Art Museum.

12

15

10

19

Page 5: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

5

1. BEST FOREIGN: The Italians won, hands down. The Gianfranco Ferré show of his white shirts was spectacular and very popular with visitors of all ages and genders. The Michelangelo drawings show exceeded our attendance expectations and attracted even young couples on dates on Valentine’s Day.

2. BEST DOCUMENTARY (SHORT): The Ultimate Collection: Iconic Baseball Cards honored the US love of the game and documented the highlights of baseball history in a beautifully-designed display of small but exquisite morsels.

3. BEST DOCUMENTARY (FEATURE): Phoenix Rising gave a peek at the gems in private collections in the Valley. Who knew we had a (maybe) Rembrandt, Cassatt, Monet, Degas, and other iconic artists in our neighborhood? This exhibition also gets the “sleeper hit” award. The After Hours closing party drew 1,300 visitors.

4. BEST ACTOR IN A LEAD ROLE: Fritz Scholder was the star of Super Indian with his masterful melding of the pop sensibility of Andy Warhol, the grotesquery of Francis Bacon, and a wit that was all his own.

5. BEST MIX OF OLD AND NEW: The Ai Wei Wei exhibition paired his bronze zodiac heads with ancient Chinese bronzes to explain the historical precedents of his work. Younger visitors loved taking selfies with their “sign.”

6. AUDIENCE AWARD: Discount Tire Free Family Sundays pushed our attendance from 500 to 3,100 at the inaugural event in January. From strollers to wheelchairs, we welcomed families of all kinds, and the Museum got loud with giggles and an army of happy volunteers.

7. AUDIENCE AWARD 2: A gorgeous display of Spanish colonial paintings celebrated an important new gift from Diane and Bruce Halle and the estate of Gerry S. Culpepper and attracted a loyal following.

8. BEST MARKETING: We celebrated Michelangelo’s 541st birthday with free cake and went through 1,000 slices in 45 minutes!

9. LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT: We celebrated the 50th Anniversary of the Fashion Department and the Arizona Costume Institute with a fascinating survey show of the collection and the announcement of a new endowment gift to name the position of Dennita Sewell the “Jacquie Dorrance Fashion Design Curator.” Congratulations to Dennita, and a warm thanks to Jacquie!

10. BEST LEAD PERFORMANCES: All of you who made last year a triumph for the Museum’s fundraising efforts. All three events (White Night, Independent Women Luncheon, and Luncheon of Champions) substantially exceeded our goals. Your generous support and dedication to Phoenix Art Museum made this happen.

See you at the Museum this summer!

With gratitude,

AMADA CRUZ The Sybil Harrington Director, Phoenix Art Museum

L E T T E R F R O M T H E D I R E C T O R

Dear Members and First-Time Visitors, The summer is upon us and, at Phoenix Art Museum, that means the end of the high season. Endings imply new beginnings, but it might be a good time to look back at our last “year” and salute ourselves for a great season. In no

particular order, here are my highlights, inspired by the Academy Awards:

“IT MIGHT BE A GOOD TIME TO LOOK BACK AT OUR LAST ‘YEAR’ AND SALUTE OURSELVES...”

FROM THE DIRECTOR.

Page 6: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

T H E C H E C K L I S T6

SEE Dive InEdward Burtynsky: WATER Members’ DayJuly 9 | 10 am – 5 pm

Make a date with Edward Burtynsky, and see the world’s most abundant natural resource as you’ve never experienced it before at our exclusive Members’ Day. Enjoy a day filled with fun activities, including exhibition tours with a Museum Docent, beginning every half hour from 11 am – 2:30 pm. No reservations are required. This event is open to all Members, a guest, and their children under age 18. For details, contact the Museum Membership Office at 602.257.2124.

PLAY Free for AllDiscount Tire Free Family Second SundaysJuly 10, August 14, September 11, October 9

Join us on the second Sunday of each month for a whirlwind of great art and hands-on activities. Through the generosity of Discount Tire Company, the Museum opens free on the Second Sunday of each month, with exciting activities, scavenger hunts, live performances, story time, delicious treats, free tours, and more. Each Discount Tire Free Family Second Sunday features an opportunity to learn about and make art with a featured local Valley artist, from muralists to dancers and more. Open to the public from Noon to 5 pm each month. Museum Members can enjoy an exclusive preview hour beginning from 11 am, so stop on in!

TASTE Good EatsRipe Awards Recognizing Chefs and MixologistsJuly 30 | 7 pm – 9:30 pm

The Valley’s favorite edible awards event is back! The Ripe Culinary Awards, presented by SanTan Brewing Company, honor the rising stars of the Greater Phoenix food scene, including past honorees such as Justin Beckett, Charleen Badman, and Gio Osso. Now in its fourth year, the Ripe Awards recognizes cutting-edge chefs and bartenders from across the Valley who are expected to make a major culinary impact in the year to come. Winners are selected by representatives of Phoenix Art Museum and The Arizona Republic following an open-to-the-public nomination process. Ripe nominees are acknowledged for their unique contributions to the local culinary scene and their ability to best represent the essence of Phoenix through food. Attendees at the event can sample winners’ creations, sip on locally-made wines and celebrate the best and brightest of the Phoenix food scene.

Tickets are priced at $65 per person and can be purchased at www.RipePHX.com.

THE (thə\chek-list\) 1. A list of artworks to be included in an exhibition or installation. 2. A guide to can’t-miss events and happenings at Phoenix Art Museum.

CHECKLIST.

ENGAGE Have a Voice2016 Annual MeetingSeptember 29 | 9 am, Singer Hall

Join us for the 2016 Annual Meeting and a chance to vote on the incoming Trustees that help shape the future of Phoenix Art Museum.

For details, and to cast your ballot as a Museum Member, visit phxart.org/annualmeeting2016.

Page 7: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

T H E C H E C K L I S T 7

World Summer Stay-cation Film Festival will broaden your scope of reality (and film) all in ONE DAY, without having to leave the city.

Schedule:

11 am: Big Mountain, Diné Bikéyah (Runtime: 75 minutes)

1 pm: Recommended by Enrique (Runtime: 87 minutes)

3 pm: Persistence of Vision (Runtime: 83 minutes)

Tickets are $10 for all three films. Visit tickets.phxart.org today.

