Throughlines: Connections in the Collection: Rotation 3

Introduction

This exhibition takes a fresh look at the museum’s collections, bringing together works from diverse places, cultures, and time periods that are not typically displayed together. The curatorial team approached the installation with a sense of curiosity: How might these different works resonate when placed side by side? What more could they tell us if we put them in new contexts? We searched the collections, reflecting on art’s unique potential to connect us across time and place. We asked: What connections might a video have with a European oil painting? A photograph with a Native American woven basket? A Chinese vase with a print emblazoned with a provocative message?

We collaboratively developed four themes that represent each collection area broadly and in surprising ways. Drawing from portraits and figurative art, Pose looks at the timeless human desire to represent one another and to be represented. Environments explores how artists help us understand and honor nature and place. Expect the Unexpected shows how artists innovate with materials and explore unconventional processes that broaden how art can be made and what it might mean. Color presents powerful pops of pigments, paints, inks, glazes, and dyes that stir the senses.

As the Portland Art Museum undergoes a big transformation, this exhibition offers a preview of the collaborations and creative approaches that will inform installations in the Mark Rothko Pavilion, our new museum spaces, and our original galleries.

Kathleen Ash-Milby, Curator of Native American Art
Mary Weaver Chapin, Curator of Graphic Arts
Julia Dolan, Minor White Senior Curator of Photography
Erin Grant, Assistant Curator of Native American Art
Jeannie Kenmotsu, Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Curator of Asian Art
Grace Kook-Anderson, Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Curator of Northwest Art
Sara Krajewski, Eichholz Senior Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art
Teena Wilder, Art Bridges Curatorial Fellow

Throughlines: Connections in the Collection is supported by the Museum’s Exhibition Sponsors.

Pose

Humans are social beings. Although many modern societies champion the individual—a concept emphasized in many of the portraits in this gallery—we rely on each other for survival and community and respond deeply to artistic renderings of people. Our depictions of one another have changed over time and can look very different in different cultures. Some of the interpretations of the human form on view here may seem familiar, while others may feel new. They bring up many questions including: What is the relationship between the artists and their subjects? And what does each work communicate about the human experience?

Artemisia Gentileschi
Italian 1593-1654
David with the Head of Goliath,
Ca. 1630-1631
Oil on Canvas
On loan from a Private Collection

In this painting from the Bible, a boy, the future King David, rests his hand on the head of the Philistine champion, the giant Goliath, who he has just killed in single combat, by using a simple slingshot and religious faith. Gentileschi was a renowned and successful woman artist in Florence, Italy, who overcame the limitations on women becoming artists. Her survival from the trauma of rape informed her many paintings of people, like David, who resist and overcome violence.

[Artwork Description] In this large-scale rectangular, vertically oriented painting the seated figure of the youthful Biblical figure David is shown with an outstretched arm touching the head of the giant Goliath, whom he has slain with his slingshot. David, staring straight at the viewer, occupies the center, extending from about nine inches from the top of the frame to just short of the bottom. While his body is turned in three-quarter view toward a table holding the head of Goliath, David’s head is positioned full frontal. His face and body are illuminated so they pop out from the dark muted background of brown, black, and grey tones. His arm closest to the viewer extends full length down his leg, clasping his knee, which is crossed over his left leg that rests on the floor. His other arm, seen in the background, is raised with his elbow bent and his fingers entwined in the hair of Goliath’s decapitated head that rests on a table to David’s left. David has dark brown, wavy hair that is parted in the middle and falls to his chin. Heavy arched eyebrows frame his brown eyes. A delicate nose and thin lips with a rosy color are set in a matter-of-fact way. His skin is painted in pale beige warm tones with rose-colored highlights on his right cheek. He wears a full, white shirt with billowy sleeves pushed up in folds above the elbow. Only the sleeves of his blouse-like shirt are visible as the straps of a terracotta colored tunic cover the rest of his top. This wraps at his waist and then trails to the ground with brown shadows accentuating the folds. Showing at the waist and beneath the tunic is a dark brown garment. His legs, peeking out from the garment, are covered with wrinkled light brown stockings; the stocking on the crossed leg ends at the ankle, showing his foot while the other leg shows more of the stocking from below his knee to the ankle. An elaborately jeweled gold sword hilt rests on the floor against his body with the blade hidden by the folds of his clothing. The upper portion of the sword is rounded with circular ornaments along with two shield-shaped ornaments that have a jewel at the center. The hilt of the sword tapers down with two distinct parts separated by a raised border. The bottom part meets a thin scrolled piece and then an oval shaped plate that is elaborately decorated. Additional jeweled shield ornaments cover the bottom part of the shaft that is visible. David’s figure is set against a dark background with the bottom half of the painting, below the table holding Goliath’s head, in solid brown. The top left quadrant of the painting shows a grey sky with a series of three vertical, slanted wispy clouds that are white with brown touches. Another cloud is seen at the far right. The sky takes up three-quarters of the top of the painting but disappears behind a heavy stone column (at the far right of frame) that the seated David is leaning against. Only part of  the column is visible, including a rounded base. The left side of the picture is dominated at the middle of the frame by Goliath’s head. It is tilted slightly forward with a large divot from David’s slingshot in the middle of the forehead. Dark curly hair frames the round face, which has a greyish caste. Wrinkles line the lower forehead, below the wound and above the heavy eyebrows. Dark irises are looking upward with the whites of his eyes mostly visible. A strong nose is highlighted while the cheeks and mouth dissolve in shadow. The planked wooden table holding the head is only partially visible as the bottom of the table disappears in the brown background. A plain heavy gold frame sets off the painting.

William Cumming
(American, 1917–2010)
Three Kids, 1968
Oil on Masonite
Gift of Sandra Stone Peters, 86.70.5

Writer Tom Robbins praised his friend Cumming in a memorial tribute: “Much of the power—much of the appeal, frankly—of Cumming’s work is a result of its expressive ambiguity. A Cumming painting is both personal and populist, abstract and literal, hard-nosed and romantic.” The artist’s tender views of people in everyday settings encourage empathy and identification with his subjects.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This abstract painting portrays three boys in strong geometric shapes and an almost complete lack of facial and body details. There is no horizon line so the figures appear slightly floating in space with strong black shadows cast by their bodies and an ambiguous background of broad vertical strokes of white, pale blue, and grey paint. The child on the left appears to carry a large box marked with a bright orange circle in the middle of the lower section. He wears a yellow ball cap, a mustard colored tee shirt with thin orange stripes, striped blue and yellow socks and shoes indicated by simple rectangular shapes. His skin is a medium brown shade. The middle figure wears a rounded, brimmed hat that covers most of his face and head, with the lower part of his head and neck forming two triangles that intersect. The top part of his green shirt has vertical yellow stripes but most of the shirt is hidden by a grey box that he carries in front of him, extending below his waist. Similar to the figure to the left of him, his brown legs end in striped socks and shoes that look like blocks. The third figure, at right, carries a box above his head, reaching out of the top of the frame with bent elbows and raised arms clutching either side of the box. He wears a red tee shirt with three stripes on its short sleeves. There are prominent shadows on the shirt and on his shorts. Long white socks and shoes complete his outfit.]

Yasuo Kuniyoshi
(American, born Japan, 1889–1953)
Girl with an Accordion, 1941
Oil on canvas
Museum Purchase: Ella M. Hirsch Fund, 41.12

Kuniyoshi’s languid female figures and whimsical circus scenes drew on American folk art and his encounters with European art on two trips to Paris in the 1920s. By the late 1930s, his earlier dreamy, sensuous girls were replaced with women alone, deep in thought. From this subject’s pensive expression to the distorted flatness of the chair, a taut psychological disquiet suffuses the work. Even the background seems restless, painted in myriad colors, brushstrokes at turns thin or thick, swirling or jagged.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: In this oil painting, the figure of a seated woman occupies three-quarters of the frame. The pensive figure is posed in a wicker chair with the lower part of her body obscured by an open accordion on which both her arms rest. Her left arm, bent at the elbow, rests on top of the instrument while her hand touches the side of her head with her fingers curling against her long brown hair. Her other arm is splayed across the accordion’s bellows. She has a thoughtful and weary expression  with downcast eyes and a thin, set mouth. The accordion, painted brown with white scroll-like touches and green bellows, dominates the bottom third of the painting, blocking the view of the figure from the waist down. She wears a rose-colored turtleneck and a grey lower garment. The brown floor is visible on either side of the figure and the background features a wall painted in many colors with swirling brushstrokes.]

Pierre-Auguste Renoir
(French, 1841–1919)
Young Girls Reading, 1891
Oil on canvas
Bequest of Winslow B. Ayer, 35.25

Two girls share a book in a quiet moment, absorbed in their reading and seemingly unaware of the viewer. The artist uses long, sweeping brushstrokes to define the figures, and suggests their easy companionship via their close proximity and the repetition of curved forms. The painting is not a portrait (the two girls are identifiable as models in other work by Renoir), but the artist nonetheless captures the lives of typical bourgeois girls in the late nineteenth century.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Description: This Impressionistic domestic scene shows two young girls seated in a parlor, slightly bent over a shared book. The figures overlap in an intimate pose with the taller, back figure in more of a three-quarter view. In the foreground a younger looking girl presents more in profile. The back figure (at left) has reddish brown hair, downcast eyes, a long green dress with a white inset in the middle of the neckline, and a three-quarter sleeve trimmed with a black bow. Her pale white arm rests alongside her skirt and her hand lightly touches the book. The foreground figure (at right) turns her body toward her companion with her head slightly bent. She has a long blonde ponytail with a red hair bow that flows over a pink dress with puffed sleeves trimmed in green. A matching green bow is tied at her waist. The two girls are seated on plush, rose-colored slipper chairs. A bit of the floor painted in reddish brown is visible in the left corner and merges into a brown paneled wall that makes up about a quarter of the background. The rest of the area behind the figures is dappled green, yellow, and blue.]

George Luks
(American, 1867–1933)
Mike the Bite, 1928
Oil on canvas
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Lesley G. Shaefer, 55.266

Luks is associated with the Ashcan School, a group of artists who shared the same social realist style in early twentieth century New York. They painted gritty scenes of urban life, including performers and athletes who entertained the masses, as well as the poor who lived in tenements and slums. Mike the Bite portrays a kid from the streets, whose messy appearance and rumpled clothing are unlike typical bourgeois portraits of the time.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: The boy shown in this portrait, taking up most of the frame, has a slightly mischievous look and stares directly at the viewer. He appears to be crouching so that the tops of his legs are drawn up close to his waist. He wears a rumpled brown jacket and pants with a white shirt barely visible. His face is the most detailed part of the painting with full, ruddy cheeks, pink lips in a bit of a grimace, and slightly squinting eyes. His disheveled hair is reddish brown with lighter broad streaks. The muted background of deep green and black tones surrounds the boy, making the figure pop out more.]

Chaim Soutine
(Russian, 1893–1943)
Le Petit Pâtissier (The Little Pastry Cook), ca. 1921
Oil on canvas
Museum Purchase: Ella M. Hirsch Fund, 40.30

Soutine created several portraits of waiters, bellboys, and chefs from Paris’s luxury hotels. His paintings bear witness to the formation of the hospitality industry as we know it today; at the time, this working class cohort was increasingly visible in fashionable establishments. Set off from the bright red curtain, the cook appears to be taking a break from the labor of the kitchen.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: A vertical portrait measuring five feet tall by a little over two feet wide features a full-length male figure standing with his hands clasped in front. His left foot is placed out in front of the other and points to the right. He wears a white cap atop a long face with a pointed chin. His ears protrude from either side of his head, with bits of black hair poking out by his ears and at his forehead. Large dark eyes look off to the viewer’s left. He wears what appears to be a long sleeve, high collared white shirt. When examined more closely, the white shirt as well as his cap and shoes are made up of many colors in addition to white; grays, blues, green, yellows, tan, orange and dashes of red applied in broad, rough brush strokes. Similarly, his baggy, brownish pants are painted with strokes of brown, black, yellow, red, orange, blue  and tan. To the left of the figure stands a brown chair with ornate slatted back. Behind the figure is a field of mottled red tones making up most of the width of the painting, suggesting a curtain. A narrow swath of reds, browns, yellows complete the right side of the painting running from top to bottom. The many multicolored brushstrokes lend this portrait a sensation of movement.]

