Gary Bolding: From Window to Wall

October 21, 2006 – January 28, 2007

Emily S. Macey Gallery

For more than twenty years, Gary Bolding has worked toward creating exquisitely polished, often surrealistic paintings that take thoughtful, but humorous looks at art historical and pop culture references. In paintings such as Man with a Flaming Wiener, he packs together layer upon layer of self-referential and more broadly cultural material. Most recently, however, Bolding has moved into an entirely different mode of painting: richly textured, highly abstracted, subtly colored, and large-scale. This new work, still layered to a strong degree, brings the imagery of his paintings back to the surface of the canvas, replacing a Renaissance view of the painting as window with a thick impasto that projects from the wall.

Currently Professor of Art at Stetson University, Bolding has had one-person exhibitions in venues throughout Florida, the Southeast, Europe and Mexico. He has received numerous awards and honors during his career, has been the recipient of two Individual Artist Fellowships from the State of Florida, and was a finalist for an NEA/Southern Arts Federation Fellowship.

The Fact of the Matter: Unusual Materials in Permanent Collection Artworks

September 9, 2006 – January 7, 2007

Ledger and Murray Galleries

Since the advent of Dada and Cubism, American and European artists have continued to expand the objects and substances from which artworks can be created. As technologies and ideas grow, the list of materials has followed. This exhibition includes works that are composed entirely or in part by materials such as terrazzo, resin, basalt, palm flower stalks, rhinestones, fossils, and cast rubber.

Herman Leonard: Artistic Stylings

August 19 – November 12, 2006

Perkins Gallery

Herman Leonard is one of this country’s most important portrait photographers. As a young man, he worked as an apprentice to renowned photographer Yousuf Karsh and worked with Karsh on his shoots of Einstein, Eisenhower and Truman. His career has included stints as Marlon Brando’s personal photographer and Playboy’s European photographer. And The Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC has honored him by housing his entire collection in the permanent archives of musical history. Though Leonard has become highly successful as a commercial photographer, he remains best known for his portraits of jazz musicians, which will be represented in this exhibition. His subjects include Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Thelonious Monk, and countless others. These aren’t studio portraits. Leonard was at Birdland when Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie were performing. He was in the studios as Stan Getz recorded, in Paris to photograph Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, in New York for Nat King Cole, Lena Horne, and Miles Davis, and Monte Carlo for Frank Sinatra.

Beyond Leonard’s gift at sensing the right moment for the most dramatic image is his technical mastery of the photographic printing process. Rarely have photographs contained such depth or texture. As music writer Richard Williams once wrote of Leonard’s jazz portraits: “There could be no better symbol for the illicit mystery and poignant impermanence of jazz than the cigarette in a Herman Leonard photograph. Spiraling, billowing, hanging and twisting into shapes or oriental delicacy, the smoke is the perfect prop for the beautiful and sometimes tragic faces at the center of the night scenes.”

The exhibition is sponsored by Peterson & Myers, P.A., Robert and Malena Puterbaugh, and Kerry and Buffy Wilson.

Women Only! In Their Studios

July 15 – October 15, 2006

Dorothy Jenkins and Emily S. Macey Galleries

Though the art world has become more open to artists of all backgrounds, those outside and too often inside the art world fail to acknowledge the art historically important contributions of women artists. This extraordinary exhibition of major works by 20 artists addresses this issue. The artists in this exhibition are innovators who have added distinct marks along the path of art through their paintings, prints, photographs, collages, sculptures, and mixed media installations. Artists represented in the exhibition are a virtual “Who’s Who” of important living artists: Jennifer Bartlett, Amalia Mesa Bains, Camille Billops, Elizabeth Catlett, Linda Freeman, Ann Hamilton, Grace Hartigan, Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, Elizabeth Murray, Howardena Pindell, Faith Ringgold, Miriam Schapiro, Laurie Simmons, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Joan Snyder, Pat Steir, Gail Tremblay, Jackie Winsor and Flo Oy Wong.

