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Ernst Wahliss | Vienna, Austria

Vase (c. 1900)

Ceramic

Gift of Edward Wilder

1901.001.085

Gown #11 From the 1490s

 

Item #11 = 1490s - Wedding Tunic - Sleeve Detail

 

Made of silk fabric and silk cording, the tunic woud have had a longer skirt under the top. Empire waist with a'la' mamelouk gathered sleves and van Dyke point embelleshments near the hem. This gown was made in Germany and was part of the Arizona Jewish pioneer Cerf family. Originally thought to be from the united States in the 1700s, the gown has recently been restored and dated by The National Textile Workshop. The green color on the dress is the salvage dye common to the 1400s in Germany and becomes more visible with age.

Brown spots on the fron tof the gown are caused by the age of the fbric and human hands touching the fabric, leaving a residue of oil that eventually will rot the threads if not preserved. There is no known technique to remove the stain.

 

Jewish History Museum Permanent Collection

Sheet music and old Christmas cards, partly on loan, partly from the TSCPL Special Collections.

DETAIL

  

Lacquered chest and stand

ca. 20th century

Lacquer, wood, paint

97.40.499

 

The decorative arts is traditionally a term for the design and manufacture of functional objects.

Concerned mainly with design and decoration, examples most commonly associated with the decorative arts include ceramics, glassware, basketry, jewelry, metalware, furniture, textiles, clothing and other such goods.

 

TOP TO BOTTOM:

 

Frances Watson

How We Lost the Mermaid’s Song, 2006

Paper, linocut

Edition of 10; Cloverleaf Studio, San Diego, CA

TSCPL Permanent CollectionCaroline Garcia Ziegler

 

Goldy Locks and the Three Ws: The First of Six Mixed-Up Fairy Tales, 2010

Paper, letterpress, linocuts, crayon

Edition of 33

TSCPL Permanent Collection

this was very curious piece. the orange edges glowed as if they were lit. pretty cool.

Mojari, origin unknown (possibly India or Pakistan)

Leather, 20th c.

Gift of Annie B. Sweet

Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library Permanent Collection, S-13

 

Left to Right:

 

Warren MacKenzie (TEACHER)

Lidded jar

Stoneware

Gift of John and Helen Petterson, 2010.28.33

 

Randy Johnston (STUDENT)

Jar, 1998

Stoneware

Anonymous gift, 2003.2.22

 

MacKenzie is one of America’s greatest living potters and has inspired

generations of ceramic artists with his “everyday pots”, simple functional

vessels that are casual yet dignified. Over the last half a century of teaching, MacKenzie has had many students including Randy Johnston,

Michael Simon and Mark Pharis.

 

Smithsonian Institution NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY at 8th and F Street, NW, Washington DC on Sunday afternoon, 9 February 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE Permanent Exhibition

Paul Peck Gallery

 

Visit NPG / THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE website at www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/struggle/index.html

 

Elvert Barnes FEBRUARY 2014 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Project

Robert Cottingham

Women-Girls, 1978

Lithograph

TSCPL Permanent Collection, 1997.037

 

Ken Price

Los Angeles CA

 

Ming (1998)

Painted ceramic

Cast by Gemini GEL, LLC and purchased with a partial gift from the Jan Weiner Gallery of Kansas City MO

2008.30

 

The shape is fairly simple, as is the color and texture. Then there’s this hole—a black hole—that seems to go on forever, and makes me doubt my understanding of the structure itself. I want to put my finger in it to see if it’s real. It is.

 

–Sherry Best

Avis Chitwood | Topeka, KS

Untitled (pitcher) (1913)

Hand-painted porcelain

Gift of Janice Gartrell in memory of Avis Chitwood

2009.014.018

Smithsonian Institution NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY at 8th and F Street, NW, Washington DC on Sunday afternoon, 9 February 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE Permanent Exhibition

Paul Peck Gallery

 

Visit NPG / THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE website at www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/struggle/index.html

 

Elvert Barnes FEBRUARY 2014 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Project

In 2015, the Walker celebrates the 75th anniversary of its founding as a public art center dedicated to presenting and collecting the art of our times. Curated by the Walker’s executive director Olga Viso and guest curator Joan Rothfuss, the exhibition looks at 75 years of collecting at the Walker—a history distinguished not only by bold and often risk-taking choices but also acquisitions that have consistently breached the boundaries of media or disciplines.

 

Art at the Center: 75 Years of Walker Collections is on view from October 16, 2014 to September 11, 2016 in Galleries 4, 5, 6.