Jiang Bibo
Chinese, born 1939
Close Neighbors, 1984
Woodblock print on paper
The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection, 2022.47.1

Jian’s strong realistic style lends monumentality and power to her portraits. Many of her subjects are the lifestyles and customs of minority peoples in rural China, particularly women. The artist uses thick but lively lines of black ink. Her sensitivity to the woodbut medium captures detailed textile patterns and the hip-swaing movements of three women as they dance to a boom box, which anchors this scene in the modern day.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: Woodblock print measuring 11 5/8 inches high and 17 7/8 inches wide. The three women stand facing away from the viewer, heads tilted to look back at the viewer. The woman on the left wears a black dress with three vertical strips of heavily patterned fabric starting at her waist and hanging down. Below them are patches which seem to move with her legs, three vertical and one L shaped. She is barefoot and has a hat made of fabric similar to the dress, tied at the top of her head, the ribbons of fabric cascading down past her ears. Her head is tilted upward slightly, mouth open.  Hashmarks from her hair and outline her cheekbones and lips. The middle woman faces away from the viewer, dancing. Her left heel is held up while the toes are flat. Her right foot is flat and faces away from the viewer. Her body is twisted in an S shape with her right arm held at chin height, wrist bent, flat palm facing to the left with her fingers straight in the air. Her left hand crosses her body, resting on her right hip. She has large bangle bracelets on both wrists. Her head is tilted downard to the right and her eyes gaze downard. Her dress has several different patterns with thick black lines on the arms and the base of the dress and lighter geometric patterns on the bodice. A scarf tied around her waist hangs over her buttocks and thighs in an angular shape that comes to a point at the bottom. She has black hair pulled back inside a patterned headscarff and wears large hoop earrings with smaller circles hanging from it. On her left side is a large circular object with several layers of hasmarks. To her right the third woman also stands facing away from the viewer. Her left knee is bent, foot ankled in the air. Her left arm is bent and she rests her chin on her open palm. There is a large black ring on her fourth finger. She looks downward with dark eyelids and long lashes. She holds a portable radio in her right hand and wears a purse on her left shoulder with geometric designs around the side and a dark center with a white outline of an unknown shape. The light colored strap with two buckles at hte top of the bag appears to twist as it crosses her shoulder. Her black hair is pulled back under a headwrap that cascades down her back. Her dress is made up of patterned patches. The artist uses thick black lines to outline the images with white hashmarks and thinner black lines creating detailed patterns. The patterns give a sense of movement. The piece is framed in a simple black frame with a white mat.]

Felipe Diriksen
Spanish, 1590-1679
Portrait of Infanta María Ana de Austria.
1630
Oil on canvas

Museum Purchase: Funds provided by William and Helen Jo Whitsell; European and American Art Council; John S. Ettelson Fund of the Oregon Community Foundation; Nani S. Warren; May Van Dyke Fund; Laura Meier; Marilyn Ross Podemski; Janet Geary; Ann Flowerree; Kent and Carol Ann Caveny; James FitzGerald and Karen Howe; Shawn and Lisa Mangum; George and Barbara Dechet; Sharon and Keith Barnes; European Art Purchase Fund, 2017.59.1

Infanta María Ana (1606-1646) was a princess in the royal Spanish court. From early childhood, she was one of the most sought-after brides in Europe. This painting was commissioned in 1629 by her brother, King Philip IV, as she was about to marry Ferdinand III, King of Hungary and Bohemia, and from 1637, Holy Roman Emperor. The portrait was to serve as a remembrance because her family in Spain knew that they would likely never see her again. Her formal pose and impassive expression were considered the height of decorum.
Dawson Carr, former curator of European Art

[Artwork Description: This large-scale oil is a richly detailed, full-length formal court portrait with the princess in a stiff regal pose and imperious expression staring straight at the viewer. Against a deep red drape with sinuous folds, the figure is a commanding presence in a resplendent ballgown. A high white and silver ruff frames the pale white skin of her face with her rouged cheeks and brown eyes that gaze slightly to the right. Her hair is in tight brown curls with red bows below the ears and at the back. A lustrous pearl earring dangles on the left side. She wears an elaborate gown with a tightly fitted bodice and bell-shaped skirt of red, embroidered with gold and silver paisleys. The sleeves, waist, and front of the dress are patterned in silver and gold stripes bordered in black and the cuffs of the sleeves match the ruff at the neck. A double strand of pearls is arrayed diagonally across the figure from left to right, looping around the waist at the right. Elaborate gold and pearl buttons in a floral shape dot the front of the dress and top of the sleeves. A pendant of three large jewels and a teardrop pearl hangs at the top, under the ruff, while five gold rings set with jewels dazzle from her fingers. The right hand clutches a white handkerchief trimmed in silver lace while the hand at left rests on the edge of a red and gold upholstered wooden chair.]

Ka’ila Farrell Smith
(Klamath, Modoc, and American, born 1982)
After Boarding School: In Mourning, 2011
Oil on canvas
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Native American Art Council, 2012.100.1

This poignant portrait depicts a young Native girl whose unevenly cut hair reminds us of the cultural genocide inflicted through the Indian boarding school system. She locks eyes with us, forcing us to acknowledge her pain, represented by the red streaks of paint that pour down her face.

Kathleen Ash-Milby

[Artwork Description: Densley colored oil paint portrait of a young Indigenous girl from the chest up. Her face is centered in the frame and her large dark brown eyes appear to be locked staring into the distance as if she is seeing through the viewer. She has a long thing nose and her lips are pressed together with tight jaws. Her dark black hair has been cut to chin length, uneven on the right side with single strokes of burgundy over the black. Three thick vertical strokes of red paint run from below her eyes to her chin. Her brown skin is covered with short strokes of white, yellow, and red. More prominent strokes of white appear above her right eye, over the bridge of her nose, down her cheeks, above her lips, and on her chin and neck. She wears a teal, v-neck shirt, that has strokes of burgundy, white, and black with white, pink, and red highlights. The background is filled with layers of different colors. The top left is predominantly dark teal with lighter teal and gray on top and pink further down around the girl’s hair. There is a small light pink and light blue area above the crown of the girls’ head. The space on the right corner is filled with mostly tan and light brown with white and teal highlights. Darker black with a deep yellow over it fills the space between the frame and the girl’s hair. There is a prominent light pink X over her heart. The brush strokes are bold and give a feeling of movement, but the girl’s face is still, almost frozen. Multiple areas have white accents giving the illusion of light reflecting from the painting.]

August Sander
German, 1876-1964
Boxers, 1929
gelatin silver print
Gift of Tim Bradbury in honor of Bruce Guenther, 2022.70.2

Sander worked on the series People of the Twentieth Century during the 1920s and 1930s, aiming to capture “all the characteristics of the universally human.” He completed over six hundred portraits before halting the project because Nazi officials were suspicious of his intentions for the work. His 1929 book, Face of Our Time, which contains twenty of the portraits from the series, was seized and censored by the  Nazis in 1936.

Julie Dolan

[Artwork Description: Black and white photo of two light-skinned male boxers. They stand, backs straight, arms hanging at their sides with muscles flexed. The man on the left wears a spaghetti strap black tank top and gray shorts that are heavily wrinkled. He has white gloves and black shoes with white laces. His thick light colored hair is combed upward. He has a solemn expression, looking directly at the camera. The man on the right is shorter and has ruffled curly black hair. He is flashing a big grin and his eyes are slightly squinted. He is barechested and wearing loose black shorts. He has black boxing gloves on both hands and also wears black shoes with white laces. They stand in front of a wall with several bumps and cracks. There is a stain on the floor in front of them. The photo is framed in a simple wood frame with a thick white mat.]

Giuseppe Bonito
(Italian, 1707–1789)
The Femminiello, 1740/60
Oil on canvas
Gift of The Ross Family Fund of Equity Foundation, 2014.107.1

This painting from Naples is a testament to the city’s exceptional social acceptance of local transvestites known as femminielli. The term, which might be translated “little female-men,” is not derogatory, but rather an expression of endearment. Femminielli come from the Spanish Quarter, the most impoverished neighborhood of the city, as evidenced by this individual’s missing tooth and goiter, a common condition among the poor. Although femminielli cross-dress from an early age, they do not try to conceal their birth sex completely. Rather than being stigmatized, femminielli are deemed special and are accepted as almost a third sex in Neapolitan culture. In particular, they are thought to bring good luck—here represented by the necklace of red coral, which is also thought to bring good fortune.

Owing to wider social prejudice, femminiello were rarely depicted until the modern era. This is the only known representation of a femminiello before photographs made in the late nineteenth century.

Dawson Carr, former curator of European Art

[Artwork Description: A vertical rectangular portrait of two male figures shown from the waist up wearing 18th century traditionally female fashions. The figure on the right is seen mostly from the side and turning to face the viewer. His hands are outstretched holding a red-coral bead necklace near the other figure’s neck. He is light skinned with short brown cropped hair under a blue turban-like headdress that is skewed to the left. He is smiling with lips parted showing his teeth and he has soft, youthful features. He wears an open neck, collarless white shirt with a reddish-pink coat and a blue shawl draped over his arms and shoulders. White full, gathered sleeves and shirt cuffs extend past his jacket at his wrists. The man on the left faces the viewer wearing a mustard yellow dress with a pink stomacher and lacing with a white ruffle seen at the neckline. He also wears a white, ruffled mob cap with a pink bow on top. This figure is light skinned, has short dark hair, heavy brows and an upturned nose. His forehead and face are lined and his mouth is partially open showing he is missing a tooth. His neck is muscular and he has a goiter. The background is a smooth, shiny brown that is darker in some places and appears to be reflecting light. The painting is framed in a black wood frame with a carved natural wood border between the frame and painting.]

Rober Miller
American, born 1948
Ric Young – Playwright, 1979
gelatin silver print
Gift of the Artist, 2013.51.13

[Artwork Description] This black and white horizontally oriented photo depicts a bedroom scene with the young male figure sitting on the bed with his head against the wall and shoulders propped up on pillows. Both of his legs are folded up with the right leg folded high so his right arm rests on it and the left leg bent underneath. HIs right foot peeks out from a voluminous robe, which covers his left leg except for a partially visible foot turned sideways. The robe drapes over the figure’s arms and extends off his shoulders. The subject is slightly right of center and the bed takes up three-quarters of the bottom of the photo. The rest of the frame is occupied by a dresser to the left of the bed. The subject (playwright Ric Young) stares directly at the viewer. He has straight hair parted in the middle that extends past his ears and merges with long bushy sideburns. His eyebrows are partially covered by bangs and his mustache curves over his lips in an upside-down U shape. A cleft in his chin is highly visible and a necklace with a square pendant encircles his neck. He rests atop a heavily wrinkled bed covering with a textured finish. His upper body leans against an oversized pillow with a bold floral pattern. A second pillow in the same fabric is tossed to the right side, touching a drape that extends from the ceiling and is tied back by a cord toward the top. On the wall above the bed, an assemblage of slatted wooden bird cages takes up more than half the space from the top left and is cut off at the top of the frame. A variety of small birds occupy the cages with two large horizontal, house-shaped cages resting on a narrow shelf and three smaller more vertically shaped cages balanced a little precariously on top. On the wall under the shelf, which is affixed with metal brackets, is a carved mask, a small mirror in a wooden frame with rounded top, a framed religious print showing an angel reaching toward a kneeling supplicant, and an antique sculpture of a horse’s torso (minus the legs) mounted on a base that sits on an architectural fragment. To the right of the bird cages, taking up most of the rest of the wall space, is a large oval-framed photograph of two naked men in an embrace. The figures are shown from the buttocks up, half turned toward the viewer with looks that appear as if they were caught in surprise. The dark wood dresser next to the bed has round drawer knobs and a mirrored top that reflects a number of decorative objects. These include a small white lidded porcelain bowl, a dark keepsake box covered with leaf-like decorations and sporting a top handle and a round pull to open a compartment in the front of the box, and a white china bedside lamp that has a curved shade and a bell-jar shaped body embellished with a bird sitting on branches.

Simone Leigh
American, born 1967
Untitled, 2020-2022
Stoneware (Shino glaze)
Private Collection, L2024.24.1

[Artwork Description: The sculpture has a cylindrical base with a round top that has a round opening in the front. The brown clay is covered in a thick layer of cream colored glaze that drips unevenly down the column with several patches of clay showing through. Some of the clay patches are round, others are longer squiggly lines. The entry to the cavern at the top is smooth and peering deep into it you can see there is a large circle of clay without glaze. It is displayed on a cream colored square pedestal encased in glass.]

Stu Levy
American, born 1948
Henk Pander, Artist, 2000, printed 2001
Selenium toned silver gelatin print
Gift of Stu Levy, 2023.94.2

[Artwork Description: This black and white photo is 11 ¾ inches tall and 24 ½ inches wide. The photo is divided into 15 squares, resembling a view through a windowpane. The artist, an older, light skinned man with wavy hair that is thinning on top, appears multiple times in the photo working in his studio. The top left square shows the dark ceiling and to the left a white wall with a large dark painting hanging in the back and a dark round object hanging in the top right corner of a window. The second square down shows a light colored man with a long brown beard standing against the wall, lurking in the shadows and watching as the artist works. The foreground of the square has a container full of various sizes and styles of paintbrushes. The bottom left square has a variety of paint cans and supplies, a large metal coffee can is laying sideways on top of another can. A glass jar with liquid sits to the right with another glass jar upside down next to it. The top square in the second column shows the ceiling which appears to be formed of aged wood with stains and some bowing. On the back wall canvases hang, partially covering a rectangular object. The middle square of the second column has a close up of the artist. He looks up at the camera with a smile peeking out from behind his mustache. He is wearing a fabric smock made of a dark velvet like material with a thin ribbon around the base. He has wire framed glasses and wears a button up shirt under a knitted sweater with a dirty painter’s cape over them. He holds a putty knife in his right hand. A vase with dried stems of flowers sits behind him. The bottom square of the second column shows the artist’s hands working. He holds a paintbrush in his right hand and a dirty rag in his left. A line of brushes lays on the table in front of him. In the foreground is a messy pile of paint tubes, some full and some used. The top square on the fourth column shows  more of the wood ceiling. Decorative curtains with large roses hang over painted canvases that lean forward against the curtain. On the far right is a large white canvas with grayscale markings that are too blurry to fully make out. It seems as if there is a light source on the left casting shadows on the images. The middle square shows the artist painting on that canvas with his right hand. His curly brown hair appears a bit messy and the sleeve on his painter’s smock is rolled up. Blurred supplies sit on a table at his waist. The bottom square shows his black pants and a worn workbench that is holding the painting. The fourth column starts with a square showing a painted wood ceiling with a lighting track extending across it. A large silver light shines down on a large painting with a thick frame hanging on the wall. The top of the painting is visible and depicts a stormy sky. To the right is another painting of an IV pole with several bags of medicine and various monitors and controls. The square below reveals the rest of the landscape painting, aged and damaged wooden ships in an angry ocean. To the left of the painting, black electrical cords hang down in a pile then stretch out to the right. The top of an object with ribs extends across the bottom of the square. To the right more of the medical painting is revealed. The IV bag tubes hang down from the pole and stretch across to a hospital bed where a light skinned, light haired woman lays on a fluffy pillow. The bottom square in this column shows a cow skull with horns, laying in front of the long rib cage. Below it is the carcass of a large black bird, some feathers intact. To its right is a wooden table with two stacks of white paper. The final column starts with a view of the ceiling and a wooden pole with black and white photos tacked to it. To the right a pocket watch hangs from the ceiling. In the bottom left you can see the corner of the hospital painting. At the bottom right you can see the top of the ocean painting, the ships sails blowing in the wind. The next square shows the artist sitting on a wooden chair reading a letter. He is wearing a black shirt with light colored buttons at the top and his white painter’s cape. He has wire frammed glasses, messy curly hair, and a mustache. In front of him is part of the painting of the hospital scene. A person crouches at the end of the hospital bed. In the final frame there is a book open with two loose sheets of the same photo printed on them. To the right is a pile of papers that are leaning backward. The thin metal poles of the table extend below the book.]