WATCH Fake-OffContemporary Forum Free Summer Film SeriesHow to Steal a Million: July 20 6:30 pm

Art and Craft: August 17 6:30 pm Whiteman Hall

Join us for the Contemporary Forum Summer Film Series. This summer features two exciting films offered free and open to the public, both of which weave fascinating stories of art and forgery. How to Steal a Million is a romantic heist comedy featuring Audrey Hepburn as woman who must steal a statue from a museum to help conceal her father’s art forgeries. Hepburn enlists the services of “society burglar” Peter O’Toole to steal back the million-dollar statue before her father gets caught and sent to prison.

Meanwhile, Art and Craft explores the life of prolific American art forger, Mark Landis. Landis’s body of work spans 30 years, and covers multiple styles and periods such as 15th-century icons, Pablo Picasso, and even Walt Disney. After donating his forgeries to museums across the country, Landis was caught in 2007 after duping a tenacious registrar at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art, who sets out to expose Landis to the art world. This cat-and-mouse art caper is rooted in questions of authorship, authenticity, obsession, community and purpose.

The CF Summer Film Festival is generously sponsored by Lisa Sette Gallery.

LEARN Family MattersArt and Legacy Planning Seminar: Can We Talk?October 18 | Noon – 2:00 pm or 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Your estate plan is in place…but is your family prepared? This seminar is designed to help you understand the discussions your family can have now to strengthen trust and communication for the future. The seminar is offered in two sessions: Lunch from Noon – 2 pm, or Happy Hour from 4 pm – 6 pm with hosted bar and appetizers, and can provide advice from experts on how best to prepare your loved ones for the future. Tickets are just $20 per person or $30 per couple and free to 21st Century Society members. All proceeds benefit Phoenix Art Museum. To purchase tickets, contact [email protected].

WATCH Eyes on the WorldSee the World Summer Stay-cation Film FestivalJuly 16 | 11 am, Whiteman Hall

The best summer getaway is right in your own backyard! This summer, explore the world through cinema, no road-trip or plane tickets needed. With a lineup of three independent films exploring themes of perspectives of social justice, political resistance and cultural identity (Big Mountain, Diné Bikéyah); mysticism, tradition, and the fantasy of celebrity (Recommended by Enrique); obsession, passion and the unrealized dream (Persistence of Vision), the See the

Ed Mell, Canyon Angles, 1992. Oil on canvas. Collection of Phoenix Art Museum. Gift of

Edward Jacobson Revocable Trust.

Image from film How to Steal a Million courtesy of 20th Century Fox.

Page 8: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

E X H I B I T I O N8

The work of Canadian artist Edward Burtynsky has long focused on the intersection between nature

and human industry, the ways in which human activity has transformed the natural world, throughout history. “To make these ideas visible, I search for subjects that are rich in detail and scale yet open in their meaning,” Burtynsky explains. “Recycling yards, mine tailings, quarries and refineries are all places that are outside of our normal experience, yet we partake of their output on a daily basis.”

That intersection is no more evident than in the color prints of Edward Burtynsky: Water, as Burtynsky explores humanity’s increasingly stressed relationship with the world’s most vital natural resource. Between 2007 and 2012, the artist traveled the globe, from the Gulf of Mexico to the shores of the Ganges, crafting an ambitious representation of water’s increasingly fragmented lifecycle. In enormous, color prints Burtynsky’s aerial images trace the various roles that water plays in modern life—as a source of healthy ecosystems and energy, as a key element in cultural and religious rituals, and as a rapidly depleting resource. Sometimes elegant, sometimes haunting, the abstract pictures hover between the worlds of painting and photography, forming a compelling global portrait of water that functions as an open-ended question about humanity’s past, present, and future relationship with the natural world.

Edward Burtynsky: Water was organized by the New Orleans Museum of Art. Its Phoenix premiere was made possible through the generous support of Contemporary Forum and INFOCUS, support organizations of Phoenix Art Museum.

Edward Burtynsky: WATER July 1 – September 16 Steele Gallery

Page 9: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

E X H I B I T I O N 9

About Edward BurtynskyEdward Burtynsky is known as one of Canada’s most respected photographers. His remarkable photographic depictions of global industrial landscapes are included in the collections of more than 60 major museums around the world, including the National Gallery of Canada, the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Burtynsky was born in 1955 in St. Catharines, Ontario. He received his BAA in Photography/Media Studies from Ryerson University in 1982, and in 1985 founded Toronto Image Works, a darkroom rental facility, custom photo laboratory, digital imaging and new media computer-training center catering to all levels of Toronto’s art community.

Early exposure to the sites and images of the General Motors plant in his hometown helped to formulate the development of his photographic work. His imagery explores the collective impact we as a species are having on the surface of the planet; it is an inspection of the human systems we’ve imposed onto natural landscapes.

Courtesy of edwardburtynsky.com

Edward Burtynsky, Kumbh Mela #1, Haridwar, India, 2010. Digital chromogenic print. Photo © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Metivier Gallery, Toronto / Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles.

Page 10: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

10 E X H I B I T I O N

This page: Kehinde Wiley (American, b. 1977). Shantavia Beale II (detail), 2012. Oil on canvas. Collection of Ana and Lenny Gravier. © Kehinde Wiley. (Photo: Jason Wyche, courtesy of Sean Kelly, New York)

Page 11: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

E X H I B I T I O N 11

Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic October 7, 2016 – January 8, 2017

K ehinde Wiley is one of the leading American artists to

emerge in the last decade and has been ingeniously reworking European art’s grand portraiture traditions. Since ancient times, the portrait has been tied to the representation of power, and in European courts and churches, artists and their patrons developed a complex repository of postures and poses and refined a symbolic language. This language, woven into all aspects of a portrait, described the sitter’s influence and power, virtue and character, or profession. In his consideration of portrait traditions, Wiley has been especially drawn to the grand aristocratic portraits of the 18th century.

The artist began his first series of portraits in the early 2000s during a residency at the Studio Museum in Harlem. He set out to photograph and recast assertive and self-empowered young men from the neighborhood in the style and manner of traditional history painting. Since then he has also painted rap and sports stars, but has focused his attention largely on ordinary men of color in their everyday clothes.

Trained at Yale in the 1990s, Wiley was steeped in the discussions concerning identity politics during this decade and he

brings his personal insights and theoretical studies to his practice.

Wiley’s portraits are highly stylized and staged, and draw attention to the dialectic between a history of aristocratic representation and the portrait as a statement of power and the individual’s sense of empowerment.

