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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
May
Exhibition on child art inaugurates U. of I., Phillips collaboration
Melissa Mitchell,
Arts Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
5/31/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Child
art Pablo Picasso (age 9), "Bullfight
and Pigeons" (Corrida de Toros y Seis
Estudios de Palomas), pencil on paper,
1890. |
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Adult
art Pablo Picasso, "Painter
and Knitting Model,"
etching on paper, 1927. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— A
new partnership between the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
and The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., begins in June with
a book and exhibition that examine children’s creativity, art
and “giftedness.”
“When We Were Young: New Perspectives on the Art of the Child” opens
on June 17 at the Phillips as the premiere initiative of its Center for the Study
of Modern Art.
The exhibition will travel to the U. of I.’s Krannert Art Museum this fall.
Also this fall, undergraduate, graduate and continuing education students from
the university, the D.C. area and elsewhere will participate in a new academic
program focusing on the study of modern art called “Illinois at The Phillips
Collection.” Classes will be taught by U. of I. faculty members as well
as by members of the Phillips’ staff.
The Phillips Collection, America’s
first museum of modern art, opened in 1921 in the former home of Duncan Phillips,
in Washington’s Dupont Circle neighborhood. The museum houses some of the
best-known impressionist and modern masterpieces by artists including Cezanne,
Degas, van Gogh, Kandinsky, Klee, Matisse, O’Keeffe, Renoir and Rothko.
According to Jonathan Fineberg, the Gutgsell Professor of Art History at the
U. of I. and the founding director of Illinois
at The Phillips Collection, the program is just one component of the
new center. Visiting artist programs, public forums, symposia and discussion
groups also will be offered.
“It’s a unique initiative – the first research center of its
kind devoted to modern art,” said Fineberg, who also chairs the Phillips’ board
of trustees committee on the center. “As we develop endowments for the
center, we will be able to create an even richer program.”
Jay Gates, the director of The Phillips Collection, said he believes the center
and the collaboration with Illinois hold great promise for both institutions.
“Like the museum itself, The Phillips Collection’s Center for the
Study of Modern Art will deepen the public’s understanding and appreciation
of modern art and its sources,” Gates said. “We are thrilled and
gratified to partner with Illinois on this project, a longtime goal and an unprecedented
educational opportunity for the Phillips.”
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Jonathan
Fineberg, the Gutgsell Professor of Art History
at the U. of I., is the founding director of Illinois
at The Phillips Collecton and co-curator of "When
We Were Young: New Perspectives on the Art of the
Child.” |
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Richard Herman,
the chancellor of the U. of I.’s Urbana campus, said the
institutional partnership will give students from Illinois and elsewhere
direct exposure to resources otherwise unavailable outside a large,
metropolitan area.
“This is the next best thing to bringing one of the world’s finest
institutions and art collections to Illinois,” Herman said.
“This is a perfect program for anyone considering a career in museums or
in the arts,” Fineberg said.
“The academic program’s structure
is flexible to accommodate students from many backgrounds and at various stages
in their academic careers.” It is also geared toward continuing-education
students, including professionals working in Washington.
The curriculum will emphasize scholarship and critical inquiry, Fineberg said,
and students will have the option of participating in internships linking them
with staff members from various museum departments.
The “When
We Were Young” exhibition will serve as a focus exhibition in conjunction
with the June 17 opening of the larger “Klee
in America” exhibition at the museum. The Klee show
is the first major American exhibition of the artist’s work
in two decades.
Fineberg, who is curating “When We Were Young” with Elizabeth Hutton
Turner, senior curator at the Phillips, said the exhibition will function as “a
study exhibition of children’s drawings that will focus on issues
of authenticity and talent, driven by aesthetics and the mind of the
gifted child.”
The show will spotlight the
creative roots of two of the modern period’s
most recognizable artists: Klee and Picasso. The exhibition will be accompanied
by a book-length catalog, published by the University of California Press.
The catalog will include an introduction and essay by Fineberg and essays
by Turner and Rudolf Arnheim, a founding figure in the psychological
study of art.
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