Gabriel Revel
(French, active Italy, 1612–1695)
Portrait of a Sculptor, ca. 1680
Oil on canvas
Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Binney, 3rd, 68.34

Revel captures a strong sense of the personality of this sitter, presumed to be the French sculptor Antoine Coysevox (1640–1720). His steady gaze, sensitive mouth, and attentive posture suggest that we are catching him in an active moment. Coysevox places his left hand on a sculpted head, indicating his profession as well as his skill in his art.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Description: This classical oil portrait in a highly ornate carved gold frame shows the upper torso and head of a sculptor. He is seated at his studio worktable, positioned facing left but with his head turned to the right to look at someone who is out of the frame. He fills almost the entire picture from top to bottom. The figure’s cream-colored skin stands out from the dark background, which merges with his full head of long curly hair. He has rosy cheeks, a barely visible mustache and goatee, and full bow-shaped lips. Only his arm at right is visible with his elbow bent and his fingers arrayed atop a small sculpture of a man’s head. The sculpture, which features a man with a bald head, flowing beard, and patrician nose, sits on a table whose edge is visible next to the sculptor. Behind the sculpture, in the upper left, part of another statue is visible; this one is of a man with his upraised arm cut off, a bare chest, and head and eyes tilted down. The sculptor is lavishly dressed in a white blouse with lace collar and cuffs, a black jacket trimmed with fancy gold buttons along the front and split sleeves, and a striking orange and red over blouse with deep folds that drapes over his shoulder.]

Bue Kee
(American, 1893–1985)
Self-Portrait, ca. 1930
Oil on canvas
Gift of Michael Parsons and Marte Lamb, 2005.114.3

Kee worked in various mediums, including painting, ceramics, and photography. Born and raised on a farm outside of Portland, Kee was Chinese American. Despite being severely hearing-impaired and not finishing grade school, he later attended the Museum Art School and became known as a WPA Federal Art Project artist working at Timberline Lodge at Mount Hood and Tongue Point Naval Air Station near Astoria. In this self-portrait the delicacy of the lines create a crispness to the artist’s white shirt and accentuate his facial features.

Grace Kook-Anderson

[Artwork Description: Portrait of a young, light-skinned Asian man, facing left in three-quarter view. He has a small mouth, his lips pursed, thin dark eyebrows, high cheekbones and a long thin nose. His brownish eyes are fixed in an intense gaze off to the left. He has a brown, full head of hair brushed back and elongated ears. Brushstrokes are visible in his hair and skin. Light catches the bridge of his nose, cheekbones, forehead and chin. Some areas reveal the weave of the canvas on which the portrait is painted. The figure wears an off-white collared shirt, with a blue-gray vest with horizontal brushstrokes of white and gold creating texture. A necktie depicted in red, blue and gold brushstrokes is visible at the throat. The background is a rich mustard gold color achieved by multiple brushstrokes filling the entire space.]

Andy Warhol
(American, 1928–1987)
Family Album 312, ca. 1970–80
278 dye diffusion prints
Gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation, 2014.105.1.1-279

Deeply excited by technology and spontaneity, Warhol first used a Polaroid in the mid-1950s. He quickly incorporated the camera into his daily routine, using the pictures as preliminary sketches for screenprints and paintings, and as social currency when visiting friends or attending parties. This family album, one of six in museum collections throughout the United States, holds 278 Polaroids of Keith Haring, Diana Vreeland, David Hockney, Man Ray, and many others.

Julia Dolan

Marianne Loir
French, ca. 1715-after 1769
Portrait of a Man Seated at a Desk, ca. 1750
Oil on canvas
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Janet and Richard Geary Endowment for Euriopean Art, 2013.87.1

Loir specialized in portraits of French nobility and intelligentsia, and they are characterized by a delicate, refined manner and elegant color schemes. Although the identity of this sitter is unknown, the artist powerfully suggests his wealth adn status through his opulent costume and his placement in a refined study, suggesting he is a man of business or letters. His sensitive gaze adn open regard of the viewer invite us into the composition.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Description: This large portrait is a little over 3 feet in height and a little under 3 feet in width and features a light skinned man, seated at an ornate desk. He sits facing us with his left elbow leaning on a book opened on the table. His left hand rests under his chin.  His right hand is resting on his knee. His gaze is directed at the viewer and he smiles slightly with unparted lips. He is dressed in a long coat in a muted grape purple color with deep turned back cuffs of leopard fur that reach almost to the elbow. Leopard fur also lined the front of the coat along with a row of covered buttons. Flounces of intricate white, ruffled lace peak out from the cuffs and collar. He wears a patterned gray and gold brocade waistcoat with purple knee breeches and grey stockings. His silver-gray hair is set in rolled curls away from the forehead and in rows on the side of the head. He has pale gray eyebrows, dark brown eyes and light skin with rosy cheeks. His lips are full but small with a pronounced cupid’s bow. The desk or table he sits at is edged in gilt gold and the legs of the table bear carved scrollwork that features a human face in profile. The man sits in a dark green upholstered chair that is also edged in gold. Behind the figure, there appears to be a paneling with vertical, cream colored strips decorating a blue-gray wall. The portrait is framed in an ornate gold frame that is carved and gilt and measures about a hands width all around.]

Wendy Red Star
Apsáalooke and American, born 1981
1880 Crow Peace delegation: Déaxitchish/Pretty Eagle and Bia Eélisaash/Large Stomach Woman (Pregnant Woman) aka Two Belly, 2014
Pigment-based inkjet print with hand coloring
Museum Purchase: Acquired with the assistance of The Ford Family Foundation and the Native American Art and Photography Funds, 2015.104.1f,h

Red Star’s reinterpretation of the well-known photographs by white photographer Charles Bell, made during the Peace Delegation of 1880 to Washington, DC, places the artist in the position of power. Her interpretation of the photographs through handwritten text humanizes the formerly static portrayal of the delegation through gentle, ironic humor and personal information about each sitter.

Julia Dolan

[Artwork Description] This is a grouping of four historical photographic inkjet portraits in grey tones with hand-written annotations by the artist in red ink. The top two pictures are slightly different views of Déaxitchish (aka ”Pretty Eagle”), an older Native American chief in regalia, shown seated from the head to just below the knees. In the left-hand photograph he is turned slightly to the left in semi-profile, while on the right-hand side he is facing straight on. From his lightly lined forehead, his hair rises up in a crown-like pompadour with a single eagle feather perched atop and leaning toward the left. Braids extend on either side of this pompadour with the braid on the left side fully visible and adorned with three spaced out bands. The braid on the right side is in shadow and the end is more splayed out. His neck is encircled with a multistrand beaded necklace. His jacket is adorned with ermine tails that trail down from just below the shoulder to the bottom of the frame on the left side. A knubby blanket covers much of his body, extending from mid-torso to folds at the waist that continue over his knees. His left arm is crossed over the right with his hands clasped, one on top of the other. His right hand holds an ax, ornamented with shells and beads, that is laying on his lap. Slightly visible on the far-left margin of the photo is the top of his chair, which appears to be velvet with an ornate, curved wooden frame that ends in a scroll  with a wooden tassel decoration. A few inches of the carved chair frame peeks out from the ermine tails that dangle from the sleeve of the figure’s jacket. The artist has outlined the figure in red, including the hair, face, body, clothing edges and folds, ermine tails, and ax. Each bead in the necklace has also been outlined. Other details have been drawn in, such as brass rings on the figure’s fingers and two conch shell earrings. There are numerous personal comments added in red printed handwriting: some are descriptive (“Ermine”; “This strap holds my hair extension”), while others are personal information (“19 wives”; “Pigeon clan father to Wendy Red Star”). Some imagined interior thoughts are also added, such as “I am not a fan of the white man.” Additionally, there are annotations that provide historical context about the meeting between the Crow chiefs, their wives, and representatives of the U.S. government.

In the companion photo on the right side, the figure’s face is more full frontal and there is the same red outlining. Several of the same annotations label parts of the photograph and additions (e.g., brass rings, ermine, conch shells), while other comments reflect interior thoughts and personal history: “ I use an ax in war” and “My Daddy was sold to a collector for $500 and kept for 72 years at the American Museum of Natural History”).

The two lower photos are two views of the chief’s wife, Bia Eélisaash (aka “Two Belly”), with the images also cropped to show the figure from the waist up. As with the chief’s portrait, the figure is seen against a flat grey background. The photograph on the left side has the head positioned about five inches from the top of the frame and is in profile, while the image on the right is full frontal and has less red outlining. The picture on the left has very little annotation: the artist points out a scar on the woman’s left lower jaw and adds her Native name, Bia Eélisaash, along with Black Lodge, the tribal name for River Crow. She has a round face, heavily lidded eyes, and long straight hair. She is wearing an elaborately decorated jacket with an applique floral pattern on the front, ermine tails trailing from the left shoulder down her arm to above her elbow, and otter fur cuffs and collar. Her left arm is folded at the elbow with only part of her hand seen. A woven blanket with two fancy border designs is partially visible, covering the back of the chair. An image of a piece of broad white tape with a jagged edge on the right is positioned on the bottom left of the photograph with a second piece of tape on the right side, extending from the figure’s upper chest off to the frame and covering what looks like a black fingerprint.

On the right-hand side photo, the figure is turned more toward the viewer. Again, her scar is circled and labelled in red ink and her hair is seen parted in the middle, slightly off center, and flowing down her back. Both of the figure’s arms are folded with the right arm trailing off the frame and part of the left hand (thumb only) shown. As compared to the companion photo, more of her elaborately decorated jacket is visible with two pairs of double buttons, joined by a strap, fastening the front of the garment. The artist’s annotation notes, “My jacket was popular amongst the River Crow in the 1879s” and “This jacket is inspired by European jackets worn by military men.” Also in red ink is the comment, “I can kick your ass with these eyes.” The artist notes that the woman, wife of Chief Pretty Eagle, was 6’4” tall, adding ”Eloise Plenty Hoops and John Adams are my descendants. My descendants are tall.”]

Bruce Davidson
American, born 1933
Untitled, fron the series Cafeteria, 1973
gelatin silver print
Gift of an anonymous donor, 2018.75.317

[Artwork Description] This black and white horizontal photograph shows a narrow view of a cafeteria and its patrons, who are seated toward the right side of the frame. A portion of the glass-fronted, metal-framed food cases and tray rail are visible on the far left with some patrons carrying plates from the food area to their tables on the right. The composition is dominated by a seated older man in the front left of the frame, who occupies about three-quarters of the frame. The very top of his head is cropped off but portions of his black brimmed hat are shown. His lined, gaunt face is triangular shaped because of the angle of the hat and the high rise of his dark coat that covers most of his neck. His eyes are deep set and appear weary with one eyebrow raised on the left. His nose and large right ear are prominent with a little bit of his white hair jutting out from his hat, just above the top of his ear. He has thin, downturned lips and sunken cheeks with a light stubble. His face is in sharp contrast to the black coat buttoned to the neck that reads as a large dark shape. His right arm is crooked at the elbow and is clutching a package wrapped in a paper bag that rests on his folded arm. His hand holds a dollar bill, a piece of paper that could be a train timetable, and billfold that’s only partly visible. Centered on the table in front of him, which trails off the frame, is a plate with a soft, knotted roll and pats of butter alongside, along with a glass of water with just an inch or so of liquid in it.

Directly over the right shoulder of the main figure is a woman in a knitted hat who we see in two-thirds profile, turned to the left. Her plaid coat hangs above her to the side, against a wood-paneled wall. Behind the central figure we see other patrons, including the back and part of the face of a man directly behind him who is also wearing a similar hat and dark jacket. He is eating with another man who is also wearing a homburg-type hat and glasses. A light-haired woman turned to the right is glimpsed at the table behind them, accompanied by another woman. Other diners at tables stretch in a long view toward the back of the room. On the wall above the patrons is a line of framed pictures. A long bar extends from behind the main diner and goes off frame. There is a strong pattern of square floor tiles, mostly a solid light color mixed with some mottled ones. The tiles march the length of the picture providing a forced perspective. Round globe lights are in a line above the food cases and then are spaced more randomly in the central space between the food counters and seating area, with small recessed lights above the tables.]

