SAINT PETERSBURG, FL.- Recent Acquisitions: Prints, Drawings, and Photographs features more than 40 works and offers a select view of the sweep and diversity of the
MFAs rapidly growing collection. Since the Hazel Hough Wing opened in 2008, the collection has grown by more than 1,100 works. In addition, the MFA has received approximately 15,000 photographs from The Ludmila Dandrew and Chitranee Drapkin Collection.
Full of surprises, Recent Acquisitions is set for Saturday, October 26, 2013-Sunday, March 2, 2014 in the second-floor Works on Paper Gallery. The works have been selected by Hazel and William Hough Chief Curator Jennifer Hardin. The Stuart Society provides major support for Museum exhibitions and educational programs, and the Tampa Bay Times is the Media Sponsor.
The earliest works are fascinating prints by Wenceslaus Hollar after Hans Holbein from The Dance of Death series (1651). The most recent is Tampa artist Rebecca Sexton Larsons large-scale Random Conversations (2011), which brings together photography, painting, and even thread, sewing together thoughts, observations, and memories.
The drawings and prints are by many other significant artists, including Jennifer Bartlett, Leonard Baskin, Jeffrey Kronsnoble, Pierre-Joseph Redouté, Milton Resnick, Georges Rouault, and Ossip Zadkine. There is also a lyrical painting, Toulouse Lautrecs Nephew (1956), by Elaine de Kooning.
Jennifer Bartlett is a gifted contemporary artist whose work combines representation and abstraction. Her powerful etching The Elements: Earth (1992) evokes both the beauty of nature and mortality. The branches and markings create tension and ultimately, a sense of unity.
Milton Resnicks untitled print with his all-over approach reveals his commitment to Abstract Expressionism. Jeffrey Krosnobles brilliant, collage-like Savigny III (1971) has a Pop sensibility, but with an element of foreboding. Geometric sculptural forms move through the center of Barbara Hepworths Fragment (1970). The British modernist is especially known for her sculpture.
A number of the works are by or depict African Americans. They complement the exhibition, Mixing Metaphors: The Aesthetic, the Social, and the Political in African American Art, Works from the Bank of America Collection.
Jason Hailey conveys the intellectual intensity of Alex Haley, the author of Roots, in his 1977 photograph. Charles W. White, one of our most accomplished African American and Social Realist artists, explored the expressiveness of the color black in his work, as well as black culture. His Hasty B, a profile of an African American woman, would be at home in one of his noted murals.
George R. Booth spotlights the stunning performer Eartha Kitt, with three African American male singers, in his memorable photograph from the late 1960s. In addition, New Orleans artist George Dureau, who influenced Robert Mapplethorpe, presents a young, handsome African American man, almost like a piece of sculpture, against a spare backdrop.
The MFA has one of the leading photography collections in the Southeast, and this exhibition reflects its scope. The works encompass documentary nineteenth-century photographs of Asian men; a signature image by Edward Steichen of fashionable people arriving for the Grand Prix in 1907 Paris; and a self-portrait of the pioneering Margaret Bourke White with her large-format camera and battered case. Ben Shahns Spectators at County Fair, Ohio (1938) is pure Americana.
A photographer whose reputation continues to grow, Ralph Eugene Meatyard staged surrealistic, mysterious scenes, often with young children wearing fantastic masks. The rising young star Shen Wei, born in Shanghai and now living in New York, is represented by the haunting Matt and Emily from his Almost Naked series (2003), an intimate look at a young, seemingly distant couple.
Recent Acquisitions is a treasure trove of works, many on view for the first time. They will encourage visitors to discover other gems in the recently renovated galleries. The MFA and its stellar collection have never looked better.