 

Curators: Olga Viso and Joan Rothfuss, with Andrew Blauvelt, Jill Vuchetich, and Mia Lopez

Sheet music and old Christmas cards, partly on loan, partly from the TSCPL Special Collections.

Leonard Baskin (artist)

Robert Francis (poet)

 

The Pumpkin Man (1986)

Woodcut, letterpress

Gift of William P. Bishop in memory of Lillian Green Bishop

2009.34

 

When I was little, I had an elderly relative who had this kind of intensity of feeling in his face. I was a little afraid of him, but he turned out to be a very kind person. He had earned his face. He raised and canned his own vegetables, and had a great sense of humor. He lived to be 102, and was driving until the last year of his life. He’d go visit the 80-year-olds at the nursing homes.

 

–Sherry Best

Shou is the Chinese character symbolizing longevity or immortality. There are over 100 various ways to represent this symbol. The shou character is often depicted with other symbols of longevity, like the bat and crane. When the two are given as a wedding gift, they symbolize a wish for many years of married life.

 

2. Peach-shaped lacquered box

ca. 20th century

Lacquer, papier-mâché, red and gold paint

97.40.156

 

In terms of the decorative arts, lacquerware refers to variety of

techniques used to decorate wood, metal or other surfaces.

108/150: David Overmyer, Ad Astra Per Aspera, c 1953, oil on paper. A sketch for a mural project that was never completed, showing Topeka’s downtown with historic and fantastic elements.

Derek Larson (Lawrence, KS)

Vase

Stoneware, anagama wood-fired

TC 26 Friends of the Library Purchase Award, 2004.5

 

85/150: Wiley William Watson, Swat the Spy, c 1916, ink, Gift of Kaw Valley Antiques. In May of 1917, the US Espionage Act limited “speech that might invite military insubordination or obstruct conscription.” This is also a reference to Dr. Crumbine’s “Swat the Fly” campaign. 81.35.19

DETAIL

 

Assorted rings. Ghana and Liberia, Loma. Copper, wood, coconut shell, steel, lead, straw, plastic, elephant hair, elephant toenail, silver. Gifts of Diana Hawks and Dr. Cotter and Jeanne Hirschberg.

DETAIL

 

Linda K. Johnson

They Said, 2007

 

Letterpress, fabric, thread

Edition of 8

TSCPL Permanent Collection

 

They Said: their age at diagnosis.

They Said: they are cancer free.

They Said: remember my mother, sister, wife, friend and daughter.

 

Sheet music and old Christmas cards, partly on loan, partly from the TSCPL Special Collections.

"'I've worked to bring African American artists to the point where if their work goes to auction houses like Sotheby's and Christie's that they can command the same price for their work as other people of equal talent,' Jones said. 'That has been my goal and philosophy. In a nut shell, that's how I got going and it continues to drive my efforts.'" (from the The University of Alabama News press kit)

Dr. Amalia Amaki and Dr. Carol Zippert in foreground.

Smithsonian Institution NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY at 8th and F Street, NW, Washington DC on Sunday afternoon, 9 February 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE Permanent Exhibition

Paul Peck Gallery

 

Visit NPG / THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE website at www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/struggle/index.html

 

Elvert Barnes FEBRUARY 2014 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Project

Gown #11 From the 1490s

 

Item #11 = 1490s - Wedding Tunic

 

Made of silk fabric and silk cording, the tunic woud have had a longer skirt under the top. Empire waist with a'la' mamelouk gathered sleves and van Dyke point embelleshments near the hem. This gown was made in Germany and was part of the Arizona Jewish pioneer Cerf family. Originally thought to be from the united States in the 1700s, the gown has recently been restored and dated by The National Textile Workshop. The green color on the dress is the salvage dye common to the 1400s in Germany and becomes more visible with age.

Brown spots on the fron tof the gown are caused by the age of the fbric and human hands touching the fabric, leaving a residue of oil that eventually will rot the threads if not preserved. There is no known technique to remove the stain.

 

Jewish History Museum Permanent Collection

John Neely (Logan, UT)

Teapot, 1997

Stoneware, wood-fired

Anonymous gift, 2003.2.18

 

Gallery Director, Sherry Best, brags about our article in the most recent City Arts magazine.