Beth Van Hoesen
American, 1926-2010
Checkered Suit, 1968/70
Etching and drypoint with roulette on white paper
Gift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Adams Trust, 2007.60.393

The artist’s husband, Mark Adams, was the sitter for this portrait, but the true subject may be the act of posing itself. In a series of drawings and prints spanning several years, Van Hoesen captured Adams in his checkered suit. The set of his mouth and stiffness of his postures suggest that he has grown weary of posint. The evident sensitivity and the gentle humor point to the long and intimate relationship between artist and sitter.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Description:  A vertical portrait roughly two feet high by 18 inches wide of a seated man in a bold red and black checked suit shown from the knees up.  The man sits facing the viewer, seeming to look beyond us with pale blue eyes. The “buffalo plaid” suit with its large chunky blocks of black and red squares, is worn with a white shirt and a long black tie. His hands rest on his thighs, with his right hand lying flat on his leg and the fingers of the left hand curled under. The slightly hairy hands bear a plain band on the left ring finger. The figure has short dark hair, dark eyebrows, a closely trimmed dark beard and mustache. Ears protrude slightly near graying hair at the sides of the head. The figure’s details appear drawn rather than painted with cross hatching delineating the plaid and the tie. The background is white and bare. A simple, narrow dark frame surrounds the portrait. The artist has noted the work’s title and number at bottom next to her signature.]

Seymour Joseph Guy
(American, born England, 1824–1910)
Adèle de la Lanceau, 1861
Oil on canvas
Gift of Diana Harris and Gary Piercy, 2012.156.1

[Artwork Description: This oversized painting of a little girl and her dog stands five feet tall and four feet wide. It captures the moment just before the girl throws her dog’s toy. The light skinned girl stands poised at left with her right arm raised holding the black and orange ball while with her other hand she holds her anxious dog back. She wears a white, knee length dress with a full skirt that stands away from her body like a bell. The top of the dress is delicate and lacy with ruffles and off the shoulder short sleeves. A wide pale blue sash is tied in a bow at her waist and accented with a pink flower. The girl’s light brown hair is parted in the middle with ringlets falling to her shoulders. Her expression is serious and her blue eyes wide. The large dog stands next to her at right, its head almost as tall as the girl’s shoulder. The dog has shaggy black fur with white paws and a white patch on its chest. Its head is turned toward the girl, as it eyes the toy, its mouth open as if panting. The pair are posed outdoors, with vegetation rising up the hill behind them. Behind the dog at right, tree trunk sprouts from a small, rocky bluff. At top left, a white house with a red roof sits on a hill overlooking the scene. The painting has a gold gilt frame.]

Environments

Artists immerse us in a sense of place. Some investigate time and space in the natural world, and how humans record its passing. Some contemplate the world around us by its borders, or by imagining what the horizon might hold. Other artists evoke the wonder of nature through close observation or expressing the feeling of a particular locale. Their work asks us to consider ourselves and our environment from different perspectives. What does it mean to interact with, and be a part of—but sometimes apart from—the world around us?

Francesco Fidanza
(Italian, 1747–1819)
Vesuvius Erupting at Night, ca. 1790
Oil on canvas
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the European and American Art Council, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Pritzker, and Shawn and Lisa Magnum; presented at the 2013 New for the Wall, 2013.86.1

The Bay of Naples became a major tourist destination in the eighteenth century because Vesuvius was in the midst of a prolonged period of volcanic activity. Paintings of eruptions were usually set at night to contrast the dramatic pyrotechnics of untamed nature with the cool serenity and constancy of the moon. Fidanza’s view reflects contemporary tastes for the “sublime,” a term then applied to natural forces of such awesome power that they instill pleasurable horror in viewers.

Dawson Carr, former curator of European Art

[Artwork Description: This painting is a little under two feet wide and just over one foot high. It depicts the dramatic moment a volcano erupts by moonlight beside a large body of water. The upper two thirds of the work is devoted to the volcano and the night sky. Vesuvius sits at middle left spewing orange fire upwards. Smoke billows in all directions, drifting across the sky to the right. The eruption near the mouth of the volcano is bright and almost white, indicating high temperatures. It seems to cast the plumes of smoke in light and shadow. The smoke dissipates towards the upper edges of the painting revealing dark blue sky. At far right middle, the full moon glows silver between parted clouds. It is contrasted by stone ramparts on the right edge that stand in the shadows. The bottom third of the work  depicts the smooth body of water, a tall ship in the middle distance and another boat with spectators watching the eruption. At far left middle, a ship with tall masts and rigging is pictured on the water with the mountain erupting behind it in the distance. The volcano is so bright it throws the ship into silhouette. Light bounces off the light-colored sails that are furled tightly away. Orange-yellow light is reflected on the water where several small boats and their crews appear to take in the spectacle. In the foreground center, another smaller boat holding half a dozen figures also has its sails furled. The long yardarm that crosses the vertical mast seems to point to the volcano. On the rocky shore by the boat three figures seem to confer and point the phenomenon. They are dressed in draped robes with elaborate turbans. They are bathed in the glow of the moon and volcano.]

Childe Hassam
(American, 1859–1935)
Mount Hood, 1908
Oil on canvas
Gift of Henry Failing Cabell, 53.22

Hassam is best known for his New England scenes, but his depictions of Oregon from his visits in 1904 and 1908 equally capture a breadth of place. This painting reflects the artist’s quick and seemingly effortless execution. Patron and fellow painter Charles Erskine Scott Wood said of Hassam: “His landscapes, even the largest, are painted in one ‘go’—say from two to five hours with possibly some reconsideration or additional touches next day; but essentially the picture is done at once.”

Grace Kook-Anderson

Kari Morgan
(Nisga’a and Canadian, born 1989)
Aks (Water), 2021
Acrylic on birch
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by Mary Sayler, 2022.16.1

This is one of four paintings representing natural elements, including fire, earth and sky. Morgan expresses the fluid forms of water utilizing the Northwest Coast formline design tradition. Her depiction represents water not as calm and passive, but as an active force, calling to mind destructive waves or tsunamis. The swirl of blue tones seems to be barely contained within the square field of the wood panel ground, embodying the energy and might of the ocean.

Kathleen Ash-Milby

[Artwork Description: This work measures a little over three feet square and under two inches thick. It uses two tones of blue to illustrate the movement of water. The base of the work is a light, natural wood color with undulating wood grain visible. A pale cool blue color contrasts with a deep ocean blue. Graphic formline shapes like a U, an S, and an ovoid, an oval shape with one long flat side, join together to create wave-like patterns that swirl and swell. The design loosely resembles a bird – body extending from the bottom left corner with a beak-like shape touching the right edge. Swirled wings extend to the top and bottom. The shapes merge to make a series of wave shapes that seem to curl over each other and cover most of the work’s surface. The upper right corner remains free of the swirling shapes.]

Beauford Delaney
(American, 1901–1979)
Twilight Street, 1946
Oil and mixed media on Masonite
Gift of Martha Ullman West in memory of Allen Ullman, 2021.51.1

Delaney frequently painted his Greenwich Village neighborhood in New York, often depicting the same streetlamp, manhole cover, and corner building. He applied his bright paint thickly with short, repetitive brushstrokes in a way that captures radiating energy in the city. Delaney was part of a tight knit, inclusive community of artists. The original owner of this work, painter Allen Ullman, was his close friend.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This street scene is roughly two feet high by three feet wide and features thickly applied paint creating a highly textured surface.  In the middle ground, the scene depicts two buildings, side by side. One is low and long with a putty-colored exterior with orange trim and a decorative cornice with a round ornament at the roofline’s center. The other building is tall and narrow. It’s olive green with a red band running across the top. Three dark windows appear below the band. A large putty colored window and door are at street level. The side of the tall building is in view and is a solid dark brown shape like a set of three stairs leading downward. A sidewalk runs around the two sides of the building. The pavement is creamy white, and wheat colored with a black traffic light and small red shape that may be a fire plug or another traffic signal situated at left. On the far right in the foreground is a large traffic light. It’s an old-fashioned post style light in dark brown with red accents. A greenish halo appears to surround the upper part of the signal post. The street between the buildings and the traffic light resembles a pastel patchwork of squares in pink, blue, brick red and turquoise. A round circle evoking a gray-green manhole cover is at lower center. A smaller traffic signpost in deep red is located on the left in the foreground.  The sky above undulates and swirls with clouds in purple, green, deep blue and cream. A small crescent moon is at the top right. This scene’s details have a cartoon quality, like they are two dimensional props. The thickly applied paint creates peaks and valleys adding a surreal feeling. The work’s frame is a simple, matte gray wood.]

Joe Feddersen
Colville and American, born 1953
Blue Horizon,  from the series Rainscape, 1984
Color lithographs on paper: diptych
Gift of Kay WalkingStick, 2003.63a.b

Feddersen’s Rainscape series depicts teh skies in different seasons, times of day, and moods. Blue Horizon feels like the perfect embodiment of the weather in the Pacific Nortwhest. It captures the opulent layers of the dawn sky as indirect sunlight scatters the soft hues to delicate blues, peach adn lavender. Rain appears as diagonal lines crossing the sky, picking up colors from the atmosphere. It particularly feels like spring showers as sthe nurturing rain offers neewal adn growth.

Grace Kook-Anderson

[Artwork Description: The lithograph is 43 9/16 inches tall and 32 ⅞ inches wide. It seems to be organized in five horizontal stripes. The top has a background of sky blue with splotches of lilac and golden brown over it in a random pattern. The second stripe has mostly golden brown splotches over the blue. A few patches of darker brown extend from the middle to the left and peek out from the right side of the frame. Next is a strip with blurred white on top and a pastel blue on the bottom. Below it the blue fades into white then into lilac. More dark brown splotches and purple splotches extend up from the bottom of the frame. Thin long white lines flow from the top of the frame to to the bottom with a slight diagonal angle. The white is more stark  near the top and more blended and soft near the bottom. A few pinkish lines fall along the white lines. The litopgraph is mounted in a thin dark metal frame with a beveled white mat.]

Claude Monet
(French, 1840–1926)
River at Lavacourt, 1879
Oil on canvas
Bequest of Charles Francis Adams, 43.8.33

The river Seine was one of Monet’s frequent subjects. Here, the artist pictures the river’s bending path at the village of Lavacourt, directly across the river from Vétheuil, where he lived for three years. Monet’s home was only yards from the river’s shore, allowing him to study and paint this rural scene in many weather conditions. Here cool hues capture water, sky, and hillsides, while warmer tones of brown, red, and yellow distinguish the buildings.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This landscape painting is just over two feet wide and just under two feet high. It depicts a river scene with a small boat docked near a row of two- and three-story buildings. The river takes up much of the lower third of the work with the water portrayed in pale grays, and blues, putty and touches of pale mustard.  In the center, stand a row of brownish trees with upward reaching, bare branches. The tree closest to the viewer is the tallest with the trees shrinking in size as they recede down the waterfront. Docked near the first tree, is a long, black and gray barge-like boat. It appears to be open topped and perhaps contains a figure. On the far right, the row of buildings also recedes like the trees. They vary in size and detail but all appear weathered in colors of a putty and gray with numerous windows and hints of blue shutters. At middle left, blue hills sit at a distance while the vague shape of a larger ship appears to move along the river. The upper two thirds of the work is composed of a pale blue sky filled with cream clouds. Impressionistic brushwork is evident, showing several colors dabbed and blended together to create the shapes and details of the scene  as well giving the work overall blue hue.]

Amanda Snyder
(American, 1894–1980)
The Forest in Autumn, ca. 1970
Oil on wood
Gift of Blount International, Inc., 2012.112.27

Inspired by her immediate surroundings, Snyder often chose representations of birds, flowers, landscapes, people, and interiors as her subjects. This is a less common and abstract representation where the colors of the season are not reflected in the leaves, but more through the density of the tree trunks. Painted in Snyder’s more typical muted palette of gray-blues, cool reds, and earthy yellows, the work has the sense of a greater landscape beyond the dense forest in the foreground.

Grace Kook-Anderson

[Artwork Description: This abstract painting is about three feet tall and over four feet wide. It depicts a series of slender vertical stripes of varying widths that fill the width of the work. Rusty browns, reds, purples, yellow, orange and deep dusty blue intermingle with dark narrower stripes of brown and black. The stripes vary in hues and are interspersed with irregularly spaced horizontal dashes. This combination suggests a close-up view of very narrow tree trunks, reminiscent of birch trees forming a solid mass. Viewed from a distance, a bold red stripe appears off center at left amid mainly bluish gray stripes. The narrow dark metal frame is almost invisible.]

