High Museum of Art Acquires Significant Collection Comprising 56 Prints by Artist Kiki Smith
ATLANTA, GA.- The High Museum of Art has recently acquired a significant collection of 56 prints by artist Kiki Smith from collector Stephen Dull. The acquisition was made through a partial gift from Dull and partial purchase through the Museum’s acquisition fund. This group of prints makes the High a major national repository for Smith’s graphic work. “Kiki Smith: Rituals,” an exhibition showcasing the new acquisitions, will be on view in the works on paper galleries at the High from October 8, 2011, through January 22, 2012.
“Kiki Smith is a great artist-printmaker, and this important collection of her work will be one of the foundation stones of the High’s growing print collection. We are delighted to make such a significant acquisition that catapults us to the forefront of museums that collect her work,” stated Michael E. Shapiro, the High’s Nancy and Holcombe T. Green, Jr. Director. “I would like to thank Stephen Dull for making it possible for us to share this treasure trove of art works with the people of Atlanta and the Southeast.”
The collection, which includes works made between 1991 and 2004, features many of the artist’s best-known prints and represents all aspects of the extraordinary range of techniques and imagery in her graphic work. Highlights include the monumentally scaled color lithograph “Born,” 2002 (68⅛ x 56⅛ inches), and the mixed-technique print “My Blue Lake,” 1995 (43 11/16 x 54¾ inches), which combines Photogravure, à la poupée inking and lithograph. This collection will join Smith’s important installation “Mother,” acquired by the High 1993.
“I am absolutely thrilled that the High Museum is acquiring so many prints from the Stephen Dull Collection,” commented Kiki Smith. “Printmaking is a fundamental part of my practice and the experience of making prints and working with printmakers has been one of the joys of my adult life.”
“My ultimate goal in collecting art is to place it in an institution that will cherish it, share it and preserve it for future generations,” said Stephen Dull. “Since I lived in Atlanta, I have a soft spot for the High Museum. Having watched its amazing and creative growth from afar, I am especially excited to be able to contribute to the High’s continued realization of its special vision and mission.”
Related posts:
- Site-Specific Installation by Artist Kiki Smith at the Brooklyn Museum
- Kiki Smith and Christiane Baumgartner to Appear at Pennsylvania Acadamy of the Fine Arts
- High Hosts Second Annual Collectors’ Evening to Help Build the Museum’s Collection
- New Exhibition at Auburn University Museum Explores Prints by Edvard Munch
- American Master David Smith Featured in Exhibition at the Phillips Collection in Whashington