This exhibition has been curated by Eleanor Flomenhaft and the tour has been organized by Smith Kramer Fine Art Services.

Pictures of Words: The Use of Text in Art

May 13 – September 3, 2006

Ledger and Murray Galleries

Using works from the Museum’s Permanent Collection, this exhibition will examine the use of words within art, whether used as the primary image within an artwork or used more subtly within a composition. Artists represented in this exhibition will include Alice Aycock, Rocky Bridges, John Scott, Pat Steir and many others.

Inside the Outsider World: Folk Art from the Permanent Collection

May 20 – August 13, 2006

Perkins Gallery

As national interest in the work of folk or “self-taught” artists has risen, work by these artists has begun to attract more attention at art museums. In recent years, the Polk Museum of Art has acquired over sixty artworks by contemporary folk artists, all of which have been donated by Polk County collectors Jane Backstrom, Rodney Hardee, George Lowe, and William D. and Norma Canelas Roth, or by the artists themselves. Polk County is not just home to many collectors of folk art, but is also one of the most active places in Florida for folk artists. Through the guidance, generosity and energy of Mrs. Backstrom and Mr. Hardee, the Polk Museum of Art has been connected to the work of many Polk County folk artists as well as those from throughout Florida and the Southeast.

Inside the Outside World is the Museum’s first exhibition of its contemporary folk art collection. Local artists exhibited include Eugene Beecher, K.C. Bennett, Rodney Hardee, Duane Locke, Edward Ott, Joey Smollen, Donald Stone, Gene Thomas, Margot Warren, Bettye Williams, and Ruby C. Williams. Additional artists in the exhibition include John “Cornbread” Anderson, Mister Imagination, R.A. Miller, Mary Proctor, and Purvis Young.

This exhibition is sponsored in part by FMC FoodTech

AFTERMATH: Images from Ground Zero, Photography by Joel Meyerowitz

April 22 – July 9, 2006

Dorothy Jenkins and Emily S. Macey Galleries

Joel Meyerowitz is one of the most respected color photographers working today. His first book Cape Light is considered a classic work of color photography. He has had one-person exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and over 250 other museums.

On September 23, 2001, Meyerowitz took his camera to the site on which the World Trade Towers had stood. For the next eight months he recorded the process of clearing the wreckage and coping with the tragedy. At first denied permission to photograph the site, Meyerowitz persisted and his efforts are a testament to the power of documented history. This moving exhibition has been viewed by millions of people all over the world. It includes approximately 30 images, two of which are monumental: one measuring 8’ x 10’ and the other 20’ wide.

The idea for the exhibition came from the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State. A version of the exhibition was inaugurated by Colin Powell in the spring of 2002. To date, millions of people from across the globe have viewed these startling and beautiful images.

For more information about Joel Meyerowitz and his photography, visit www.joelmeyerowitz.com.

Views from Within: Christian Duran and Vickie Pierre

March 5 – May 14, 2006

Perkins Gallery

Christian Duran and Vickie Pierre are young artists living and working in Miami. Though they have known each other for a number of years and have even exhibited their work together in group exhibitions in the past, they work quite independently—Duran in his quiet home studio in Hialeah Gardens and Pierre in her studio in the heart of Miami Beach. At the same time there are interesting parallels in their work.

Duran and Pierre seek, in different yet distinctly poetic ways, to connect themselves to the greater world around them. Using delicate lines and colors that range from the earthiest browns to the softest pinks and blues, they express through their artworks the hope that there are forces of life anda love that link us to the world around us. These links, in turn, give each of us a stronger sense of ourselves.