The works presented in Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic raise questions about race, gender, and the politics of representation. The exhibition includes an overview of the artist’s prolific 14 year career and features 60 paintings and sculptures.

Through the process of “street casting,” Wiley invites individuals, often strangers he encounters on the street, to sit for portraits. In this collaborative process, the model chooses a reproduction of a painting from a book and reenacts the pose of the painting’s figure. By inviting the subjects to select a work of art, Wiley gives them a measure of control over the way they’re portrayed, allowing them to have a voice in the telling of their individual, unique story. Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic is organized by the Brooklyn Museum.Its Phoenix premiere is made possible by Contemporary Forum, with additional support provided by UMB Bank, Adam and Iris Singer, and Gail and Steve Rineberg.

CELEBRATE

Wiley, Wiley WestSpecial October First Friday with Kehinde WileyOctober 7 | 6 pm – 10 pm

First Fridays at the Museum are always a great night out, but this October, enjoy a First Friday like no other. Be among the first in the Valley to see the Arizona premiere of Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic. The internationally-acclaimed contemporary artist who transforms Renaissance style works with modern, young African-American men and women, will be in attendance, to celebrate the opening of his exhibition with YOU. Join us for pop-up performances by Arizona Opera and others, an engaging fashion and hair presentation by PALABRA, drink specials at the cash bar and more, at this once-in-a-lifetime night with one of the biggest names in contemporary art.

Image above: Kehinde Wiley (American, b. 1977). Houdon Paul-Louis, 2011. Bronze with polished stone base. Brooklyn Museum, Frank L. Babbott Fund and A. Augustus Healy Fund, 2012.51. (Photo: Sarah DeSantis, Brooklyn Museum)

Page 12: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

E X H I B I T I O N

Horacio Zabala: Mapping the Monochrome October 19, 2016 – March 12, 2017

For Argentine artist Horacio Zabala, it began with lines on a map.

12

CONTRA-

Page 13: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

E X H I B I T I O N 13

Horacio Zabala is recognized as one of the most important conceptual artists to emerge in Argentina during the latter part of the 20th century. Educated as an

architect but active as an artist since the late 1960s, he has long been fascinated by the means by which space is defined, be it architectural, cartographic, or narrative.

In the early 1970s, Zabala produced a series of maps of Latin America that he graphically modified to reflect Argentina’s socio-political turmoil under repressive military dictatorships. He began this experimentation by obscuring maps of the region with monochromatic rectangles of black, blue, or red paint.

To escape persecution, Zabala moved his family to Europe in 1976. He returned to Argentina in 1998 and took up where he left off, with the idea of mapping space, but now through a different idiom: monochromatic paintings arranged in sequences accompanied by mathematical signs or punctuation marks. The

monochrome seen in his early maps has now become untethered from geography. Zabala titles these punctuated monochromes Hypotheses, suggesting that they constitute only one possible configuration among many others: these works present viewers with an invitation to visualize painting as inextricably linked to other systems of logic and reason, even beyond math and language.

Featuring maps, monochromes, and sculptures, the exhibition Horacio Zabala: Mapping the Monochrome presents a cross-section of Zabala’s work, both historical and contemporary. It illustrates his continuous exploration of innovative ways to engage viewers with art objects that are immediately accessible because they are familiar to us, but altered to reflect deeper socio-political undercurrents or references to international art historical traditions. Horacio Zabala: Mapping the Monochrome is organized by Phoenix Art Museum, and is accompanied by a bilingual catalogue produced in collaboration with the Colección de Arte Amalia Lacroze de Fortabat, Buenos Aires. It is made possible through the generous support of Shawn and Joe Lampe.

“MY INTENTION, AND MY ATTENTION, IS NOT ONLY ORIENTED TOWARDS WHAT IS EFFECTIVELY SEEN, BUT ALSO TOWARDS WHAT IS THOUGHT TO BE SEEN.” – HORACIO ZABALA

This page from top to bottom: 1. Revisar/Censurar (Revise/Censor), 1974, Ed. EC. Ink and pencil on 5 printed maps. Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York and Buenos Aires. 2. Este papel es una carcel (This Paper is a Jail), 1972/2007, Ed. 8/10. Photograph. Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York and Buenos Aires.

Page 12, from top to bottom: 1. Seis imágenes del fragmento 30 (Argentina) III (Six Images of the Fragment 30 (Argentina) III), 1973, Burnt printed maps and ink on paper. Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York and Buenos Aires. 2. Hipótesis para cuatro monocromos, un signo de equivalencia y paréntesis (Hypothesis for Four Monochromes, an Equal Sign and Parenthesis), 2013. Acrylic on canvas, enamel on wood. Dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York and Buenos Aires, and Estudio Giménez-Duhau. 3. Hacha. Reconstrucción (Axe, Reconstruction), 1972-1998, Iron ax, printed map, wood base. Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York and Buenos Aires, and Estudio Giménez-Duhau.

Page 14: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

E X H I B I T I O N14

About the ArtistMartin Fan Cheng was born in 1931 in Anhui Province, China. His family then fled to Chongqing, Sichuan Province during the Sino-Japanese War. In 1949, he moved to Taiwan, where he received a degree in Civil Engineering from National Taiwan University. In 1958, he came to the U.S., where he earned a degree in Aeronautical Engineering and Mathematics from the University of Minnesota, followed by a Ph.D. degree in Mathematics from the University of Kansas. In 1980, he completed a BFA degree from the same university, then an MFA degree from the University of Washington. Today he lives and paints in Lawrence, Kansas.

Fish Story

Throughout his career, contemporary Chinese-

American artist Martin Fan Cheng has persisted in his quest to “to paint the real world as we see it.” Cheng’s work is influenced by fishing, one of his beloved hobbies, through which he became

intrigued by the glistening presence of fish. More recently, he has produced a series showing fish in their natural habitat, reflecting the Chinese painting tradition of depicting the beauty of the natural world. Along with his interest in the natural world, his

work also alludes to the significance of food as a Chinese cultural obsession, and focuses on fish and other food in a life-size or larger format. Ducks, Eggs, and Fish is organized by Phoenix Art Museum. It is made possible through the generous support of donors to the Museum’s annual fund.