Zhang Hongtu
(Chinese, active United States, born 1943)
After Shitao’s Landscape Album: Shitao—Van Gogh, from the series Ongoing Shan Shui, 2002
Oil on canvas
Gift of Judith B. Anderson, 2017.31.1

Zhang’s Ongoing Shan Shui series explores the categories of “East” and “West,” reflecting his own life lived in two cultures. Here, he reimagines an album leaf by the great seventeenth-century artist Shitao in the manner of Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh. From the Chinese precedent—a small work in ink on paper—the bright colors and swirling brushwork of the Dutch artist transform the composition into something totally new.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: This large painting is four feet tall and three feet wide. It portrays a landscape with soaring cliffs, spiky distant mountains and a small body of water near a walled house.  Tall gray green cliffs appear at right and left, flanking a small white house built with a low wall around it in the center. The cliffs on the left are so tall they disappear into overhead clouds. Two masses of green vegetation jut from the bottom edge and frame the house just off center. A small body of water also appears at the bottom edge. It is painted in blue and white which resembles sunlight bouncing off its surface.   In front of the house outside the low wall, stands a tree almost bare of its leaves on a bit of golden-brown ground. The middle background is devoted to steep mountains in blues, greens, and creams. The upper half of the work is the sky across which roll billowy clouds in white, pale blue, and pink. The setting is the traditional Chinese countryside, but the style of painting is pure Van Gogh.  Paint has been applied thickly and boldly using broad brushstrokes creating lush texture. Layers of paint are used to create color, shade and depth. Across the top of the painting is a band of Chinese characters along with chop marks in red. Two rows of characters appear at left, written vertically down the side of the work.]

Hoshino Satoru
(Japanese, born 1945)
Spring Snow No. 12, 2007
Stoneware with white and copper blue glazes
Gift of a private donor, 2013.8.53

Hoshino describes his collaborative relationship with clay as a dialogue with nature. Inside and out, this vessel drips brilliant blue and sharp white pools of glaze from each finger-pressed hollow—like ice and water melting atop moss-covered rocks. The inspiration came during a hike with his wife Kayoko, also a ceramist, when they encountered a pristine field of snow melting below a clear blue sky.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: This sculpture stands a little under two feet high and measures just under a foot across at its widest.  It has an irregular, conical shape that starts narrower at an unglazed base and widens, tier by tier, towards its top. Deep indentations the size of fingers cover its surface as the tiers spiral upwards.  Deep mossy green glaze is combined with milky white glaze that drips down the sculpture while pooling in the indentations. Its organic shape shifts, seemingly leaning, jutting and retracting depending on from which angle it is viewed.]

Akio Takamori
(Japanese and American, 1950–2017)
Twin Mountain, 2015
Stoneware with underglazing
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by Barbara Christy Wagner, 2016.41.1

Takamori has been known to create life-size human figures from his own imagination and memories. Though a departure from the human form, Twin Mountain is part of a body of work that looks at mountainscapes inspired by classical traditions such as Japanese ukiyo-e prints, meaning “pictures of the floating world.” Similar to Takamori’s tender and rounded human figures, these landscapes and clouds that sit above the mountaintop are captured in a three-dimensional space, scaled down to an embraceable proportion.

Grace Kook-Anderson

[Artwork Description: This small sculpture depicting mountains is about 20 inches high and a bit over a foot and a half wide. The two steeply peaked mountains are connected at their bases and are painted with a variety of hills in green, greenish gold, smokey blue, all outlined in brown. Portions of the sculpture are white, especially nestled in the area between the two mountains suggesting snow or mist. The peaks are topped with rounded clouds in off-white. The overall shape of the sculpture resembles two upside down ice cream cones with scoops of ice cream stuck on the pointed ends. The sculpture has an unglazed, matte finish and its shape undulates on all sides creating an irregular footprint.]

Expect the Unexpected

When visitors arrive at our doors, they often expect to see paintings and sculptures made using conventional materials like oil paints and marble. But isn’t it a delight to find that artists do not confine themselves to these expectations? How can an artist’s choice of materials alone unsettle how we perceive their work, and by extension, their subjects differently? In this section artists challenge us to see things differently, including using everyday materials or using conventional materials in innovative ways.

Wally Dion
(Yellow Quill First Nation/Salteaux and Canadian, born 1976)
Green Star Quilt, 2019
Circuit boards, brass wire, copper tube
Museum Purchase: Funds provided in memory of Brian Gross, 2020.1.1

The star pattern in this work is evocative of the quilting traditions of many Native communities in the United States and Canada, but it is constructed with repurposed computer circuit boards. Each piece is stitched together with wire instead of thread. The resulting sculptural work plays with our expectations: soft, comforting cloth has been replaced with rigid material and the surface is visually complex with a multitude of mechanical, sharp protrusions.

Kathleen Ash-Milby

[Artwork Description:  A large, almost square work is composed of circuit boards in various shades of green pieced together like a quilt and connected with brass wire. It is about six feet hight by five and a half feet wide. At center, the circuit boards have been cut into diamond shapes and pieced to form an eight-pointed star. Further diamond shapes surround this star and radiate outward until they create a large star that almost fills the entire work. A thin gold line encompasses the large star forming a square. A border of more circuit boards completes the work. Many shades of green make up the different boards and they are heavily textured with silver and brass colored workings. Small silver balls in rows or patterns dominate the boards along with other metallic geometric shapes. Etched lines in patterns feature in most of the green boards.]

Robert Rauschenberg
American, 1925-2008
Tampa 3, 1972
Lithograph, collage, and graphite on paper
Gift of Paul and Linda Clinton, 81.9.1

[Artwork Description: This lithograph is 42 ⅝ inches high and 47 inches wide. A brown background extends behind two objects. On the left is a paper bag with a jagged edge on top. Near the top right is a blue line with 1900 in the center. A couple inches from the top are blue capital letters reading “do not fill above here”. The bag is flattened and the bottom of the bag is folded up at the bottom. To the right is an imprint of the bag. The graphite appears irregularly, some areas with more thick coverage thgan others. A strip down the middle is less colored than the sides. Strokes extend in different directions. The fold at the bottom of the bag extinuates the dark hue. At the bottom of the work, handwritten words are illegible with the number 72 at the end. It is framed in a flat, thin black shadowbox with a white background.]

Analia Saban
(Argentine American, born 1980)
GRACIAS GRACIAS GRACIAS THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU Have a Nice Day Plastic Bag, 2016
Mixografia ® print on handmade paper
Museum Purchase: Funds Provided by the Graphic Arts Council, 2023.26.1

In 2016, Saban produced a series of sculptural prints in the shape of plastic bags. These trompe l’oeil objects are, in fact, formed from handmade paper.

The subject of the artist’s work can be interrogated as part of the consumerism of contemporary America, in terms of environmental sustainability, or enjoyed as playful prints that monumentalize ordinary objects. Their cheery platitudes of gratitude remind us of the social niceties that facilitate daily life in a fast-paced and often anonymous city setting.

Mary Weaver Chapin


[Artwork Description: This print depicts a two handled plastic bag commonly used at stores. The paper takes on the shape of a wrinkled, well used plastic shopping bag, rising off the rough-edged paper creating a three-dimensional work. The white bag has a large yellow smiley face emblem: A yellow circle with black and white oval eyes with a broad smile made from a single line. The face is also outlined in black. Text below the face reads “Have a nice day” and follows the curve of the face. Directly beneath that it reads: “Thank you”. Smaller text in black below that reads: “Please recycle this bag”.  Even smaller appears below that and includes safety warnings, recycling, and trademark emblems. The print has considerable volume and resembles plastic more than the paper it is printed with.]

Sean Healy
(American, born 1971)
Egghead, 2006
Resin cast chewing gum on wood table
Gift of the artist and Elizabeth Leach Gallery in honor of Glenda Goldwater, 2015.70.1a,b

Healy explores social power structures using such disparate materials as chewing gum, resin, cigarette butts, and sliding glass doors. His process-oriented installation work is influenced by pop culture and the urban environment. Egghead is made from a repurposed school library table. The bottom of the table has permanently placed anchors that hold the “cameo,” a portrait of Melville Dewey, inventor of the decimal system used to classify books and other publications. The portrait, constructed from over fifty pieces of gum chewed by Healy and his son, is stuck under the table in a nod to youthful defiance.

Mike Starn and Doug Stam
American, born, 1961
Rose, 1982/1991
Gelatin silver print, cellophane tape, and pushpins on panel
Museum Purchase: Photography Acquisition Fund, 2003.28

[Artwork Description: This work is 11 ½ inches tall and 9 ¾ inches wide. It has a saturated sepia tone that makes it difficult to decipher the background from the rose. The print seems to have been folded, torn, and marked up. It is attached to the dark wooden frame by four silver push pins. It appears to have four distinct horizontal sections, marked by three lines of cellophane tape. The tape is uneven and has also been folded, creased, and marked up. The rose has a tight center with outer petals that unfold more loosely. The curves in the folded paper make the light reflect differently in different portions of the photo and give it a weathered, heirloom appearance.]

Christopher Russell
American, born 1974
Ghost Ship Wreck (1), 2010
Pigment print
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Mark and Hilarie Moore Family Trust in memory of Timothy A. Fallon, 2015.44.2

[Artwork Description: This print is 25 ⅛ inches tall and 37 ⅛ inches wide. The background is composed of a gray ocean with small ripples. Areas of lighter reflection are mixed between darker, duller, areas. White images of shipwrecks are layered over the ocean waves. In the center a large ship with a tall mast leans drastically to the right as if it has just been capsized. The standing rigging stretches to the top of the mast, with some of the lines appearing to have snapped. The bottom is blurred into the background with a white and gray haze covering a large portion of the ship. Below it to the right is the mast of a smaller ship, also in disarray. Ten solid white irregular shapes appear over the ship. Some are squarish while others more closely resemble triangles. One in the middle is a thin vertical line that comes to a sharp point at the top. To the right is another mast with standing rigging stretching downward. A large horizontal beam seems to ground the other chaotic lines. Above it is another image of a downed mass, a solid vertical line with waves on the left with thinner lines, some in a vertical grid and some running diagonally upward towards the right corner of the work. To the left of the center is yet another mast with layers of the thin white lines. Some run up and down while others are horizontal and a flow downward diagonally from the top left corner. Small white specks cover the print, resembling sea foam blowing in a storm. The print is framed in a flat black frame without a mat.]

Grace Kook-Anderson
Vik Muniz
Brazilian, born 1961
Rouen Cathedral (Observation and Reflection, Claude Monet, Joel Isaacson) Rouen Cathedral and the Tour d’Ablane, Early Morning, 1894, Repro, 2016
Chromogenic print
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Contemporary Collectors Circle, 2016.86.3

To his surprise, Muniz discovered that across five different books the same exact painting of the Rouen Cathedral by Claude Monet appeared wildly different: black-and-white in one, too purple in another, and so on. Wondering about the veracity of reproductions, Muniz set about to make his own version of the painting. On the surface, his photograph seems filled with impressionist brushstrokes in honor of Monet’s style. Lean in closely to discover the many images cut from magazines, catalogs, and art books that animate the surface.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This image of the Rouen Cathedral façade and Albane Tower is six feet tall and four feet wide. Small pieces of ephemera are collaged together to create the Cathedral’s façade, rose window, the oversized portal and the even taller tower next to it. When viewed from a distance the collage pieces create a soft, hazy view of the landmarks in blues, purples and beige.  Up close, hundreds of tiny pieces of ephemera reveal themselves to contain a variety of subject matter. Among those depicted are faces, legs, arms, hands, torsos, doves, rabbits, horses, fruits, saints, popes, nudes and birds. These are portrayed in an array of ways including drawings, etchings, photographs. Using the varying hues and shades of the ephemera, an impression of the famous cathedral and tower are created. It has a simple black frame.]

Dinh Q. Lê
(American, born Vietnam, 1968)
Buddhas at Angkor Temple, 1996
Woven chromogenic prints and linen tape on board
The Carol and Seymour Haber Collection, 2018.51.1

Lê’s woven photographs explore the complexities of war, borders, remembrance, and representation. The artist was a child when his family was displaced by war between Vietnam and Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge regime. This weaving juxtaposes relief carvings at Angkor Wat with the portrait of a prisoner held at a Khmer Rouge facility. Physically plaiting together the two images, Lê symbolically joins the Buddhist figures and prisoner, but blurs the images of both—neither can be seen clearly, but are held forever in a state of suspended dissolution.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: Woven chromogenic print that is taped to a board. 45 inches tall by 30 inches wide. Multiple images are imposed over each other with a face somewhat visible in the top third. The background is composed of brown sandstone like carvings. The background along the bottom has rust colored splotches and 90 appears in black numbers on gray background in the lower third. White rectangles are cut out in repeating geometric patterns where there is a blank space in the middle revealing the background with two white rectangles above and two to the side. This pattern repeats every few inches. The middle of the painting along the figure’s face has smaller squares cut out in a varying patterns. They reveal varying shades of gray. The lower third has more of the squares cut out revealing black behind them. The image with the cut away shapes gives the impression of a magic eye poster with a slightly dizzying effect. The print is framed in a shadow box with a white border and light wood frame.]

Shan Goshorn
(Cherokee Nation and American, 1957–2018)
Oklahoma Indians, 2015; Unhinged, 2015; Moise, 2015
Paper basket, Arches watercolor paper, pigment printer ink, acrylic
Gift of Charles Froelick, 2021.1.1-3

These baskets represent Goshorn’s work at the height of her career, when she began using the basketry format, especially the rare Cherokee double-weave technique. They incorporate reproductions of historical portraits and important documents. Moise is part of a series based on the artist’s archival research, including studio portraits by Frank Rinehart, taken at the 1898 Indian Congress in Omaha, Nebraska, including Salish (Flathead) delegate Chief Antoine Moise (ca. 1850–1918). Goshorn described these as “unique in that they are a ‘non-exotifying’ collection, simply recording the participants as they were without the glamor of special backgrounds or added props.” The interior adds the translated text of a Cherokee memorial song, including the words, “We remember your sacrifices. You will not be forgotten.” The words and images honor her ancestors, both as individuals and carriers of tradition.
Kathleen Ash-Milby
[Artwork Description: This basket is 9 11/16 inches high and 5 1/16 wide and 4 inches deep. It is a tall cylinder. Each woven strip is thin and long. The top and bottom thirds are woven with strips that are white with black illegible cursive on them. The center strips are compose a photo with about twenty-five Native individuals posing for the photo. The image is too blurry to see details, but outlines of each body can be seen. They wear a variety of clothes in white, black, green, yellow, and burgandy. Some are wearing feathered headdresses. Others have plain hair that is braided. It appears that those in the back row are standing, leaning against a wall. Those in the front are seated. The top of the basket has a thin burgundy edge with vertical stitches of orange twine attaching it to the basket. Inside, the top of the basket has cream, green, and black pattners which are just barely visible.]

