|
|
| The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Wednesday, December 31, 2025 |
|
| Shelburne Museum announces 2026 exhibition schedule |
|
|
Ogden M. Pleissner, On the Wind River, ca. 1940.Watercolor and gouache on paper, 15 1/2 x 21 1/2 in. Collection of Shelburne Museum, bequest of Ogden M. Pleissner. 1985-31.53. Photography by Andy Duback.
|
SHELBURNE, VT.- Shelburne Museum announced its 2026 exhibitions, featuring major presentations that will explore American art, regional identity, material culture, and contemporary creativity. The museum will present five exhibitions that highlight both the breadth of the museums permanent collection and the vitality of new contemporary work. The museum will be open May 9 through October 25, 2026.
As we look toward 2026, our exhibitions reflect the museums commitment to presenting art and material culture that illuminates the many ways Americans have represented themselves, their histories, and the landscapes they call home, said Kory Rogers, Francie and John Downing Senior Curator of American Art at Shelburne Museum. From Norman Rockwells vision of Vermont to the exuberance of Carl DAlvias monumental sculptures to the extraordinary needlework created by young women in the 19th century, these exhibitions invite visitors to reconsider familiar stories and encounter new ones.
Norman Rockwell: At Home in Vermont
Pizzagalli Center for Art and Education, Murphy Gallery
June 20October 25, 2026
As the nation marks the 250th anniversary of its independence, Shelburne Museum will honor one of Americas most iconic painters with Norman Rockwell: At Home in Vermont. The exhibition explores how Rockwell (18941978) shaped an idealized vision of Vermontnostalgic, resilient, and mythicduring his prolific Arlington years (19391953). In a time marked by the Great Depression and World War II, his images offered a reassuring portrait of American life. The exhibition places Rockwell within the vibrant Arlington artist circleincluding Mead Schaeffer (18981980), John Atherton (19001952), and Gene Pelham (19092004)whose work helped mythologize Vermont as democracys granite-strong refuge. It also considers his public friendship with Anna Mary Robertson Grandma Moses, part of a broader crafting of New England as both authentic and marketable. Featuring newly acquired Rockwell paintings celebrating Vermonts granite industry, the exhibition examines not only his imagery but the intentional mythmaking that embedded Vermont at the heart of Rockwells American vision.
Varied and Alive: New and Rarely Seen Treasures from the Collection
Pizzagalli Center for Art and Education, Colgate Gallery
May 9October 25, 2026
(and MayOctober 2027)
Guided by founder Electra Havemeyer Webbs vision of Shelburne Museum as a project varied and alive, this exhibition celebrates the museums vast and varied permanent collection. Objects ranging from the 19th to the mid-20th centuries showcase the incredible depth and breadth of the museums collection rooted in Mrs. Webbs collecting legacy. A curatorial tour de force, objects on view include folk art paintings, circus posters, porcelain, textiles, toys, and trade signssome beloved favorites, others not seen in decades.
Carl DAlvia: (mono)LITHS
Shelburne Museum Grounds
June 20October 25, 2026
Carl DAlvias brightly colored aluminum sculpturespart of his ongoing Liths seriesbring a sense of play and whimsy to the museums expansive grounds. Referencing ancient monoliths as well as 20th-century sculptural icons, these monumental forms are both hard-edged and humorous, serious yet soft, collapsing traditional binaries with wit and invention. DAlvias animated shapesslouched, sprawled, or floppedseem to breathe with personality and movement, engaging in a playful dialogue with the museums historic architecture, gardens, and collections. Coated in automotive paint, the Liths activate outdoor spaces with bold color and presence, inviting visitors to reconsider what monuments can be and who theyre for.
On Point: Needlework from the Garthwaite Family Collection
Dana-Spencer Galleries at Hat & Fragrance + Needlework Gallery
May 9October 25, 2026
On Point: Needlework from the Garthwaite Family Collection will emphasize extraordinary examples of schoolgirl artworks made in Vermont, ranging from samplers, silk-on-silk embroideries, and sewing boxes to memorials, family registers, theorem paintings, and more. The exhibition features highlights from the Garthwaite Familys collection of more than 100 Vermont schoolgirl artworks, alongside select textiles and related ephemera from Shelburne Museums permanent collection. Special emphasis is placed on new research into womens education in the state and the Connecticut River Valley at large. In raising the larger issues of womens education in the 19th century with a focus on Vermont, this exhibition represents an important contribution to emerging scholarship on schoolgirl artwork.
Big River: Ogden Pleissner in Wyoming
Pleissner Gallery
May 9October 25, 2026
The landscape of the American West has long been a source of inspiration for artists. American 20th-century painter Ogden Pleissner often recalled formative experiences spent at the CM Ranch in Dubois, Wyoming, and the nearby Wind River Reservation. This place would become a recurring character in Pleissners life and work, serving as respite and inspiration from the 1920s through the 1940s. Big River: Ogden Pleissner in Wyoming explores this region through sketches, watercolors, oil paintings, and select archival materials consider Pleissners engagement with the land and the settler and Indigenous communities who call this place home.
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|