Ducks, Eggs, and Fish: Works by Martin Fan Cheng Through November 6 Art of Asia Gallery

From top to bottom: 1. Martin Fan Cheng, Chinese Tea Eggs (detail), 1985-1986. Watercolor on paperboard. Lent by Martin Fan Cheng. 2. Martin Fan Cheng, Nanjing Saltwater Duck (detail), 2000. Watercolor on paperboard. Lent by Martin Fan Cheng.

Image above: Martin Fan Cheng, Hundred-Year-Old Egg. Watercolor on paperboard. Lent by Martin Fan Cheng.

Page 15: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

15O N V I E W

DEFINING MOMENTS: 50 YEARS OF FASHION AT PHOENIX ART MUSEUM

Through August 7 Lewis and Ellman Galleries

In 1966, the fashion design collection at Phoenix Art Museum was born. With the support of the Arizona Costume Institute, over the next 50 years, that collection would grow to nearly 8,000 objects from across the history of fashion, putting Phoenix Art Museum on the map as one of the few museums in the nation with a fashion collection of this caliber. Defining Moments: 50 Years of Fashion at Phoenix Art Museum celebrates that history, with more than 50 objects drawn from across the history of fashion, highlighting masterworks and milestones across the collection’s fascinating history. It includes works by acclaimed designers Alexander McQueen, Yves Saint Laurent, Givenchy and Chanel, alongside historical pieces dating as far back as 1650.

ON VIEW

HERE AND ABROAD: PHOTOGRAPHS BY DAVID TAYLOR

Through October 16 Norton Family Photography Gallery

During a period of rapid change along the U.S.–Mexico border in 2007, Arizona-based artist David Taylor began photographing the 276 monuments that delineate the border between Mexico and the United States, documenting each of the obelisks installed by the International Boundary Commission following the Mexican/American War. In the process of his work, and as tensions in the area grew as the zone became increasingly politicized, Taylor became familiar with the region, including the physical terrain, shifting politics, and human dynamics.

Here and Abroad: Photographs by David Taylor includes the full portfolio of monument photographs, installed in numerical order, to form a grid. It will also feature recent photographs that complement and expand upon the artist’s documentation of the monuments. Many of these pictures—some of them quite large—were made in the last few years and enrich the story of Taylor’s experience photographing along the border. Primarily made in Tijuana, these new images are a succession of sketches guided by personal exploration and interaction. The photographs, a combination of expansive landscape views and images of people and interiors, are meant to reveal a space that is simultaneously foreign and familiar, much like the border itself.

Image above photographed in Phoenix Art Museum by Mark Peterman.

Right column: David Taylor, Border Monument No. 251 | Lat. 32°33.383’ Long. -116°51.948’ | San Ysidro Mountains, Overlooking Tijuana, 2010. Images courtesy of the artist.

Page 16: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

16 S P O T L I G H T

Phoenix Art Museum Receives $2 Million Endowment Benefiting Fashion Design FASHION

FORWARD

Page 17: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

17S P O T L I G H T

Through the generosity of Jacquie Dorrance, longtime Museum

patron and member of Phoenix Art Museum’s Board of Trustees, the fashion design department at the Museum has received a transformative endowment of $2 million. One of the largest gifts in Museum history, the endowment commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Arizona Costume Institute and the 16-year tenure of Dennita Sewell, curator of fashion design. It has provided a permanent funding source for the curator of fashion design position which has been renamed the Jacquie Dorrance Curator of Fashion Design.

“Jacquie Dorrance’s vision, leadership and profound generosity will have a transformative impact on the Museum’s ability not only to develop fashion exhibitions and programming, but to retain and invest in our curatorial talent for decades to come,” said Amada Cruz, the Museum’s Sybil Harrington Director. “At Phoenix Art Museum, we are truly humbled by the largesse of our donors, whose support enables us to make our most ambitious goals a reality.”

Mrs. Dorrance and her husband, Bennett, have supported Phoenix Art Museum for nearly four decades, and Mrs. Dorrance has served as a member of the Museum’s Board of Trustees since 1999, also serving as chair of the Museum’s 50th Anniversary gala in 2009. Passionately committed to the arts in Arizona, Mrs. Dorrance has also been a longtime patron of the Arizona

Costume Institute (ACI). ACI was instrumental in the establishment of the fashion design collection in 1966, and has continued to raise funds that enabled the expansion of the collection, exhibitions, and programs. This endowment recognizes ACI’s lasting commitment and aids the continuation of their work by providing funding in perpetuity for the the curator of fashion design position.

“I am pleased not only to support fashion design at Phoenix Art Museum and celebrate the contributions of Arizona Costume Institute, but also to recognize the exceptional talents, leadership and unparalleled commitment of Dennita Sewell, whose dedication has enabled the Museum to expand its collection and develop world-class exhibitions,” said Mrs. Dorrance.

Sewell has held the curator of fashion design position at Phoenix Art Museum since 2000. She came to the Museum from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, where she managed that august institution’s extensive costume collection. Over the nearly two decades at Phoenix Art Museum, she has organized and curated 40 exhibitions, including Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor, Chado Ralph Rucci, and most recently, The White Shirt According to Me. Gianfranco Ferré. Through her work both with donors and international fashion houses, Sewell has played a key role in the evolution of the fashion design collection, now numbering more than 8,000 objects, elevating its prestige and infusing the historical collection with contemporary objects from some of the most recognized names in couture.

This gift, established in perpetuity, ensures that the Jacquie Dorrance Curator of Fashion Design will continue to lead research and scholarship in this collection area and to develop internationally-acclaimed exhibitions, presenting fashion in all of its complexity and nuance, and allowing visitors to find new connections between the past and the present everyday.

About Dennita Sewell

The Jacquie Dorrance Curator of Fashion Design

Dennita Sewell has been Curator of Fashion Design at Phoenix Art Museum since January 2000. She received her MFA in Design from the Yale School of Drama and BA in Textile and Apparel Management from the University of Missouri. Prior to Phoenix, Sewell was Collections Manager at The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute. At Phoenix Art Museum she has organized exhibitions on topics ranging from motorcycle jackets to contemporary designers drawn from the Museum’s comprehensive collection, international fashion houses and private collections. Her exhibition catalogues include Way Haute West, Garden of Eden, Extending the Runway: Tatiana Sorokko Style and Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor.

Image above: Dennita Sewell, pictured with donor Jacquie Dorrance.