Duran has converted his fascination with the systems of life into complex webs of lines that bring together natural and human forms. Plant roots and branches become human veins and then back again, all serving as vessels for life-sustaining substances. While there is a scientific aspect to his work, there is a much stronger sense of imagination and wonder. For there are not simply physical parallelsibetween the structures of plants and human anatomy in Duran’s drawings, collages and paintings, but metaphors for a spiritual union between all life forms. It is within this union that Duran demonstrates his artistic vision. As he has stated, “I aspire to find my own poetry concerning the intangible self, as well as bring to mind the spirit of the human psyche.” To accentuate the connections between art and nature, Duran mixes his own blends of pigment and metallic powders so that his creations not only shimmer with life but owe much of their essence to natural materials.

Pierre’s works also represent personal explorations and searches for connections. Her paintings from six to eight years ago are richly colored, small-scale settings in which dreamy narratives are presented. The titles reveal quite intimate moments, most often reading as love stories in miniature. Text is used in these earlier worksi both for its graphic/decorative impact and as evidence of the stories floatingi within the fantastic shapes and airy environment. The linear elements of these works have taken on increased prominence in Pierre’s most recent work. While de-emphasizing the density and sensuousness of the background, she has brought our attention to the flow of the lines across and even into the canvas. And the lines often have a tangible source: Pierre uses stamps representing Disney characters such as Sleeping Beauty to create the sense of flow and pattern seeni in paintings such as Mothers and Daughters. Though the bases for these works are often obscured through Pierre’s reworking of the stamped images, their romantic and nostalgic qualities represent our impulse to reach out to others even as we continue to explore the mystery of our selves.

Pop Art 1956-2006: The First 50 Years

February 18 – April 16, 2006

Dorothy Jenkins and Emily S. Macey Galleries

Exhibition Sponsored by ASC Geosciences, Inc.

Though history has numerous examples of the intersection between fine art and popular culture (Shakespeare managed this feat quite easily), it was not until the post-World War II years that a large number of visual artists began to take direct aim at the rapid growth of consumer culture. Hollywood, Detroit, and Madison Avenue became producers of not only commercial products, but of inspiration to a generation of artists, providing the foundation of what came to be known as “Pop Art”. What is especially important about this half-century old movement is that its impact is still as vital and visible as ever, since each era’s generation of young artists has been influenced by its own unique forms of popular culture.

Ironically, the post-war boom first inspired a group of young British artists to create collages that, despite their modest size, encapsulated the fast-paced world promoted by magazines, television, and movies. In 1956, British artist Richard Hamilton created the collage Just what is it that makes today’s homes so different, so appealing? that featured images cut from magazines of consumer goods, a pin-up girl, and a male bodybuilder holding a large lollipop printed with the word “POP”. By not only illustrating the goods and interests of the moment but using commercial reproductions of these goods and interests, Hamilton showed his American counterparts how they could use art to address their own culture.

At the same time, some American artists were trying to find a path away from the heroic aims of the Abstract Expressionists. In the early post-war years, Abstract Expressionists created powerful paintings that demonstrated their unique gifts as artists and were testaments to the spirit of rugged individuality at the core of American self-identity. However, with the advent of the television era and the growth of the transportation industry, the American cultural landscape began to change rapidly. Those who would become known as Pop artists responded with an increased focus on depicting this country through the lens of the mass media: movies, television, billboards, magazines, comic books and newspapers.

This shift happened in part as an attempt by artists to reconnect themselves to the everyday, material world. This was indicated by the early work of Robert Rauschenberg about which he stated “I don’t want a picture to look like something it isn’t. I want it to look like something it is. And I think a picture is more like the real world when it’s made out of the real world.” Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns had begun creating work that were described as “Neo-Dada”, works that brought mundane objects to the forefront and attempted to push the hand of the artist into the background.

By 1960 a new generation of American artists was beginning to adapt their varying interests in American culture to new forms of art. This exhibition features artists born between 1920 and 1937 who have made important contributions to American Pop Art. Many of these artists were recognized widely as young artists. Others are only now beginning to receive their due adulation. This exhibition includes work by Jim Dine, Red Grooms, Robert Indiana, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, Nam June Paik, Robert Rauschenberg, Larry Rivers, James Rosenquist, Wayne Thiebaud, Andy Warhol, and Tom Wesselmann as well as British artists Patrick Caulfield and David Hockney.

