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A First Look
A Long-Range Look by DAA
Bradford Leads Medical Alumni
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A First Look
Private viewings of sculpture and paintings by
major artists have brought hundreds of alumni together to learn from
Duke experts at museums in select cities across the country. Sponsored
by the Duke Alumni Association, with the assistance of the development
office and local alumni clubs, these popular gallery receptions featuring
lectures by authorities on art have included the works of Van Gogh,
Rodin, and Rockwell. The alumni affairs offices Alumni Education
and Travel program has organized the events.
The series premiered in February 1999, when the concept was brought
to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The exhibit was Van
Goghs Van Goghs, a collection of self-portraits. Duke
art history professor Hans J. von Miegroet discussed Van Gogh:
Contemporary Culture and Early Influences. Nearly 850 attended
this event, which was the largest ever hosted by the Duke Club of
Southern California.
In February 2001, the first major retrospective of Henry Moores
work exhibited in the United States in almost twenty years was the
centerpiece of an evening at the Dallas Museum of Art. The Duke Club
of North Texas was host to nearly 150 alumni and friends attending.
The evenings program, The Art of Collecting, featured
Raymond D. Nasher 43, art collector and namesake of Dukes
new art museum, which is to be built on Campus Drive. Nasher, whose
collection includes works by Rodin, Brancusi, Moore, Gauguin, Miro,
Matisse, Giacometti, Calder, David Smith, Stella, and Lichtenstein,
shared his personal recollections of Henry Moore. Art historian Michael
P. Mezzatesta, who is the Mary D.B.T. Semans and James H. Semans Director
of the Duke University Museum of Art, discussed collecting for the
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke. A private viewing of 120 pieces of Moores
drawings, maquettes, plasters, and full-scale bronzes followed.
Last November, the DAA and the Duke Club of Philadelphia sponsored
a reception for the private viewing of Van Gogh: Face to Face,
an exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Dukes von Miegroet
spoke
on the topic The Van Gogh Paradox: Art (f)or Profit. Nearly
500 attended. A similar reception and program last July, attended
by nearly 300, was sponsored by the Duke Club of Boston for the Van
Gogh show, when it was exhibited at the Boston Museum of Fine Art.
The Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., was the site last
June for a reception and viewing of the exhibit Norman Rockwell:
Pictures for the American People. Anne Classen Knutson 86,
American art curator at Atlantas High Museum and co-curator
of the exhibit, focused her remarks on Norman Rockwell: Comfortable
or Controversial? The DAA and the Duke Club of Washington were
hosts for the event, which attracted more than 400 alumni and friends.
Rodin: Sculpture from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Collection
and additional works at the North Carolina Museum of Art last
April was, historically, one of the Duke Club of the Triangles
largest events, with 550 in attendance. Duke museum director Mezzatesta
discussed Rodin and Washington Duke. Alumni Education
and Travel is planning more events for this year, including a Winslow
Homer exhibit and viewing in Atlanta on October 10 and a reception
and program in Chicago on October 16 for the exhibit of works by Gauguin
and Van Gogh. Alumni in these cities will receive invitations by mail.
For information, contact Deborah Weiss Fowlkes 78 or Rachel
Davies 72, A.M. 89 in the Alumni Education and Travel
program at (919) 684-5114. |
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