“I AM PLEASED NOT ONLY TO SUPPORT FASHION DESIGN...BUT ALSO TO RECOGNIZE THE EXCEPTIONAL TALENTS, LEADERSHIP AND UNPARALLELED COMMITMENT OF DENNITA SEWELL.” – JACQUIE DORRANCE

Page 18: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

18

Page 19: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

19

Connect with us.Become a fan of Palette at Phoenix Art Museum on Facebook for First Friday and Discount Tire Free Family Sunday dining specials.

Visit us Wednesday through Sunday and to view the full summer menu visit www.phxart.org/palette.

P A L E T T E

A t Phoenix Art Museum, the art of food thrives in our in-house restaurant,

Palette. More than just casual dining offering brunch, lunch and dinner menu items, Palette offers a unique approach to the dishes it crafts for Museum visitors. Local, fresh and sustainable aren’t just fashionable buzzwords. They are the guiding philosophy of its culinary approach, with a seasonal menu that features organic produce, housemade dressings, and local meats, cheeses and breads.

“This season’s new menu was inspired by farming in the Southwest, featuring fare from sustainable purveyors in our state,” explains David Rivera, Palette’s onsite manager. “Whenever possible, we seek to support Arizona farmers and producers for their dedicated efforts and commitment to sustainable methods.”

The food philosophy for Palette was inspired by its sister business, Santa Barbara Catering. The preferred caterer for the Museum, Santa Barbara’s thoughtful, intentional approach infuses organic and locally-sourced foods and sustainable practices into its catering

offerings. That philosophy has inspired unique menu items for its clients, including a handmade artisan salad with fresh berries and local cumin-toasted pecan kale salad.

At Palette, the upcoming season’s menu will feature vegetables, fruits, and honey from McClendon’s Select, a certified-organic farm in Peoria. Visitors can taste these certified organic items in the sonoran chop salad and farmer’s market sandwich, layered with grilled chicken, bacon, dates, lettuce, sliced apple and pesto mayo on prairie bread. The sandwich is accompanied by mixed greens, fresh fruit or our famous quinoa salad.

Another local business that will be featured on the summer menu is The Meat Shop, the traditional-style butcher shop located in south-central Phoenix. Products from The Meat Shop will be featured in the new Cuban-press sandwich and slow-roasted pork tacos, which feature roasted pork, mango salsa, ancho aioli, and crisp cabbage.

Stop in and cool off with fresh, delicious food, and take a bite out of summer.

GET Sustainable, organic and fresh food is a part of the art at Palette

A R C A D I A F A R M S C A F É at Phoenix Art Museum

Page 20: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

S U P P O R T20

Circles of SupportPlease note Directors Circle includes those who gave a donation between February 1, 2016 and June 1, 2016.

BENEFACTORS CIRCLE $50,000+

*Mr. and Mrs. Drew M. BrownLee and *Mike Cohn

*The Dorrance Family FoundationBud and Gerry Grout

*The Diane and Bruce Halle Foundation

*Ellen and Howard C. Katz*Sue and Bud Selig*Adam and Iris Singer

FOUNDERS CIRCLE $25,000+

°Roberta AidemDawn and *Jay Schlott

*Gary and Diane Tooker Family Foundation

PRESIDENTS CIRCLE $10,000+AnonymousJett and Julia Anderson

*Peter and Pari Banko*Debbie and Brent BergeCarol and Larry ClemmensenAndrew and Amy Cohn

*Joan D. Cremin*Eileen Elliott and Frank MauerCarter and Susan Emerson

*Erin and John GogolakHeather and *Michael D. Greenbaum

*Dr. and Mrs. Meryl Haber*Mrs. Lee T. HanleyIrvin and Barbara KesslerMr. and Mrs. Peter LarsonDel and *Sharron LewisJan and Tom Lewis

*K. David and Ann LindnerSam and *Judy Linhart

*Susan and Mark MulzetJames R. ParksMr. and Mrs. Richard ReitmanPam and *Ray SlomskiJane Wallace ThorneCharles and *Meredith von Arentschildt

*Mr. and Mrs. William G. Way

TRUSTEES CIRCLE $5,000+AnonymousSara and *Alvan AdamsMilena and *Tony AstorgaBetty and Frank BarberCraig and Barbara Barrett

*Alice and Jim BazlenUta Monique BehrensAllison and Robert Bertrand

°John and Oonagh Boppart*John and Bonnie BoumaGinger and *Don BrandtRichard and Ann CarrMary Beth and Joe Cherskov

*Denise and Bob DelgadoLarry DonelsonMark and Diana Feldman

*Richard and Susan GoldsmithBeverly N. GrossmanPhil and Susan HagenahJudith HardesRicki Dee and John JenningsJones Wajahat FamilyJane and Mal JozoffDr. and Mrs. Jamie Kapner

°Margot and Dennis KnightMark and Betsy KoganMr. and Mrs. *Joseph O. LampeVicki and Kent LoganMarianne and Sheldon B. LubarJanis and *Dennis Lyon

°Paul and Merle MarcusCindy and *Don P. MartinDiane and Larry McComberMatthew and Mary PalenicaGail and *Stephen RinebergLois and John RogersBarbara and Jeffrey G. SchleinMs. Therese M. ShoumakerJulie and Barry SmookeNancy Swanson

Patricia and Paul TaylorMr. and Mrs. Jonathan TrattGilbert Waldman and Christy VezollesGina A. Warren

°Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Weil IIIDr. Judith G. Wolf

CONNOISSEURS CIRCLE $2,500+AnonymousJames T. BialacSumner Brown and Lyn BaileyKatherine and Charles CaseMarc and Mary Ann CavnessGretchen M. Cherrill and *Bradley D. WildeMaureen and John Chestnut

*Amy Clague°Mr. and Mrs. William Wallace ClementsEdie and James Cloonan

*Bruce Covill and Lucia RenshawRobert and Vanne CowieTed CunninghamJoann and Paul DelaneyBetsy and Jim DonleyShelley DuaneMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey N. FineGeorge and Ann FisherDean and Taylor Griffin

*Paul and Mary Beth GrovesJeanne and °Gary HerbergerBob and Karen HodgesRachel and Jonathan HofferDoris and Martin Hoffman Family FoundationMimi and David Horwitz Dr. Bill Howard and Iris WigalChristine HughesNancy Husband

°Dr. Eric JungermannEllen and Bob KantRavi and Sherrill KoopotJames and Ina Kort

°Carolyn R. Laflin°Richard and *Sally Lehmann

Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. LorenzenMrs. Herbert J. Louis