Rudolf Stingel
(Italian, born 1956)
Untitled, 1998
Aluminum
Gift of a private donor, 2013.8.168

Stingel has been called “one of the greatest anti-painting painters.” Say what? Over his career, he has been a controversial figure whose “paintings” have consisted of strange materials like orange carpet or Styrofoam panels covered in Mylar. He jabs at the belief that painting is a rarefied pursuit with great intrinsic value. He made this work from a Styrofoam block, cast in aluminum to preserve the gouges that take the place of brushstrokes.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: Aluminum painting 29 ½ inches tall by 23 ½ inches wide. This monotone gray painting could also be categorized as a sculpture. The thick textured strokes jut out at different lengths forming jagged ledges. They are positioned at different angles and depths. The work has a natural essence of wind and water battered stone or disturbed freshly poured concrete. Each broader stroke consists of several tiny vertical lines and layers of sand like clumps. The work is light from above, casting shadows under the longer ledges. It is anchored to the gray wall with two small metal metal brackets, one at top and one at bottom.]

John Livingston
(Canadian and adopted Kwakwaka’wakw, born 1951)
Queen and Maple Leaf Copper, 2013
Canadian copper pennies and steel
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by Barbara Christy Wagner, 2013.101.3

Livingston’s sculptural work riffs on the shape of the “copper,” created with the rare and valuable material in the shape of a shield as a demonstration of wealth by Pacific Northwest coastal tribes such as the Tlingit and Kwakwaka’wakw. The artist has used the least valuable form of currency in contemporary Canadian society, the copper penny, as a critique of colonial culture’s values.

Kathleen Ash-Milby

[Artwork Description: Composed of 1000+ Canadian copper pennies which have been soldered together as a mostly flat surface, the shield is approximately 30” tall and 18” wide. The pennies are arranged with each row offset to fit between the ones above it, creating a “pennny-tile” pattern. The upper half widens to the shoulder area at the top and gently bulges out in the chest area about an inch or so from the background. Midway down is a raised horizontal ridge in an inverted V shape the height of two pennies that would seem to represent a belt, as well as a vertical ridge of the same height dissecting the lower portion from the belt to the bottom. The shield is displayed on a flat panel that leans to the back in an acrylic case on a waist-high pedestal.]

Liz Rideal
British, born 1954
Swiss Chard, 2000
Chromogenic prints mounted on board
Gift of the artist, Thomas P. Callan, and Martin H. McNamara, 2013.145.2

[Artwork Description] This square grid of photographs features two views of the bottom part of a Swiss chard plant, arranged with 16 rows of photographs down and 16 rows across. The vegetables are shown against a white background, with either the white stalks and thin brown spidery roots pointing downward or reversed, with the roots and stalks pointing upwards. There are three clumps, with the last plant having two stalks joined in a “Vee” shape to one root. A hint of the spiky green leaves can be seen attached to the white stalk. In the first vertical row, there are 4 plants hanging from the top of the frame, then 4 shown from the bottom up, with the next 4 repeating the first sequence and the last 4 in the second sequence. The second row reverses the order with the first 4 shown from the bottom up and the next 4 from the top, followed by a repeat of that sequence. The third, fourth, and sixth rows are identical to the first row, while the fifth and seventh rows repeat the second pattern (with the first and third group of four images shown from the bottom up and the second and fourth group of four images shown from the top down). The 8th vertical row has all the plants hanging from the top left side while the 9th row shows all of the plants positioned from the bottom up. The remaining seven rows continue variations of alternating groups of four images with either the bottom up or top down. There is a thin black border on the left and right edge of the squares while the top and bottom edge of the squares has a thin white border.

Teresa Christiansen
American, born 1978
Shadowed Disconnection, 2016
Pigment print
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Northwest Art Purchase Fund, 2016.129.1

[Artwork Description: This square photograph is printed in such a way that it appears 3-D in places. It depicts a forest scene of dense foliage with green dominating while glimpses of a deep bluish-lavender sky peek through the branches. The boughs of fir trees go left to right across the frame. While the top of the photograph is mostly heavy green canopy that reads like a solid mass, about one-third of the way down there is a brown branch encrusted with moss that protrudes from the right side of the frame. Two-thirds of the way from the top of the frame there is a thin branch that goes almost totally across the width of the photograph from left to right, stopping just short of the right side of the frame. The bottom third of the image features the short end of a branch hanging down from the left side towards the bottom of the frame and below that a brown branch sticks out. Layered behind the green branches there are some dark, brownish boughs that are in shadow.]

Teresa Christiansen
American, born 1978
Dissolving Terrain, 2016
Pigment print
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Northwest Art Purchase Fund, 2016.129.2

[Artwork Description: This tall rectangular landscape photo is printed in such a way that it appears 3-D in places. There is a mass of dark green and grey mottled fir trees in the far background. In front of the trees is a heavily textured rock face with brown, white, and grey mottled tones and brighter, lighter terracotta colored stone on the left side. Eight vertical undulating ledges of stone of various widths stick out from the surface in a 3-D effect. Some of these “pillars” are thicker at the bottom while others are thicker at the top and taper down. The fourth pillar is the largest and of more uniform width. Sprouting out of the stone in various places are dense patches of yellow wildflowers with feathery green foliage.]

Gianmaria Buccellati
(Italian, 1929–2015)
Boar, last half of 20th century
Sterling silver
The Carol and Seymour Haber Collection, 2008.82

[Artwork Description: The sculpture is approximately 12” in height and depicts a boar lying in a bed of silver oak leaves and acorns with its head lifted, eyes and snout pointed to the sky. The snout, tusk-like teeth, and hooves are all smoothly polished silver, with the rest of its body covered in realistic fine metallic strands of silver. The largish ears point horizontally towards its back, with smooth but gently-scored texture on the inside of each ear. Details on its skin is depicted through thousands of extremely fine strands of silver, with more coarse strands along the ridge of the back and below the jawlines. The boar’s mouth is in a closed position and its eyes are fixed in an upward gaze, suggesting a moment of contemplation. The sculpture is displayed in an acrylic cube about 30” wide mounted on a pedestal approximately 34” in height.]

Yanagihara Mutsuo
(Japanese, born 1934)
Mandolin, 1966
Stoneware with brown and yellow glaze
Museum Purchase: Caroline Ladd Pratt Fund, 68.23

Yanagihara probably created this work while he was teaching ceramics at Washington State University in the late 1960s. Around this time he considered abandoning ceramics for sculpture. Instead he developed a sculptural form of ceramics, producing boldly shaped and brightly colored functional and non-functional works. His ceramics are playful and humorous, often with a touch of anatomical suggestion and the funky personality of the West Coast ceramics scene he participated in as a young artist before returning to Japan.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: Stoneware sculpture shaped like a mandolin. From the side, the neck of the mandolin resembles a leg with a bent knee. The curves are fluid, but the texture is rough. The base opens into a large concave circle. Three yellow quarter inch thick lines run from the top to the bottom. A warm brown rust color covers the whole sculpture with distressed areas of darker brown and yellow sporadically around the front. The sides and back are much lighter with a tan yellow color emerging from beneath the rust color which seems to have worn off. There are bumps, lines, and pits throughout giving a rich texture. The glaze on the back shines brightly reflecting the track light above. The top edge has multiple dips with a thick coating of glaze. The sculpture is about 23 inches tall, 4 inches wide at the top, and 9 inches wide at the base. It is sitting on a white pedestal with glass around it. It is held up by two thin white metal supports on the back.]

Kondō Takahiro
(Japanese, born 1958)
Wave, 2022
Marbleized porcelain with “silver mist” overglaze and cast glass
Museum Purchase: Margery Hoffman Smith Fund, 2023.18.1a,b

From a distance, Kondō’s slab-built vessels mimic the fluidity of an ink painting, with marbleized layers of different colored clays swirling together. On closer inspection, the surface gleams with an extraordinary, incandescent metallic glaze, or what the artist calls “silver mist.” Composed of silver, gold, and platinum, once heated, the metals form spheres that shimmer like water droplets. Kondō’s work explores not merely the possibilities of clay, but “the concept of water emerging from fire.”

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: Large, angular porcelain sculpture that stands about 27 inches tall, with three 6 ½ inch wide sides. The top has a one inch tall shiny black protrusion that has marbleized silver throughout. The main portion has a cream base layer with marbleized black and gray lines and swirls that resemble smoke. On the surface are thousands of silver balls that resemble tiny shimmering bubbles. The bubbles continue around the sharp edges connecting the surface of each side. The sculpture is secured with two small white brackets that connect to the white pedestal and the sculpture is enclosed in a glass case.]

Sonya Clark
(American, born 1967)
Penny Loafers, 2010
Copper and pennies
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by Barbara Christy Wagner, 2017.76.1a,b

Shoes evoke movement, protection, style, and—for these penny loafers—the weight of history. By choosing hundreds of pennies to create this pair, Clark uses the presidential likeness on the coin to reflect on the actions and legacy of Abraham Lincoln. Some moments in Lincoln’s presidency brought celebration, others devastation. With this in mind, the lighthearted pun on a penny loafer gives way to deeper considerations of value and burden.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: Two pairs of loafers with the sides and tops made of about one hundred pennies and a solid copper sole with a slightly raised heel. A solid copper saddle across the top with a small slot where a penny would normally go. The shoes are about a foot long and just over an inch and a half tall. They are on a white pedestal covered with a glass case.]

Color

Whether painted, printed, glazed, sculpted, or woven, color plays a fundamental role in art across media and cultures. In this gallery, we explore the power of color to evoke mood, narrative, and illusion. The juxtaposition of complementary colors or the gradual transition of shades can add dimension and perspective to a two-dimensional surface. Color impacts how we experience a work of art: hot colors like red, orange, and yellow are stimulating, while cool tones like blue and green can be soothing. How does it feel when colors clash or are used in unconventional ways? Can we perceive colors with senses other than sight?

Severin Roesen
(German, active United States, ca. 1815–ca. 1872)
Still Life of Flowers and Fruit, 1870–1872
Oil on canvas
Gift of Mary and Pete Mark, 2005.20

In this lush still life, Roesen uses a rich variety of colorful flowers and fruits to suggest the abundance of nature: peonies, morning glories, lilies, primula, and iris are arranged in a glass bowl. The muted brown background and white marble edge let color take center stage.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Descriptions: This oil painting is about 49” tall by 38” wide. It is a vibrantly colored still life, framed by an ornate gold frame that protrudes out from the wall by about 4 ½”. It has ornate etchings of repeated patterns. The background is brown with the left side being slightly darker than the right. A white marble table with gray veins extends from the right side of the painting. A large blue wide vase sits in the middle holding a large bouquet of brightly colored flowers. The top left in the back is a stem of red flowers. Six fully opened blossoms hang from the green stem with thin yellow lines extending from the center. Fifteen unopened buds of various sizes surround the blossoms. Below multiple stems of much larger white lilies blossoms. The top three are partially open and the middle two are fully open. Two partially open blossoms duck beneath the front blooms. A single drop of water rests on the front lily. To the left, reddish orange bleeding hearts jut up then cascade down. The sparsely budded branch is more muted in color. Below it thin stalks of small blue flowers extend to the left. To the right, tulips of variegated pink and white and yellow and red frame the clump of lilies. Below is a variegated pink tulip with a small pink rosebud next to it. Below this are two closed white buds that resemble peony buds. To the left a small flat purple flower with a white center extends past the green leaves. Under it is a large fully open blossom with pale pink and lavender petals and a lavender center. Two white blossoms bloom to the right with several layers of petals. The larger one in front has a single water drop on the front petal. Behind is a variegated pink tulip, fully open with some of the petals on the left curling. Below is a green leaf pointing downward with a tiny ladybug at the tip. At the bottom of the vase are four pink primrose-like blossoms with leaves between them next to flat, round, purple morning glory flowers with white star centers. Behind them is a small pansy with a purple top and yellow bottom. Next to it a thin stalk extends downward towards the table with three long thin red flowers. At the rim of the vase are two yellow blossoms with multiple layers of teardrop shaped petals and a green center. A thin green stalk hangs downward to the right with four white unopened oval buds and a larger opened white flower shaped like a lily at the bottom. Above it, a cluster of about eleven small flat round red flowers with orange centers and an orange edge. To the left is a full deep pink rose blossom. Above this is a smaller, partially opened pink rosebud surrounded by several green leaves. To the left are three short stalks of tiny white bell shaped flowers. To their right is a large purple iris with a white center. Above it is a tall, thick stock of heavy pink flowers with multiple layers of ruffled petals. The bottom three are fully open, one facing backwards, one on the left partially open, and the rest still closed buds. To the right is a large white calla lily stretching out to the right. To the right are full green leaves and multiple talks of smaller flowers that appear in the shadows. The table is filled with fruit including pears on the left, a basket of cherries that is laying on its side, a cluster of green grapes that hang over the front of the table, a twig with six partially open pink roses. Behind this is a round metal basket full of strawberries. Big green leaves flow over the basket and a yellow apple lays on the table to the right. The artist’s signature is barely visible on the front edge of the table.]