LEFT TO RIGHT

 

64/150: Marshall’s Band scrapbook Mr. Marshall, an Englishman by birth, was one of the non-German members of the Topeka Turn Verein. The 1884 political campaign wanted a band for Kansas delegation to the Republican National Convention, and Marshall’s Band played. Marshall’s Band played regularly at Turner Hall, the German health, athletic and social club. The Turn Verein was a team of athletes and gymnasts, who also participated in community projects and philanthropy. Turner Hall served “…ice cream and soft drinks called for by the children and ladies, there were light wines and beer, but no hard drinks. To the membership of the Verein it was inconceivable that the ban on alcoholic drinks placed in the Kansas State Constitution in 1881 could be aimed at them.” Turner Hall eventually came under violent attack by followers of Carrie Nation. In 1903 Turner Hall flooded. It burned in 1911. (The Melting Pot, p. 94-95)

 

62/150: Marshall Band horn

Smithsonian Institution NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY at 8th and F Street, NW, Washington DC on Sunday afternoon, 9 February 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE Permanent Exhibition

Paul Peck Gallery

 

Visit NPG / THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE website at www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/struggle/index.html

 

Elvert Barnes FEBRUARY 2014 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Project

Yoshiro Ikeda (Manhattan, KS)

"Passion" (late 20th c.)

Ceramic

Topeka Competition 26, Friends of the Library Purchase Award (2004.2)

DETAIL

 

Rebecca Wright

Topeka KS

 

untitled (c. 1965)

Watercolor, ink on paper

Gift of Barbara Waterman-Peters and Larry Peters

2005.46.2

Sheet music and old Christmas cards, partly on loan, partly from the TSCPL Special Collections.

DETAIL

Enkawera (wedding necklace), Kenya, Maasai. Made for a bride by her mother. Leather, beads, cowrie shells, aluminum. Gifts of Gary K. Clarke.

DETAIL

  

Lacquered chest and stand

ca. 20th century

Lacquer, wood, paint

97.40.499

 

The decorative arts is traditionally a term for the design and manufacture of functional objects.

Concerned mainly with design and decoration, examples most commonly associated with the decorative arts include ceramics, glassware, basketry, jewelry, metalware, furniture, textiles, clothing and other such goods.

 

Hammer Museum New Gallery and Lobby Openings

Smithsonian Institution NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY at 8th and F Street, NW, Washington DC on Sunday afternoon, 9 February 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE Permanent Exhibition

Paul Peck Gallery

 

Visit NPG / THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE website at www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/struggle/index.html

 

Elvert Barnes FEBRUARY 2014 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Project

Yoshiro Ikeda (Manhattan, KS)

"Teapot" (1984)

Stoneware

Topeka Crafts Competition 8, Friends of the Library Purchase Award (1984.9)

RED in Advertising featuring products typically associated with the color red

Smithsonian Institution NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY at 8th and F Street, NW, Washington DC on Sunday afternoon, 9 February 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE Permanent Exhibition

Paul Peck Gallery

 

Visit NPG / THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE website at www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/struggle/index.html

 

Elvert Barnes FEBRUARY 2014 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Project

Gown #11 From the 1490s

 

Item #11 = 1490s - Wedding Tunic

 

Made of silk fabric and silk cording, the tunic woud have had a longer skirt under the top. Empire waist with a'la' mamelouk gathered sleves and van Dyke point embelleshments near the hem. This gown was made in Germany and was part of the Arizona Jewish pioneer Cerf family. Originally thought to be from the united States in the 1700s, the gown has recently been restored and dated by The National Textile Workshop. The green color on the dress is the salvage dye common to the 1400s in Germany and becomes more visible with age.

Brown spots on the fron tof the gown are caused by the age of the fbric and human hands touching the fabric, leaving a residue of oil that eventually will rot the threads if not preserved. There is no known technique to remove the stain.

 

Jewish History Museum Permanent Collection

Kunsthalle (Museum of Art, Gallerie der Gegenwart (Museum of Contemporary Art), Hamburg, Germany

Taller Leñateros

Chiapas, Mexico

 

Bolom Chon (2008)

English/Tzotzil

Woodblock prints, silkscreen, handmade agave paper, audio CD

Edition of 99

 

Taller Leñateros, which translates to “The Woodlanders’ Workshop”, is an alliance of Mayan women and men founded in 1975 by the Mexican poet Ambar Past. The purpose of the group is to keep traditions alive and to provide employment to the local community. What draws me to this book are the bold colors and the exuberant nature of the images. The handmade paper has a wonderful texture and in handling it you notice the smell of earth. The book is so organic and the presence of the jaguar has such a strong connection to ancient Maya myth that the book has a timeless quality to it.

 

–Brea Black

Kunsthalle (Museum of Art, Hamburg, Germany

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