*Mr. James Lundy and Dr. Michele LundyRoger and Victoria Marce

Steve and Janice MarcusSandra MatteucciPat and Keith McKennon

°John H. MorrellMichael and Jane MurrayFred and Linda NachmanStuart and Carol NierenbergDr. and *Mrs. Hong-Kee OngCarol OrloskiRobert and Myra PageJohn J. PappasChristopher H. Price and Edie TaylorVincent and Janie Russo

*Deanna and Randy SalazarSaltlick Family TrustJohn and Claudia SchauermanJacqueline Schenkein and Michael SchwimmerSheila SchwartzCharles and Rowena SimbergDiane and Jay Simons

*Angela and Leonard SingerBeth Cummings SolemBarbara Steiner

°Betsy and Bruce StodolaJoan and Roger StrandJames and Barbara Sturdivant

°Betty Lou SummersMr. and Mrs. Anthony M. TurchiMrs. Betty Van DenburghMr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. VecchioneJoan and James von GermetenWilliam C. Weese, M.D.Dr. Anthony T. and °Eileen Ong Yeung

DIRECTORS CIRCLE $1,500+Anonymous (3) Dr. Dan and Miriam Ailloni-CharasBert and Jill AlankoMegan and John Anderson Judson C. and Nancy Sue BallLinda and Jim BallingerDavid and Susan BermanMarshall and Dale BlockMrs. Cerelle Bolon

°Donna and Gus BossJo and Bill BrandtRobert Bulla

Jerry and Stefanie CargillIris Cashdan-FishmanSandy Chamberlain and David KestMr. and Mrs. Tom Chauncey, IIAnne and Fred ChristensenMichael and Kathleen ChristodolouMr. and Mrs. F. Wesley Clelland IIILibby and Joel CohenElaine and Sidney CohenDeborah and Richard Cookson *Joyce CooperRobert and Vanne CowieJoAnne Doll Robin and Ric DonnelleyMr. and Mrs. Jeff Ehret Maureen and Tom Eye Matthew and Michele FeeneyHarve A. Ferrill

°Jack Fields, IIIAmy Flood and Larry WestSusie FowlsDr. and Mrs. Jack A. FriedlandBarbara GantAllison GeePaul Giancola and Carrie Lynn RichardsonSara and Marvin GoldbergDr. David and Joan M. GoldfarbAlan and Elaine GoldmanFrank and Betsy GoodyearMr. and Mrs. C.R. Granberry Jr.Maxine HenigLinda M. Herold and Martin L. BellLori and Howard Hirsch Millicent JonesLynn and Larry KahnDonald Karner and Kathryn ForbesDraga S. KellickEleanor and Bruce KnappenbergerCarolyn Refsnes KniazzehJames and Debra LarsonEllen and Philip Leavitt

°Gene and Cathie LemonMr. and Mrs. Robert H. LevineShirley and Jerry LewisMarilyn and Dale LillardChristine Lowery-Nunez and Rick NunezCarol Ann and Harvey MackayGinnie Maes

The Museum gratefully acknowledges those whose annual Circles of Support and Corporate Council gifts support our exhibitions, educational programs, activities and services for the community.

THANK YOU.

Page 21: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

S U P P O R T 21

Celia Maneri and Steve GodseyLynda Martin and Joe SquatritoPhilip and Susan MatosJanet and John Melamed James and Ana MelikianDoris and Eliot Minsker

°Alice and Jesse MonongyeMarita MuhrGene and Connie Nicholas

*Rose and Harry Papp Mr. and Mrs. * James S. Patterson, Jr.Jody PelusiHelen J. PiersonHoward and Dilys PopperBlair and Lisa PortigalSunnie Richer and Roger Brooks Lynn and Herb RigbergDonn and Patricia RobertsKim and Steve RobsonMrs. Constance T. RodieElaine RosePaul Sakion and Ginger CornellStephen and Lois SavageCarol and Randy Schilling Fred and Arleen SchwartzLaurie and Matt ScottMary and Stanley Seidler Don and Sandra SherlineLynne Smith

°Charles and Marron SneadMr. and Mrs. Richard SnellLou and Larry SteinCita and Irwin StelzerMrs. Janice Tekofsky

°Fred and Mary TuckerGloria J. WagnerJanis S. and Paul F. WalshSusan and Chuck WattsMildred B. WilliamsRuth WordenNorma and Conrad WredbergMatt and Carlissa WrightJoyce R. Young

°Judy Zuber

CORPORATE BENEFACTORS LEVEL $50,000+APSArizona Commission on the ArtsContemporary Forum

Cox CommunicationsDiscount Tire CompanyThe Dorrance Family FoundationThe Flinn FoundationFriends of Mexican ArtThe Diane and Bruce Halle FoundationWilliam Randolph Hearst FoundationJPMorgan Chase & Co.J.W. Kieckhefer FoundationThe Kemper and Ethel Marley FoundationMen’s Arts CouncilNational Endowment for the ArtsNeiman MarcusPetSmartVirginia G. Piper Charitable TrustSalon EstiqueThe Virginia M. Ullman Foundation

CORPORATE FOUNDERS LEVEL $25,000+AccelerentThe Arizona RepublicThe Arizona Republic/ azcentral.comArizona Costume InstituteAZ Lifestyle MagazineThe Arizona RepublicThe Arizona Republic/ azcentral.comBlueCross BlueShield of ArizonaCyberitas Enterprises, LLCHerbert H. and Barbara C. Dow FoundationHarkins TheatresINFOCUSThe J.M. Kaplan FundJane A. Lehman and Alan G. Lehman FoundationMargaret T. Morris FoundationThe PhoenicianPhoenix Office of Arts and CultureReel Men RentalsThe Selz Foundation, Inc.SRPThe Steele FoundationTarbell’sTwiford FoundationUMB Bank Arizona

Wells FargoWells Fargo Private Bank

CORPORATE PRESIDENTS LEVEL $10,000+Arizona Taste CateringAsian Arts CouncilBank of AmericaBMO Harris BankThe Business JournalCapital GroupCopper Square KitchenCorporate Presentation NetworkDavid E. Adler, Inc.Ernst & Young LLPHensley Beverage CompanyJ.P. Morgan Private BankJohn Brooks, Inc.Lewis Roca RothgerberMacy’sMaricopa Community CollegesMJM401KMy Sister’s ClosetPhoenix Art Museum LeagueSaks Fifth AvenueSanta Barbara Catering CompanyTempe Camera Repair IncorporatedUS Airways/American AirlinesThe Walton Family Foundation, Inc.Western Art AssociatesWomen’s Metropolitan Arts Council