Ryan McGinley
American, born 1977
Wade Wave, 2004
Chromogenic Print
Gift of the McCusker Family, 2022.53.11

[Artwork Description: This print is 29 ⅞ inches tall and 39 9/16 inches wide. The whole print is covered in a pink mist. The water which fills the bottom half has an orange yellow tone and the sky which fills the top half is muted pink. A shirtless, light-skinned individual with wet short dark hair rises up out of the wave, rushing towards the left side of the frame. The individual’s hands are held upward in front of their body. Ocean mist rises up out of the wave and covers the surfer from the waist down. A small white patch near the surfer’s left arm appears cloudlike. There seems to be an optical illusion that makes the surfer appear frozen from one angle, while looking from the left gives a sense that the wave is about to break onto the viewer.]

Corita Kent
American, 1918-198
Our father, 1964
Color screenprint on Pellon
The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection, 92.94.264

An artist, activist, educator, and nun. Kent pairs snippets of grocery store marketing and the Lord’s Prayer in this mash-up of the commercial and the divine. The text at upper left evokes the biblical supplication to “give us this day our daily bread” and is paried with the truncated word FLAV[OR], which Kent most likely lifted from a food advertisement. The print’s title makes it clear that God is the source of the “everyday FLAVOR” promoted in Kent’s witty and subversive work.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Description: This print is 29 11/16 inches tall and 36 inches wide. A deep orange rectangle is centered on a white background. White cursive letters at the top left corner read “give us everyday”. Below large capital yellow letters that start on the white background read “flav.” The next letter is only partially visible and is rounded like the left side of an O. At the top right corner is an uneven red rectangle with a large thick black one on it. The numbers 2 and 3 appear over the yellow writing below. The lines are imperfect and there are small blemishes throughout the print.]

Théo van Rysselberghe
(Belgian, 1862–1926)
Beach at Low Tide, Ambleteuse, Evening, 1900
Oil on canvas
Gift of Laura and Roger Meier, 2011.142

Van Rysselberghe was fascinated by color theory, and especially as developed by Neo-Impressionist artist Georges Seurat in the 1880s. Called “pointillism,” this style employs small dots of color to build up the composition; when viewed from a distance, the individual dots blend together to create a luminous surface. In this view of the seaside in northern France, vividly colored dots form a vibrant sky, blending to the smooth surface of the bay, while the colorful sunset reflects on the estuary curving through the wet sands.

Mary Weaver Chapin

[Artwork Description: This sherbert colored painting is nearly square, measuring two feet wide by a little less than two feet tall. Small dabs of pastel candy colors are combined to create a sky and shoreline at what may be dawn or dusk. The painting is divided in half horizontally with upper portion depicting a sky strewn with segmented clouds that slant across the canvas from lower left to upper right. The clouds closer to the viewer appear as deep lavender ringed with peach and pale orange. Clouds in the distance are yellow and cream against the pale blue sky. A wide strip of sea in purple, blue and cream reflects some of the colors in the sky. The lower portion of the work portrays a shoreline in blue, green and pink. Pale cream, yellow and pink streams of water snake their way to the ocean. The streams break off, divide and wind their way across much of the beach. At left, a portion of the beach appears darker in deep blues and greens with pops of purple, suggesting a different terrain such as a rocky patch. The work is contained in an ornate gold gilt frame.]

Raymond Jonson
(American, 1891–1982)
City Perspectives, 1932
Oil on canvas
Gift of Mr. Arthur H. Johnson, 78.17

Jonson was part of the Transcendental Painting Group, an artist collective based in New Mexico in the 1930s. According to their manifesto, they desired “to carry painting beyond the appearance of the physical world, through new concepts of space, color, light and design to imaginative realms that are idealistic and spiritual.” Instead of depicting a realistic cityscape, Jonson uses primary colors and diagonal lines to capture radiating energy.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Descriptions: This painting measures 47 3/4″ tall by 37 3/4″ wide. It has multiple horizon lines and a variety of muted colors. The focal point is a large rose colored rectangular tower in the middle of the painting. A few inches from the top of the tower is a tan circle with a pink outline. A horizontal line cuts through the center of the circle and extends upward. It is a light gray layer that shows the designs behind in muted color. Two vertical stripes extend downward starting at the center point of the pink border around the circle. They extend to the ground. Two leaf shaped layers create a shadow like effect, their points just beyond the circle. At the base of the rose rectangular tower are two cone shaped structures with pipes pushed into the top causing them to sink with a ripple around the base of the pipe. The one in back is a pastel green and the one in the front a deep rose. Both appear to have steam coming out the top of the pipes in a straight vertical line. To the right is a horizontal cone, facing to the right, that is rose colored with an orange tint with lighter pigment in a line across the center. The base extends to the left to near the edge of the painting. To the left of the cones a trail of bubbly steam floats to the left and then rises upward. Below the steam bubbles is a horizontal line comprised of five cone cylinder shaped dashes on top of a deep burgundy triangle. In front of the rose cone is a flat black square with a border. Two small pipes extend up from the back edge of the square with curved lines extending up and around the rose cone and disappearing behind bubbles of steam. The black square has a deep burgundy border to the back and right. To the right is an army green cone shape that is horizontal and has a more rounded top. Large transparent steam bubbles overlap as they extend up and to the right. The rose colored square at the bottom of the painting extends to the center point, creating a horizon line to the right. Three cream color sky-rise buildings extend upward from below the burgundy line. The first has a small portion visible before it continues out of frame. To the left is a square column with a spike on top. It has a thinner portion on the far side that is partially visible. The last and largest tower has two vertical lines of square windows extending the length of the canvas. The building has two vertical edges on the front to the right of the windows. A fourth building extends from the burgundy horizontal cone on the bottom upwards at an angle, some of the building extending past the canvas. There are two vertical rows of windows on the right and a single row on the left extends downward where the right lines stop. To the right of the lower windows are three pipe stacks that have one pipe below, another above, and then have thinner curved pipes extending from the top and reaching to the right, disappearing behind the main large burgundy rectangular tower. To the left of the far left building is another set of six white cylinders that appear as dashes in a line. A variety of translucent white shapes appear behind the other shapes on this painting creating illusions of lighted shadows and slightly altering the colors they are over. A few cloud-like shapes appear between the buildings on the right.]

Amy Adler
(American, born 1966)
I Am a Rainbow (Orange), 2002
Silver dye print (Cibachrome)
Gift of the McCusker Family, 2022.53.1

[Artwork Description: This silver dye print is 47 1/2″ tall by 68″ wide. It is set in a simple white frame. The whole print is various shades of orange. A nude woman with straight shoulder length hair lays on her stomach on the couch. A checkered blanket with fringe on the edges is laid over the back and seat of the couch made up of light orange squares and dark, almost red squares. Her hands are clasped in front of her chest, obscuring her breasts. She looks straight at the viewer with an intense gaze. Her jaws are set, lips closed, brows furrowed. Her hair is parted in the middle and cascades down her face and over her shoulders like strands of yarn. Her head obscures her back, but her round smooth buttocks are visible and her legs are bent at the knees. Her feet are crossed resting against the back of the couch. The background behind the couch is formed of overlapping orange hashmarks. The print’s highlights suggest a bright light source just out of view in front of the woman.]

Ed Paschke
(American, 1939–2004)
Creato, 1986
Oil on linen
Gift of the McCusker Family, 2022.53.18

The brash colors and cropped figures in Paschke’s paintings appear like distorted images on an old-fashioned television screen. Late twentieth-century TV shows, film, comics, advertising, and magazine photography inspired his surreal imagery. Paschke often titled his works suggestively, sometimes in languages other than English. “Creato” in Italian can refer to “The Creator.” The huge face and intense gaze suggest a powerful, all-seeing figure.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This oil painting is 50 1/16″ tall and 89 1/16″ wide. It is brightly colored with somewhat of an ominous presence. A large neon green head fills the canvas from top to bottom. The face has a blue and black beard, black eyebrows, and black circles around the eyes. A large nose protrudes between the yellow slits with diagonal orange stripes that are the eyes. Flat red ears shaped like elf ears extend on both sides. The background is a bright red. Thin horizontal lines of blue, green, black, green, and red cover the canvas in random areas suggesting a video glitch effect. Lighter blue lines outline the figure’s eyes, and mouth. Shorter vertical blue and red lines fill the space above the figures lip. Words written in cursive start on the edge of the canvas with the end of the words out of view. The background fades from reddish orange to yellow about halfway up the figure’s ears.]

Jaune Quick-to-See Smith
(Confederated Salish and Kootenai Nation and American, born 1940)
The Eye of the Storm, 2015
Oil and acrylic on canvas
Museum Purchase: Funds provided by Elizabeth Cole Butler, by exchange, 2015.166.1

The soft, gentle colors in this painting are a stark contrast to its difficult subject matter: climate change swirling out of control. An ancient cougar figure with a stern expression on the right and a skeleton falling from the sky indicate that we cannot sugarcoat our predicament or gloss over the consequences of decades of polluting our environment.

Kathleen Ash-Milby

[Artwork Description: This painting is five feet tall and a bit over three feet wide. It shows two figures near a cluster of spirals. A humanoid figure is positioned upside down, legs and feet at lower center, arms and head towards to bottom edge of the painting. The figure has clearly defined ribs that extend over the entire torso and a wide mouth showing teeth, large blank eyes and triangular nose. The effect gives the figure the appearance of a skeleton. To the right of this figure is another individual who sits kneeling, arms extended straight with hands on their lap, facing to the right. They appear to be nude. The head is that of an animal with small upright ears and a short snout. The figures are rendered in black outline filled in with multiple colors. Cream, rust, light blue, yellow, brown and orange are applied loosely. Paint drips and is blended and layered over the figures. The top third of this painting is dominated by the cluster of spirals. The spirals vary in size and color and are layered over one another. The most prominent spirals are the four, light blue ones at top left and one orange at center close to the top of the painting. The spiral shapes beneath are rendered in muted shades of blue, gray, rust, pale yellow, orange, light blue, peach, cream and black. The paint has been applied boldly and unevenly with brushstrokes visible with some colors blending into others and drips from paint running down. The spiral shapes are flanked by wide, curved swaths of cream paint on either side. Along the bottom of the work running from left to right is a narrow strip of green. Above this at bottom left is a small gloved open hand with its palm up. Next to this is a bird-like creature. Its wings are held above its body with individual feathers depicted. It has a long neck and a flat triangle head with two dots for eyes. Two straight lines serve as its legs. Paint drips with colors bleeding together are especially evident in the lower portion of the work.]

Tim Bavington
(American, born England, born 1966)
Voodoo Child, Slight Return (solo), 2002
Acrylic on canvas
Gift of the Contemporary Art Council, 2002.12

Synesthesia is the experience of one sense stimulating another: feeling sounds, tasting shapes, or hearing colors. Bavington explores this phenomenon with his intensely colorful paintings. He developed a system that keys color to notes on the musical scale and creates visual scores for rock ’n’ roll songs. Here, the artist pictures the pitch, timbre, tone, and tempo of Jimi Hendrix’s unforgettable guitar solo in “Voodoo Child.”

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This painting is six feet wide and four and a half feet tall and is composed of vertical stripes of varying widths. There are generally three main areas of concentrated color. They are yellow, red and green. Starting at the left the piece begins with narrow yellow stripes in different strengths, some deeper, some paler. Interspersed with the yellow are pink and pale orange stripes. A few wider stripes of sky blue appear and mix with grass green, hot pink, red and darker neutral colors. A section of pale lavender, pink and sky blue separates the yellow are from the red area. Red and yellow stripes alternate until they are joined by darker neutrals, pale blue, green, magenta. Here at the center of the work, red becomes the dominate color. Slim stripes yellow, orange and lavender join the red until several stripes of blue appear. Pink, blue and dark wide bands of neutrals alternate until shades of grass green begin to dominate. Narrow stripes of navy, brown, red and orange are added to the mix. The stripes end on a yellow that fades to white unpainted paper.  The work is matted in white with a simple black frame.]

Penelope Umbrico
American, born 1957
18_IMG_6697-a, from the series Moving Mountains,
2014 (negative), 2015 (print)
Pigment print, edition of 3
Museum Purchase. Funds provided by the Mark and Hilarie Moore Family Trust in memory of Timothy A. Fallon, 2015.44.1

[Artwork Description: This print is 40 inches tall and 30 inches wide. It has a wide spectrum of colors and those mixed with the orientation being turned to the right 90 degrees gives an unsettling sense as you view it. The main focus of the print is a mountain range. It starts off the frame on the left and takes up the left two thirds of the print. Two peaks stretch into the final third of the print. The left third has a hazy pink overlay and the white snow of the mountain appears yellow in the middle of the print. Art the very top of the pink column is a small rectangle of bright blue. Two thin black horizontal lines border the center strip. A white circle covers part of the top black line. It spills into the second column which has a green haze over it. A series of green rings extends from the center outward and upward to the right. They fade in and out as they expand. The snow on the mountains in this section also appears green. There is a small vertical strip between the pink and green strips where the mountain is blue and the snow patches are white. The final column on the right has a white and blue haze. It seems divided into two with a slightly brighter white stripe on the right. In the top right corner are two tansulsent white circles which have a blurred burgundy and black shadow creeping over them from the top right corner. The middle section is filled with a misty yellow that highlights the green rings. The bottom portion has a larger white and purplish dome that fades into a darker purplle and black shadow that extends from the lower right corner.]

