High presents exhibition showcasing the distinguished Huber Family collection of American art
September 27, 2011 by All Art News
Filed under Art Events & Exhibitions, Featured
ATLANTA, GA.- The High Museum of Art is hosting “Embracing Elegance, 1885–1920: American Art from the Huber Family Collection,” an important exhibition showcasing the collection of turn-of-the-century American art collected by Atlantans Russell and Jack Huber over the last 25 years. With 35 paintings, pastels and drawings, the exhibition features work by artists Cecilia Beaux, Frank W. Benson, Thomas Wilmer Dewing, Robert Henri, Lilla Cabot Perry, John Singer Sargent, Everett Shinn, John Sloan, John Henry Twachtman and J. Alden Weir. “Embracing Elegance, 1885–1920” and its accompanying full-color catalogue are co-organized by the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, and the High Museum of Art. The exhibition will be on view at the High through November 27, 2011.
“By focusing on the period in American art that the Hubers love best—roughly the four decades that bracket the turn of the twentieth century —their collection as a whole provides an illuminating window into the dramatic cultural changes of the era, from the phenomenal growth of the cities and mass immigration to changing gender roles,” commented Stephanie Heydt, the High’s Margaret and Terry Stent Curator of American Art.
“Over the past 25 years, Jack and Russell Huber have built a highly selective and distinguished collection of American art from the turn of the twentieth century. We are grateful to the Huber family for their generosity in parting with their collection for an extended period and allowing us to share their works with our visitors,” stated David Brenneman, the High’s Director of Collections and Exhibitions.
The artists featured in “Embracing Elegance, 1885–1920” gravitated toward intimate, informal subjects, which they captured in an expressive manner influenced by the Aesthetic movement, Impressionism, urban realism and Post-Impressionism. The majority of the works reflect the common tendency of these artists to retreat from social issues and instead celebrate the beauty found in timeless landscapes, still lifes and intimate images of women at leisure. Introspective in mood and refined in taste, these works mirror the subtle shifts in cultural values, including a growing fascination with the life of the mind and an appreciation of art for art’s sake, rather than for moralizing, didactic or political purposes. Additionally, a select few images openly address social change, including the city scenes that depict a mix of classes and races by the artists of the Ashcan School, including John Sloan and Everett Shinn.
Most of the artists represented in the exhibition gave careful consideration to how they presented their works, which spurred innovation in terms of frame design. If the original frame was not available, the Hubers paired their works with elegant period examples. These carefully selected frames enhance the visual impact of the works and reflect the sophisticated frame aesthetics of the period.
On view concurrently is the installation “Beaux Arts and Crafts: Masterpieces of American Frame Design 1890–1920,” on loan from the noted New York frame collector Edgar O. Smith. This exhibition brings together 15 frames by American makers from the late 19th and early 20th centuries―a golden era for innovations in frame design in the United States. Works of art in their own right, this selection of frames from the Arts and Crafts and Beaux Art periods perfectly embodies the spirit of turn-of-the-century aesthetic in America by celebrating hand-crafted, elegant and useful design. “Beaux Arts & Crafts: Masterpieces of American Frame Design 1890–1920” showcases how by the late 1880s American artists had begun to pay more attention to their frames. This was inspired by a growing appreciation for handcraftsmanship and redefined designs in reaction to mass-production and the unrestrained ornamentation associated with Victorian taste. By the early 1900s more artists and craftsmen were creating frames that integrated historical European prototypes with distinct, contemporary forms, such as the sinuous curves of Art Nouveau or the hand-crafted appeal of the Arts and Crafts movement.
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