Because Pop Art is tied to the material culture of our country, it remains as flexible and important as ever. Baby Boomers, Gen Xers, and successive generations have adapted new media technologies and interests into their artworks, following the trail of the artists represented in this exhibition. For this reason, Pop Art’s influence will be felt for years to come.

Life as Art: Wood and Fiber Art from the Permanent Collection

December 17, 2005 – April 23, 2006

Ledger and Murray Galleries

Life as Art is an exhibition of artworks from the Museum’s permanent collection that are composed of wood or fiber materials. Included among the objects in this exhibition are contemporary works by Holly Hambrick, Margaret Steward, and Charles Parkhill, a set of Chinese nesting tables, Pre-Columbian textiles, and works from southern Africa.

David Maxim: Natural Force

December 2, 2005 – February 22, 2006

Perkins Gallery

Between 2002 and 2004, Robert and Patricia Maxim donated to our collection three dozen original drawings by California artist David Maxim. Some were studies for larger paintings, and some were exercises in visualization, but all of them are wonderful pieces of art.

Maxim is a San Francisco based artist whose work deals with mythical characters and forces. The Polk Museum of Art has an extraordinary collection of his dynamic works on paper in addition to two major sculptural paintings. Maxim will talk about his work at a pre-reception lecture in the Museum’s auditorium on Friday, December 9 at 6:00pm.

Carrie Mae Weems: The Louisiana Project

December 10, 2005 – February 12, 2006

Dorothy Jenkins and Emily S. Macey Galleries

Internationally renowned artist Carrie Mae Weems is one of the most important artists working today. Her work in photography, video and installation examines the history of culture, gender, and race within American society. The Louisiana Project was commissioned in 2003 to commemorate the bicentennial of the The Louisiana Purchase. However, the impact of this exhibition extends more widely than the particular culture of New Orleans.

Carrie Mae Weems has been exhibiting internationally for over 20 years. Her work has been collected by virtually every major American art museum including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Getty Center. She has been awarded numerous honors and has served as artist-in-residence at the National Endowment for the Arts, Bunting Institute at Harvard University, and the Art Institute of Chicago. Recently, she was awarded the Joseph H. Hazen Rome Prize Fellowship by the Trustees of the American Academy in Rome. This exhibition has been organized by the Newcomb Art Gallery, Tulane University, New Orleans and toured under the auspices of Pamela Auchincloss/Arts Management, New York.

Little Treasures from the Permanent Collection

July 23 – November 20, 2005

Ledger and Murray Galleries

The Polk Museum of Art has exhibited paintings as wide as 30 feet and sculptures that weigh over 3,000 pounds. But bigger doesn’t always mean better. This exhibition from of works from the Museum’s permanent collection contains over two dozen paintings, prints, drawings, and sculptures from artists including Gerardo Cantú, Marc Chagall, Evelyn Ellwood, Mark Tobey, and Sandy Winters.

Beauty Overlooked: Pattern and Decoration Artworks from the Permanent Collection

October 15 – November 27, 2005

Dorothy Jenkins Gallery

The Pattern and Decoration Movement emerged in the 1970s. It was the outgrowth of several different trends in the art world at the time: a reaction against the pervasiveness of Minimalism, a growing interest in the history and products of women, and an increased admiration of the decorative arts—ranging from old American quilts to the stylized arabesque forms in early Islamic art. Artists including Miriam Schapiro, Robert Rahway Zakanitch, Cynthia Carlson, Tony Robbin, and many others created colorful and complex paintings, prints, and collages that reflect sources as diverse as early 20th century Russian art, old wallpaper designs, and computer recreations of the fourth dimension.