CORPORATE TRUSTEES LEVEL $5,000+AccentureAlliance Bank of ArizonaAmeriprise Financial, Inc.AnonymousAZ Big MediaArt Solutions & Installations, LLCBarnes & Noble BooksellersBentley GalleryBonhamsBruce Brown CateringCambriaCreations in Cuisine CateringCullum Homes

Wilhelm\DOXAEdward Jones InvestmentsFabulous FoodGammage & Burnham, PLCLarsen GalleryMain DishMJ InsuranceNational Bank of ArizonaNorthern Trust Bank, NAPearson & CompanyPhoenix SunsSnell & WilmerSotheby’sVersant Capital ManagementWORKSBUREAU architecture

CORPORATE CONNOISSEURS LEVEL $2,500+AnonymousAlphagraphics #4Arizona Humanities CouncilBuse Printing and PackagingCardinals CharitiesChristie’sThe De Falco Family Foundation, Inc.Dickinson WrightThe Maurice R. and Meta G. Gross FoundationLinda M. Herold, Herold EnterprisesJohn C. Lincoln Health FoundationM Catering by Michael’sOsborn Maledon, PAWilliam L. and Ruth T. Pendleton Memorial FundPractical Art, LLCQuarles & Brady, LLPThe Red Book & azredbook.comSacks Tierney P.A.Scottsdale League for the ArtsSun State BuildersTotal Wine & More

CORPORATE DIRECTORS LEVEL $1,500+Arizona Technology Councilazarchitecture.com/ Jarson & Jarson

Calvin Charles GalleryCole-Belin Education FoundationCollector’s Study ClubCourier Graphics CorporationDavid Yurman BoutiquePhoenix Art Museum DocentsFennemore Craig, PCFlader Wealth Consulting GroupFrench Designer JewelerFriends of European ArtFUJIFILMGlobe FoundationGoodmans Interior StructuresJ.W. Harris Inc.Jet Linx ScottsdaleKitchell Brusnighan Design AssociatesLisa Sette GalleryP.S. Studios, Inc.Perkins Coie FoundationPHX ArchitectureQuench Fine WinesRuss Lyon | Sotheby’s International RealtyShamrock Foods CompanySouthwest Gas CorporationSouthwest Rubber and Supply Co., Inc.Topete/Stonefield, Inc.Trends PublishingTumbleTeesThe Westin Phoenix Downtown

SMALL BUSINESS LEVEL $750+Hair Again

Arizona Five Arts Circle* Board Member°Past Board Member

Page 22: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

22 W H Y I G I V E

WHY I GIVE

June Olson 21ST CENTURY SOCIETY ANDMUSEUM MEMBER SINCE 1998

For more than 40 years, Phoenix Art Museum has been one of the art anchors in my world. During that time, whether as a teacher of a high school American Studies class or exploring on my own, the Museum fed the need to draw the relationships between creativity and aesthetics and current society. When we stood before pieces in the American collection, connections between history, literature, and the arts became more focused and real as they bridged the gaps between times.

This museum fulfills its mission by peeling back the layers of art, making its nuances accessible to each person, no matter his or her interests or expertise. As I told my students, the arts are a window into another world but a mirror to our own. Now, I am grateful to be able to repay the Museum through its legacy program and the 21st Century Society so that future generations can likewise be so enriched.

“THE ARTS ARE A WINDOW INTO ANOTHER WORLD BUT A MIRROR TO OUR OWN.”

Page 23: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

23P L A N N E D G I V I N G

Establish your giving tradition by gifting art or making a bequest to Phoenix Art Museum. Each gift can make

a difference. Your Phoenix Art Museum depends on 21st Century members to provide the next generation with the opportunity to view and appreciate great art. You can name Phoenix Art Museum as a beneficiary of your will, trust, retirement plan or life insurance policy. Or,

consider a deferred gift or immediate gift annuity and you can provide yourself and/or another beneficiary with dependable income for life. You may also benefit from significant tax savings.

Planned Giving initiatives are generously support by our sponsors: Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., Bonhams, Morris, Hall & Kinghorn, Sacks Tierney P.A., and Versant Capital Management

Art Enriches Your LIFE

Stanton Macdonald-Wright. Santa Monica Canyon (detail), 1919.Oil on canvas. Collection of Phoenix Art Museum, Gift of Pinnacle West Capital Corporation in honor of Bill and Mary Kay Post and the Museum’s 50th Anniversary.

LET US THANK YOU.If you have already included Phoenix Art Museum in your estate plans, please let us know. We would love an opportunity to thank you for your generosity, to make sure the purpose of your gift is fully understood and will be appropriately allocated, and to recognize you as a member of our 21st Century Society so that you can begin to enjoy those benefits immediately. Contact Kirsten Peterson Johansen, Deputy Director, Advancement, at 602.257.2106.

Page 24: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

24 T H E M U S E U M S T O R E

L egendary furniture company Herman Miller, Inc., has named The Museum Store at Phoenix Art Museum its newest authorized retailer. Working with

design legends George Nelson and Charles and Ray Eames, Herman Miller pioneered modern furniture design in the mid-20th century. As the business grew, it added a research focus to its problem-solving design. Today, the spirit of innovation and collaboration continues to drive the global company forward. In addition to the enduring designs that form its foundation, Herman Miller also offers solutions from partners and top designers who share its values.

3 Ways to Shop Herman Miller at The Museum Store

STOP BY The Museum Store on your next visit for a sampling of the most iconic pieces and take your favorite home today, with your 10% Member discount.

MAKE A DATE for a personal-shopping appointment. We’ll help you select the perfect piece for your home from the complete Herman Miller catalog. Call 602.307.2025.

BROWSE hermanmiller.com, then place your special order at 602.307.2025 or [email protected] in order to save with your 10% Member discount.

Mid-Century The Museum Store is now an authorized Herman Miller retailer.

1

2

Page 25: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

25T H E M U S E U M S T O R E

1 EAMES® LOUNGE CHAIR AND OTTOMAN (1956) $4935 NON-MEMBER $4441.50 MEMBER Special order

With what Charles and Ray Eames called the “warm, receptive look of a well-used first baseman’s mitt,” this chair and ottoman feature an innovative amalgam of traditional design and the Eames’ experiments in molding wood, and are one of the most significant furniture designs of the 20th century.

