Tacoma Art Museum appoints new Curator of Western American Art
Congratulations to Laura Fry for being selected as the new curator of Western American Art at the Tacoma Art Museum. Peter Hassrick will serve as a special advisor for the museum and the installation of the Haub collection. I am very excited for the new Western American Art wing of the Tacoma Art Museum to open featuring the Haub collection. Having a quality museum featuring Western American Art in the Northwest is crucial in the growth and exposure of Western American Art. The Northwest has a rich history of Native American culture and Western art is a great conduit in portraying that history. I also think it's terrific that Peter Hassrick is serving as a special advisor, because you would be hard pressed to find someone who has contributed more to the advancement of Western American Art than Peter Hassrick. Here is the press release from the Tacoma Art Museum:
(Tacoma, WA) – Tacoma Art Museum has named Laura F. Fry as
the Haub Curator of Western American Art. She will join the museum in April
2013. Fry will create, articulate, and implement a vision for the newly acquired
Haub Collection of Western American Art. She will play a central role in the
planning and preparation for the opening of the new Haub Galleries, and will
shape a new collecting and educational focus for the museum and
community.
TACOMA ART MUSEUM APPOINTS LAURA F. FRY AS NEW CURATOR
OF WESTERN AMERICAN ART
Leading Scholar Peter H. Hassrick to Serve as
Advisor
Frederic Remington |
“We are delighted to welcome Laura to the museum,” said
Stephanie A. Stebich, Director of Tacoma Art Museum. “This is a critical
position for our museum as we move forward with sharing the Haub Collection with
the public. Laura’s confidence, knowledge, and charisma will help lead the
charge as we transform Tacoma Art Museum into one of the leading museums in the
country featuring Western American Art."
Fry has worked at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody,
Wyoming, since 2009 as an integral part of the curatorial team who developed the
Buffalo Bill Museum’s new 15,000-foot reinstallation of the permanent
collection. The Buffalo Bill Historical Center is a world leader in presenting
authentic interpretations of the American West, educating and entertaining
audiences about the past, present, and future of the West. Fry is collaborating
with Western American Art scholar Peter H. Hassrick to create the second edition
of the Frederic Remington Catalogue Raisonné, and authoring an essay for
the publication that explores the connection between Frederic Remington and
William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody. She has a research background in Western
American Art starting with graduate coursework at the University of Denver and
continuing with her work at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center. Her research has
explored how the imagery of the West has helped to shape American history,
identity, and myth–from early 19th century through today. Fry’s previous museum
positions include the University of Denver’s Myhren Gallery and the Kirkland
Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver.
Thomas Moran |
She will begin her new position by immersing herself in
preparations for the new Haub Galleries, including an intensive investigation of
the Haub Collection, working with the architects and staff on the designs for
the new galleries, crafting an inaugural catalogue of the collection, and
creating a robust exhibition and public outreach education plan.
“I am thrilled to become part of the Tacoma community,” said
Fry, the new Haub Curator of Western American Art. “The chance to share the
vision and passion of the Haub family and to bring the stories and history of
Western American Art to the Puget Sound through this extraordinary collection is
the opportunity of a lifetime.”
The museum also continues its relationship with Peter H.
Hassrick as an advisor on the upcoming Haub Collection projects. He will also
play an integral role in working with the museum to create a national advisory
committee, which will inform the collection’s exhibitions and educational
programming. Hassrick has been advising both the Haubs and Tacoma Art Museum on
shaping this transformational gift of art, building funds, and endowment
support.
Charles Russell |
Hassrick’s work as the former long-time director of the
Buffalo Bill Historical Center and as recent Director of the Denver Art Museum’s
Petrie Institute of Western American Art has elevated Western American Art’s
scholarship and popular interest. He has emeritus status with both institutions.
He is the Founding Director Emeritus of the Charles M. Russell Center for the
Study of Art of the American West at the University of Oklahoma in Norman,
Oklahoma. He was also the founding Director of The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in
Santa Fe, New Mexico. From 1969 to 1976, he was Curator of Collections at the
Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas.
The Haub Collection of Western American Art features
outstanding works that embrace and elucidate the cultural history of the
American West including the work of significant historic Western painters, such
as grand manner landscape painters Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran; titans of
Western genre, Frederic Remington and Charles Russell; and works by master
artists of the Taos School such as E. Martin Hennings and Ernest Blumenschein.
The collection also contains works by notable modernist painters, including
Georgia O’Keeffe and Kenneth Adams, as well as more contemporary artists such as
Tom Lovell, John Clymer, Bill Schenck, and Clyde Aspevig. The works range in
date from the 1820s to the present.
Charles Russell |
This significant donation of iconic works, announced in July
2012, will transform Tacoma Art Museum into one of the leading museums in the
country featuring Western American Art. The museum will be the only Pacific
Northwest institution to hold a collection of this caliber, and in turn will
provide an entirely new dimension of cultural offerings to Tacoma as well as the
state of Washington and the Pacific Northwest.
Albert Bierstadt |
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