Philbrook Museum of Art Shows Exhibition by Taos Society of Artists
Written by Bradford Clarke Thursday, 07 January 2010 20:29
TULSA, OK.- Philbrook Museum of Art is featuring an exhibition of 70 masterpieces by some of the most influential American painters of the 20th-century through January 31, 2010. Among these are the Taos Society of Artists, Maynard Dixon, Nicolai Fechin, Leon Gaspard, and others whose work has shaped our vision of the American Southwest. In addition to these stunning paintings, the show offers a unique behind-the-scenes look at the Adkins Collection. In all, the Adkins material includes not only outstanding paintings and other artwork, but also invaluable records of a unique and important collection that was created by a Tulsa native.
Over a period
of more than forty years, Eugene Brady Adkins (1920-2006) amassed a large and
important collection of Southwestern art. From baskets, jewelry, pottery, and
weavings by Native American artists, to more than 800 paintings, prints,
drawings, and photographs focused on images of the American West.
Adkins’ love of the Southwest developed at an early age; as a child in the 1920s and ‘30s, his family often drove from eastern Oklahoma to the pueblos of northern New Mexico and beyond. During such trips, he acquired an appreciation for the natural and cultural landscape of the area, taking in the drama of the mesas at sunset and the beauty of Native American dances and ceremonies. These early experiences led to Adkins’ lifelong passion for Southwestern art and spurred his collecting.
The history of the collection and episodes pertaining to particular pieces are revealed through correspondence, exhibit brochures, and other materials. Mr. Adkins kept letters on which he would write notes to himself, creating an ongoing conversation about individual pieces and the collection as a whole.
The Eugene B. Adkins Collection is jointly housed and managed by the Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa, Oklahoma and the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, the University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma.
In 1926 Edward Buehler Delk (1885–1956), a Kansas City architect, was hired to design an Italian Renaissance villa on 23 acres by oilman Waite Phillips. Delk skillfully interpreted Renaissance styles in the most fashionable manner of the day and was hired in a burst of commissions with three major projects at once: Villa Philbrook, Villa Philmonte and the Philtower office building.
In 1938 Waite Phillips surprised Tulsans with the announcement of his gift of the 72-room mansion and surrounding 23 acres of grounds as an art center for the city of Tulsa. The vision first made possible by Waite and Genevieve Phillips is now one of America's finest art museums. The integrity of the original residence remains intact while later additions to the facility and gardens complete this classic Tulsa attraction.
Visit the Philbrook Museum of Art at : http://www.philbrook.org/
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