WINSTON-SALEM, NC.- A new exhibition opening this fall at
Reynolda House Museum of American Art will celebrate Americans renewed interest in knowing where their food comes from, while tracing how the family farm has shaped Americans identities for centuries.
Grant Wood and the American Farm will open at Reynolda House Sept. 8 and will be on view through Dec. 31. Reynolda Houses Wood masterpiece, Spring Turning, will feature prominently alongside 35 works of art on loan from 17 museums from around the country. The exhibition will also include historic North Carolina farm equipment. Grant Wood and the American Farm is curated especially for Reynolda Houseits only venueby the museums curator, Allison Slaby.
The family farm occupies a central place in American identity, Slaby says. Even as we have transitioned from a rural society to a more industrialized one, the ideals of the farm and farmerindependence, humility and diligencehave remained.
Grant Wood and the American Farm will trace the evolution of this notion over a period of 100 years, from 1850 to 1950. It will give particular attention to the Regionalist artist Grant Wood, exploring his agrarian landscapes and situating the artist as someone both responding to the tradition of the agrarian ideal and creating new pictorial representations of that ideal.
Slaby asked some of the nations most prestigious museums to loan works for the show, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Gallery of Art. She also turned to a private collection, the collection of Ernest Fackleman and Cynthia Skaar, for nine stunning Grant Wood lithographs.
Everyone has a farm somewhere in their past; everyone has a farm story, says Cynthia Skaar, who is loaning the Wood lithographs to the museum.
Reynolda House plans to tap into the idea that visitors to the exhibition will find personal connections to it. The museum will encourage visitors to share images and stories via a hashtag on social media, #reynoldafarm, throughout the exhibition season.
Reynolda has its own farm story that will be shared in a complementary exhibition on view starting October 29, Reynolda at 100: Reynolda Farm. Drawn largely from the historic photographs and manuscript collections from the Reynolda House Archives, many on display for the first time, the exhibition will illustrate the impact of the Reynolda farm on local agriculture and the context and conditions of life at Reynolda.
Described in 1917 as an experiment station, Reynolda Farm was a model farm and dairy where local farmers could learn the newest techniques in scientific agriculture, dairying, livestock raising and horticulture.
At that time, Piedmont farmers were reliant upon growing tobacco as the regional cash crop, says Bari Helms, Reynolda Houses director of archives and library, and the archival exhibitions curator. But Katharine Smith Reynolds intended her farm to demonstrate that diversified agriculture could be both healthful and profitable.