The Polk Museum of Art has a major collection of works from the Pattern and Decoration Movement, including seven works by Schapiro plus an additional suite of 6 prints. This exhibition will also mark the first opportunity for the public to view major works by Tony Robbin and Cynthia Carlson, which were recently acquired by the Museum.

Maria Brito: Realizations

September 3 – November 6, 2005

Perkins Gallery

Maria Brito is a Cuban-American artist who lives in Miami and creates vivid, realist paintings on shaped pieces of wood. Her work recalls her childhood in Cuba yet is full of warmth and hope. She says of her work, “My work deals with essential and universal existence as defined by emotions, sensations, knowledge, and perception. The imagery that I use is symbolic of a process of self-discovery, and it is a personal iconographic system developed from my identity as a woman, a mother, an exiled Cuban, a naturalized American, and a Catholic.”

Among her many accomplishments, Ms. Brito has received three Individual Artist Fellowship Awards from the State of Florida, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant.

Rebecca Sexton Larson: Another Time, Another Place

July 30 – November 27, 2005

Perkins Gallery

Rebecca Sexton Larson has established herself as one of the most creative artists in Florida. Although she is often classified as a photographer, and has recently been awarded the distinction of Photographer Laureate of Tampa, Larson paints over her photographs and incorporates fabric and stitched text into them. As she creates layers of images, paint and text, she investigates the impact of distance and context in understanding personal and general history. The stitched text is more than caption; the paint is more than decoration. Each material brings a different perspective on the subject; Larson brings their varying points of view into a poignant consensus.

Larson has been awarded two Florida Individual Artist’s Fellowships and has had her work collected by museums including Gulf Coast Museum of Art, Polk Museum of Art and Tampa Museum of Art.

Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith: Made in America

July 30 – October 9, 2005

Dorothy Jenkins Gallery

Known for her use of political satire and humor to examine current American Indian issues, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith is one of the nation’s most accomplished contemporary artists. This exhibition of compelling works, ranging from paintings and drawings to prints and installations, explores the artist’s preoccupation with the paradox of American Indian existence in the reality of the U.S. consumer culture. Quick-to-See Smith examines myths, stereotypes and flaws of contemporary society through loaded subject matter such as cowboys and Indians, General Custer, fry bread, reservation life, war, and various American Indian archteypes. Her work has received significant critical acclaim through more than 75 solo exhibitions and has been collected by many important museums including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

This exhibition was organized by the University of Missouri-Kansas City Belger Arts Center for Creative Studies with guest curator Charles Muir Lovell, Director, Harwood Museum of Art, University of New Mexico, Taos. The exhibition tour was organized by TREX: the Traveling Exhibitions Program of the Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe, with support from MetLife Foundation and McCune Charitable Foundation.

An American View: Forty Years of Richard Florsheim

June 18 – August 28, 2005

Perkins Gallery

Richard Florsheim (1916-1979) was both a great painter and printmaker. His nearly 4 decade career explored issues as varied as war and self-identity. But he became known especially for his landscapes—urban, industrial, and pastoral. This exhibition presents a large selection of his work, recently acquired by the Polk Museum of Art, from 1940 through the 1970s.

From the Good Earth: Ceramic Artworks from the Permanent Collection

May 14 – July 24, 2005

Dorothy Jenkins Gallery

Pre-Columbian figurines, 20th-century Japanese bowls and flower bottles, 7th-century Korean jars and warming stands, Zulu beer pots, French, German, Spanish, and Italian bowls and plates from the 16th-18th centuries, and contemporary American sculptures and vessels. It’s a long and diverse list of objects, united by one very important thing: clay. From the Good Earth: Ceramic Artworks from the Permanent Collection brings together dozens of objects from five continents and 2,000 years of human activity. The exhibition will present the similarities and differences in the construction and use of ceramic objects from these many cultures as we celebrate this rich area from our Permanent Collection holdings.