2 EAMES® MOLDED PLASTIC SHELL CHAIR (1950) $319-$588 EACH NON-MEMBER $287.10 – $529.20 MEMBER Special orderExemplifying the designers’ mantra of “the best for the most for the least,” Charles and Ray Eames’ molded plastic shell chair is as stylish, efficient, and comfortable today as it was when first available in 1950.

3 EAMES® MOLDED PLYWOOD LOUNGE CHAIR (1946) $919 NON-MEMBER $827.10 MEMBER

Declared the “Best Design of the 20th Century” by Time magazine, this lounge chair by Charles and Ray Eames is still crafted using the groundbreaking plywood molding techniques the duo invented in the early 1940s.

4 NELSON™ PLATFORM BENCH (1946) $1499 NON-MEMBER $1349.10 MEMBER

Equal parts seat and surface, this landmark design made with ebonized wooden legs emerged from George Nelson’s Fortune magazine office to join his first Herman Miller collection in 1946.

5 CU-CLOCK (2011) $349 NON-MEMBER $314.10 MEMBER

Cleverly stripping away the ornamentation, pendants, and chains that define the look of the Black Forest cuckoo clock, Japanese designer Naoto Fukasawa teamed with Magis to offer a clean, contemporary twist on tradition. Herman Miller is the exclusive distributor of Magis products in the U.S. and Canada.

6 EAMES® HANG-IT-ALL (1953) $199 NON-MEMBER $179.10 MEMBER

With their Hang-It-All, Charles and Ray Eames elevated the everyday coat rack into something inventive and fun. Crafted with multicolored hooks and a white wire frame.

7 EAMES® WALNUT STOOL (1960) $919 NON-MEMBER $827.10 MEMBER

Designed by Ray Eames for the lobby of the Time & Life Building in New York City, this sculptural occasional piece crafted from solid-turned walnut functions as a stool, side table, or something in between.

8 NELSON™ LOTUS BALL TABLE LAMP (1952) $395 NON-MEMBER $355.50 MEMBER

The Nelson Bubble Lamp adds a touch of softness and luminosity to any interior with its spherical silhouette. Designed by George Nelson in 1952, this elegant fixture is fashioned from a sturdy, lightweight steel frame yet has a delicate, floating quality.

3

4

5

6

7

8

Page 26: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

26 M U S E U M N E W S

ARRIVALS

Phoenix Art Museum welcomes Margaree Bigler to the role of marketing and communications manager, in the marketing and communications department. In her role, Bigler will oversee the Museum’s social media and digital communications efforts, as well as locally-focused media relations. Bigler earned a bachelor of arts in geography and regional development with a minor in Spanish from the University of Arizona.

The Museum is excited to welcome Carolyn Greene to the role of curatorial assistant. Greene will provide support to the area of Asian Art, and will assist in scholarship and the development of future exhibitions. Greene earned a bachelor of arts in Chinese art history,

studied Chinese language at the University of Business and Economics in Beijing, and earned a master of arts in East Asian languages and civilizations from the University of Pennsylvania. Greene is currently a PhD candidate in art history at Arizona State University.

The Museum is pleased to welcome Erin Marley to the role of membership manager. Marley will oversee the Museum’s membership program. Marley earned a bachelor of science in family and human development from Arizona State University, and a mini MBA in nonprofit organizations from the University of St. Thomas, in Minneapolis.

The Museum welcomes Cydney Rooks to the role of assistant to the deputy

director, advancement. Rooks will provide administrative support within the advancement division. Rooks earned a bachelor of arts in theatre arts and communication from Otterbein University in Oxford, Ohio, where she graduated magna cum laude.

The Museum welcomes Chris Rudolph to the role of corporate relations officer. In his role, Rudolph will oversee the Museum’s efforts to develop lasting partnerships with both locally- and nationally-based businesses that seek to support community access to arts and cultural activities. He brings to the role more than six years of experience in development and fundraising as well as significant experience in financial services. Rudolph earned an MBA from Oregon State University, and a bachelor of science in economics from the University of Wisconsin.

The Museum is pleased to welcome Erika Wingfield to the role of assistant

registrar. In her role, Wingfield is responsible for the movement, care, and documentation of objects in the collection, as well as objects on loan for exhibitions. Wingfield earned a bachelor of arts and a master of arts in art history from the University of Arizona.

PROMOTIONS

We are happy to announce the promotion of Carolyne Levin to receptionist. Levin provides clerical and customer service support to the Museum’s administrative offices and visitor services. Levin first joined the Museum in 2014 as a visitor services associate, before ascending to her new role. She earned a bachelor of science degree in accounting from Arizona State University.

MUSEUM NEWS

Page 27: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

Your happy ending deserves a beautiful beginning.Inspiration around every corner. Visit pinterest.com/phxart/weddings to explore your possibilities.

Located on the corner of Central & McDowell Downtown Phoenix (602) [email protected] | @phxart

Page 28: Phoenix Art Museum Magazine Jul-Oct 2016

phxart.org | @phxart

Need more information? Looking to get involved?Give us a call.

(602) 257-1222 24 Hour Information(602) 257-2124 Membership Office(602) 307-2009 Volunteer Office(602) 257-2115 Circles of Support

(602) 307-2011 Arizona Costume Institute(602) 307-2028 Asian Arts Council(602) 307-2029 Contemporary Forum(602) 307-2040 Friends of European Art(602) 307-2079 InFocus(602) 307-2007 Men’s Arts Council(602) 257-2175 Phoenix Art Museum Docents(602) 307-2050 Phoenix Art Museum League(602) 307-2070 Western Art Associates(602) 257-2161 Women’s Metropolitan Arts Council

TALK TO US

Non

profi

t Org

aniz

atio

nU

S Po

stag

e Pai

dPh

oeni

x A

ZPe

rmit

Num

ber 4

02

Phoe

nix

Art M

useu

m16

25 N

orth

Cen

tral

Ave

nue

Phoe

nix,

Ari

zona

850

04-1

685

phxa

rt.o

rg

on the cover:Edward Burtynsky, Oil Spill #2, Discoverer Enterprise, Gulf of Mexico, USA (detail), 2010. Digital chromogenic print. Photo © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Metivier Gallery, Toronto / Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles.

J U L Y – O C T O B E R 2 0 1 6