LITTLE ROCK, AR.- The Henry Luce Foundation has awarded a $350,000 grant to the
Arkansas Arts Center, the states leader in international, visual and performing arts. The grant will support the complete research, conservation and integration of the Art Centers John Marin drawings into the AAC collection.
290 drawings and watercolors by American modern artist John Marin (1870-1953) were donated to the Arkansas Arts Center in February of 2014 by the artists daughter-in-law, Norma Marin. The earliest drawings in the collection are architectural renderings and drawings of the artists native New Jersey and of Philadelphia, where he studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. The collection then follows Marin through his years in Paris just after the turn of the century and his return to America as a modernist. Many of these works have never been exhibited and are largely unknown to both scholars and the public.
The purpose of The Marin Project is to execute the conservation of all 290 works on paper and the digitization of the complete holdings to be made available to scholars and the public, as well as research and production of a catalog featuring the Marin collection at the Arkansas Arts Center. The research and conservation will also yield an exhibition highlighting the gift which will originate at the Arts Center before traveling to a select number of venues in the United States.
Marin is best known for luminous watercolors of urban structures, landscapes and seascapes. He stands as one of the leading innovators of American modernism in the first half of the twentieth century and his work continues to be celebrated in publications and exhibitions around the world.
We are incredibly grateful to the Henry Luce Foundation, said Arkansas Arts Center Executive Director Todd Herman. This grant will allow us to research, conserve and present this important collection of works by one of Americas greatest artists and share them with the public.
The Arkansas Arts Center possesses a very fine and nationally recognized collection of drawings from the 15th century to today, with a particular concentration in American Modernism, Herman said. This gift of 290 works by John Marin adds considerable strength to our already impressive collection of drawings by Stieglitz Circle artists.
The Arkansas Arts Center holds the second largest collection of Marin works in the world, spanning the entirety of his career and including simple gestural and movement drawings, sketches from nature and finished watercolors. In addition to the beautiful finished watercolors, the collection includes many working drawings, said Curator of Drawings, Ann Prentice Wagner, Ph.D.
Wagner, whose doctoral dissertation was titled Living on Paper: Georgia OKeeffe and the Culture of Drawing and Watercolor in the Stieglitz Circle, will head up The Marin Project.
The working drawings give us valuable insight into Marins creative process. The on-the-spot sketches are priceless. They capture the artists initial ideas about subjects he went on to paint and depict in prints, like the Brooklyn Bridge and the New York skyline. Rarer topics, like the marvelous zoo animals and circus scenes, open doors to lesser-known aspects of the artist.