Sol Hashemi
American, born 1987
Untitled (Lemonade), from the series Industry Standard, 2012
Inkjet print
Gift of Carlos Garcia and James Harris, 2013.27.1

Hashemi explores aspects of product production in his series Industry Standard. Here, he revels in the bright colors used in advertisements. Curiously, he has scraped away the bright, “natural” colors of the lemon from the metal surface of the drink can, revealing the aluminum container holding “real” lemonade.
Julia Dolan

[Artwork Description: This print is 13 15/16 inches tall and 18 ½ inches wide. This colorful print is busy with several different areas of focus. The top left corner has a green label with black text, rotated 90 degress to the right. The text reads “#388 Gaslight Green”. Below it are additional color cards also oriented to the right 90 degrees. The next one is light green and reads #88 Light. The rest of the title is out of the frame. Below it a tan card reads #08 Pale Gold. It has a third word that is unreadable as it flows out of the frame. The last card is pink and reads “#4630 CalColor 30 Red Trans = 55%.” It has a chart that is unreadable below the title. At the top of the frame there is a tan color card with a light blue card laying over it upside down. The light blue card reads “#4307 CalColor 7.5 Cyan. Trans. = 79%. It has a chart on it also that is too small to read. To the right is a large color test strip. Each row is labeled with a number, which are shown upside down. 113, several are covered by the light blue color card. Then 121, 122, and 123 are partially off the frame. A series of square color swatches appears in 44 columns with 11 rows. The heavily saturated squares seem random. Some have colors that are similar next to each other and they seem to blur into a column of brown or black. Most are bordered by thin white lines, but a few have black borders on some of the edges. Another 42 column color test strip appears below the first, this one angled slightly to the right. Labels at the bottom start with letters and then turn to a combination of letter and numbers reading 2B, 2C, 2D, 2E, 2F, 2G, 2H, 2I, 2J, 2K, 2L, and the rest are unreadable as they run out off the frame at the bottom right corner. In the middle of the print is another test sheet. The first 19 columns on the left are filled with different colors. Different hues of blue, purple, green, pink, gray, green, burgundy, brown, green, and yellow. The next 25 columns start with black, then slowly fade from dark gray to light gray to white. The last six columns have thin black vertical lines separating them, while all the others have white lines. Small black letters at the top read 9900 Semimatte 0 0 50 i1io. Thinner light gray letters below read il profiler Test Chart Page: 4 of 4: Size: 31.9×20.2cm. In the center of the print a can of lemonade lies right in the middle with the colorful squares to the left and the columns of black and gray to the right. The can is yellow at the top with a black background for the brand name which has been scratched out. Faint white letters are barely readable – ade on the top row and d on the bottom. A bright yellow band in the middle has black letter reading lemonade, but the l and e have been screatched out. Below smaller letters read “with real lemons”. Below an image of a lemon with cut lemon wedges around it with bubbles overlaid on them extends around the side of the can.]

Miyashita Zenji
(Japanese, 1939–2012)
Facing the Light, 2012
Stoneware with bands of colored clay
Lent by Carol and Jeffrey Horvitz, L2022.43.5

Miyashita perfected the traditional Japanese ceramic technique of saidei, applying thin layers of differently colored clays to create gradations. Simultaneously minimal in its gentle swelling from pale pinks to deep purple, this diamond-shaped vessel is nevertheless dramatic, like an unfolding landscape or the slow crescendo of light at dawn. The artist completed this work in the final year of his life.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: This hand-constructed ceramic piece is displayed on a waist-high pedestal with an acrylic cover about 34 inches wide and 24 inches high. The piece is approximately 15 inches, at its highest point, around 24 inches in width and about 6 inches front to back at its thickest point. From above, the shape is an elongated horizontal diamond with the widest point at about two thirds of the left to right distance. At the intersection of the diamond’s axis is a circular hole about 1 ½ inches in diameter. The top of the piece forms a ridge with sides that angle down about three inches from either side of the circular opening and meet at the left and right corners. There are two rectangular vertical sections on the front and back surfaces about 12 inches high. The left section width is about two thirds of the side and the right is about one third. Each rectangular section angles up about one inch from the base at the ends with the flat angular surfaces receding slightly from the lower edges. The surfaces of the piece appear to be smooth from a distance, but closer observation reveals over twenty layers of very thinly flattened clay about the thickness of an index card. These are applied from left to right in a vertical position with the left edges forming gentle organic curves. Just as subtle as the gradual layering of the piece, the gradation of colors begin with a medium rosy-pink at the left end, softening as it moves towards the right to the lighter pinks which transition to light purples and finally to a darkish purple at the far right. The coloring was mixed into each layer of clay before it was applied.]

Betty Woodman
(American, 1930–2018)
Untitled (in shape of urn), date unknown
Glazed ceramic
The Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection: Fifty Works for Fifty States, a joint initiative of the Trustees of the Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection and the National Gallery of Art, with generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Institute for Museum and Library Services, 2009.64.49

Woodman brought ceramics, painting, and sculpture together with a sense of playfulness. Her witty works flip our view of functional craft upside down. Here, she flattens an urn into two dimensions; instead of glazing it with specific colors, she describes the colors with words instead.

Sara Krajewski

[Artwork Description: This flat ceramic urn is about 17 1/8″ tall and 11″ wide. It is a tan clay color. Several other colors are hand written on the surface in the corresponding colored paint. The main portion is vase shaped with two curved handles extending from the top to the sides, connecting where the urn widens in the middle. The handles are slightly ruffled and twisted. The left handle has the word vanadium written in a brownish yellow hue. Indecipherable words are written in purple at the top of the urn – possibly spelling the word lilac. Very light purple letters on the right handle are difficult to read, but may spell lavender. Below them is the word olive in olive colored paint. The word naple appears in yellow just below the top of the urn. Below is the word golden in rust colored paint. Next is a diagonal word in light yellow that appears to spell pantimony. Below are yellow letters spelling praseo. At the bottom in dark brown is the word hazel. At the top of the urn a small lavender colored tube juts out from the ceramic and connects to a part above with a fracture line between. A small yellow tube juts out of a hole at the bottom of the urn. There are several dents, chips, ripples in the clay.]

Plateau region, artists unknown
Beaded flat bags, ca. 1940–50
Beads, hide, cotton cloth, cotton thread
Bequest of Arlene and Harold Schnitzer, 2022.35.2 and 2022.35.6

These beaded flat bags are part of a larger tradition among tribes in the Columbia Plateau region, created for use within the community and for sale to outsiders. These are in a less common heart shape and each features a woman’s portrait. One woman wears hair and makeup in keeping with the midcentury era in which the bags were made, while the other is dressed in tribal finery suitable for a parade, in which she might carry one or more of these bags while on horseback.

Kathleen Ash-Milby

[Artwork Description:  The first piece is in the shape of a heart with a wide handle on top. The piece is about 10 9/16″ x 10 3/8″ x 5/8″. It has a bright yellow background and features a Native woman with long braids in the middle. Her long black hair is parted in the middle and two braids hang down her chest. Two feathers, white on the bottom and black on the top stick out from behind her head. She wears a white headband with four upside down red triangles. She wears large white round earrings and two strand necklace with sections of white and black beads. She wears a white dress with a red collar line. It has a green diamond outlined in blue just below the neckline. Across the chest are three patterns that loosely resemble fir trees. A green triangle on bottom with red horizontal triangles on the sides with a blue outline around it all. She wears a blue belt that has four sideways red triangles. The heart is outlined in a pattern of white and blue beads that appear twisted as they surround the heart. Inside of this is a layer of orange beads with several blue triangles. The handle is yellow with two red triangles stacked on top of each other near the top of the heart and a large black rectangle with four smaller squares on each corner.

The second piece is another beaded heart-shaped bag. It also has a yellow background the flows up onto the handle. The handle and heart are outlined in red. A light skinned woman with black wavy hair, black eyebrows, thick eyelashes, gray eyes, and red lipstick appears on the bottom right. She wears a brown blouse with a salmon collar that is outlined in lace. Her head is tilted slightly as she looks to her right at two large red roses. The two blossoms are fully open with several layers of petals. Some layers are a darker burgundy color and they are surrounded by nine lush green leaves.]

Japan, Kagawa prefecture, Sanuki, Shido kiln
Gennai Ware Five Square Chrysanthemum Plates, second half of 18th century
Molded stoneware with green, manganese purple, and yellow glaze
Gift of Mary and Cheney Cowles, 2013.95.3a-e

Gennai ware is named after the polymath Hiraga Gennai (1729–1780), a scholar, physician, pharmacologist, inventor, and writer. Gennai’s kiln employed novel techniques he learned in Nagasaki to produce distinctive, three-colored stoneware in bold glazes of yellow, purple, and green. The chrysanthemum design indicates an autumnal association; these plates were probably meant to be used at the time of the fall equinox.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: These five grass green stoneware plates are roughly six inches square and are decorated with a raised chrysanthemum flower and leaf design. The edges are tipped up giving the plates a depth of one inch. The flower patterns on all the plates are the same: Clockwise starting at four o’clock is a large golden yellow chrysanthemum along with a short bit of green branch and three leaves. At seven o’clock is a cluster of five leaves, four of them green and one yellow. At nine o’clock a muted purple mum is situated slightly behind the leaf cluster. At eleven, a yellow mum on a stem is shown from its underside as if reaching upwards to the sun. And at one o’clock is a cluster of three leaves, two green and the center one in purple. The flowers and leaves are in relief so that each detail is outlined from  the edges of petals and branches to the veins on the leaves. The tipped up rim is decorated in the same manner on each side with sets of green scrollwork flanking an elongated yellow mum. The underside of the rim is incised with an abstract mum design that radiates outward. The base of the plates are unglazed.]

Korea, unknown artist
Phoenix-Shaped Kkokdu for a Funerary Bier, late 19th/early 20th century
Wood with polychrome pigments
Gift of Virginia Nelson, 2002.2.1

Kkokdu are decorative figurines for funerary biers. Made in the shapes of creatures and human entertainers, they were meant to protect and celebrate the deceased person. Phoenixes usually decorated the corners of the roof as symbols of transcendence, guiding the deceased from this world to the next. The bright colors and repeated patterns of this example reflect the spirit of joy with which mourners sought to send on the departed.

Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: This wooden sculpture of a phoenix in profile measures 17 5/8″ x 9 1/4″ x 4 5/8″.  It is composed of multiple bright colors, but is predominantly red. It faces to the right, beak pointing forward and tail held high to the left. It has no feet and rises from a light blue wooden base that has cream and green scrolling designs on top, black dots spread evenly along the top edge, and a dark blue edge with vertical red stripes and yellow scratches over them. The bird’s body is salmon pink. A repeated pattern of three to four almond shapes in red with black bases shaped like sideways crescent moons and eight white raindrop shapes above runs from the bottom to the chest. Rows of different colored feathers rise from the base upward. First, three light blue feathers with diagonal dark blue stripes and white highlights on the right. Then four dark green feathers with white highlights on the right and white diagonal stripes. Then four red feathers with deep burgundy stripes and highlights. Next three partially visible light blue feathers with dark blue horizontal stripes, darker blue right edges, and white highlights between the stripes and the dark blue edge. Above are three rows of light blue feathers outlined in dark blue with thin white upside down triangles in the center surrounded by white dots. Above these and to the right is a patch of red with yellow and white highlights and blue and black vertical stripes. Above on the right is a bright red wattle outlined in cream. Behind it is a series of circles in different colors with cream spirals on top. The first is green, then red, light blue with dark blue spirals, yellow with burgundy spirals, and green with cream spirals. The head consists mostly of a large eye. It is black with a gray outline. Dark black lines outline the whites of the eye. A light blue border with dark blue hash marks on the bottom and small circles on the top connects the eye to the bright red comb at the top. It is made of four large red circles with cream spirals and outlines. The orange beak is pointed and has several scrapes and chips out of it. A thin yellow stripe connects the beak and the eye to the tail. The tail is formed with  five large circles outlined in cream with spirals in the center. The top is bright red, then light blue with dark blue spirals, yellow with burgundy spirals, green with cream spirals, and black with cream spirals. Each tail feather curves out of the circle and flows down to the base of the bird in a gentle curve. There are several scratches and nicks across the surface.]

China, unknown kiln
Langyao baluster vase, 19th century
Porcelain with langyao (copper red) glaze
Gift of Henry L. and Kay Corbett, 92.96

This vase’s elegant shape and impressive color are based on types that originated in the early eighteenth century, when the imperial kilns at Jingdezhen revived spectacular monochrome glazes of the earlier Ming dynasty. Ranging from delicate, pale shades to deep, saturated hues, monochrome glazes highlight the technical perfection of China’s ceramics industry. This ruby red glaze, known as langyao (Lang ware), demonstrates the vibrant end of the spectrum.
Jeannie Kenmotsu

[Artwork Description: This porcelain vase stands a foot and a half tall and is six inches wide. It is shaped simply with two main parts. The base begins flaring slightly then nips in before gently widening as the sides climb towards the top. They narrow creating a rounded shoulder around the vase. From there, a cup-like shape tops the vase, delicately flaring out at the rim. The surface appears smooth and shiny despite the crackled glaze. The base has a deep red glaze that appears slightly transparent as it reaches the vases’ shoulder. The upper cup-like portion bears mere streaks of the red glaze that fades to a cream color as it approaches the flared lip.]