Davenport, Iowa (October 14, 2015) - Chicago artist Kenneth Josephson is best known for his witty images that explore the illusory nature of photography. An exhibition of his work will open in the second floor Katz Gallery at the Figge Art Museum on Saturday titled: Wit and Whimsy: the Photographs of Kenneth Josephson.

 

The exhibition, sponsored by the Hunt and Diane Harris Family Foundation, will include 42 Josephson photographs from the Figge's permanent collection, the Stephen Daiter Gallery in Chicago, Illinois and one from Terry Etherton Gallery in Tucson, Arizona.

 

Included will be one of Josephson's best works, New York State 1970, where the artist's arm and hand are seen holding the image of an ocean liner against a backdrop of ocean, making it clear that neither ocean nor ship are "real"?both are just recognizable images. In another popular work, LA, 1982, Josephson photographs his arm holding up a square of paper to frame a small, squiggly section of a painted white crosswalk, defining its curves as "art" as selected by the photographer, whose shadow can be seen in the corner of the image.

 

Many of Josephson's works can either be considered a discovery or an alteration of a scene that questions our tendency to accept the photographic image as "truth" and expose the photographer's role as the manipulator of information.

 

A native of Detroit, Josephson studied photography at the Rochester Institute of Technology and at the Illinois Institute of Technology with well-known photographers Harry Calahan and Aaron Siskind. He taught photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago for 30 years. His work is included in museum collections worldwide, including the Figge Art Museum.

 

Visitors will have the opportunity to view classic images from Josephson's early work along with more recent investigations of the potential of the photographic image.

Wit and Whimsy: The Photographs of Kenneth Josephson will be on display through February 7, 2016.  

 

COMPANION EVENTS:
Opening Reception/Artist Talk 

Thursday, November 12 

5:30 p.m. Opening Reception with light hors d'oeuvres

7 p.m. Artist Talk with Kenneth Josephson

Members are invited to mingle in the lobby with light hors d'oeuvres and a cash bar to celebrate the opening of the exhibition. Join artists Kenneth Josephson and Marilyn Zimmerwoman at 7 p.m. for a conversation about Josephson's artwork and the current exhibition. Free!

 

Family Day

10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturday, January 9, 2016

 

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

 

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Davenport, Iowa (October 9, 2015) - Edward S. Curtis: One Hundred Masterworks will be on view at the Figge Art Museum beginning Saturday in the third floor gallery. The exhibition features a selection of 100 images of the Native American people of the United States taken by renowned photographer Edward S. Curtis.

 

In 1900, Edward Curtis (born in 1868) set out on a monumental quest to make an unprecedented, comprehensive record of the North American Indian. He traveled to Alaska, the Southwest and the Great Plains in search of his subjects. Over the next 30 years he produced more than 40,000 photographs of Native peoples. The culmination of his project resulted in a 20-volume, 20 portfolio set of handmade books entitled: The North American Indian?one of the most ambitious publishing projects in American history.

With an approximate cost of $35 million in today's dollars, Curtis' effort involved more than 100 assistants, artisans, salespeople and support staff, and required the collaboration of an estimated 10,000 Native Americans who posed or otherwise assisted the photographer. The project bankrupted him and ruined his health, and he died in obscurity in 1952, but today his work is considered a masterpiece of photography and a priceless record of Native American culture.

Visitors to the One Hundred Masterworks exhibition will have the opportunity to view well-known and rare images of Native Americans that range from portraits, including notables such as Red Cloud, to traditional scenes and ceremonies. Included are platinum prints, goldtones, cyanotypes and the more common photogravures, drawn from the largest existing collection of Curtis' work. The photographs are increasingly prized for their artistic value and present a historical record of enormous and irreplaceable importance.

One Hundred Masterworks will be on display October 10, 2015-January 17, 2016 and is sponsored by The Hunt and Diane Harris Family Foundation.

The Edward S. Curtis: One Hundred Masterworks book by collector, curator and Curtis authority Christopher Cardozo will be available for purchase in the Museum Store.

COMPANION EVENTS:
Opening Reception 

Friday, October 9

5:30 p.m. Members' Reception

7 p.m. Curator Talk

Members are invited to partake in light appetizers in the lobby to celebrate the opening of the exhibition. All are welcome at 7 p.m. to listen to collector, curator and Curtis authority Christopher Cardozo speak.

 

Documentary Film

7 p.m. Thursday, November 5

Language Healers tells the story of Native peoples striving to revitalize their languages and explores the importance of Native languages and cultures to Alaskans.

 

Talk

7 p.m. Thursday, November 19

Jane Simonsen, PhD, will present her research on Native American visual culture as it relates to the exhibition.

 

Family Day

10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturday, January 9, 2016

 

Docent-led Tours

1:30 p.m. Saturday, October 17

1:30 p.m. Sunday, October 18

Free with museum admission

 

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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Davenport, Iowa (June 30, 2015) - Figge Art Museum Executive Director Tim Schiffer has been elected to membership in the Association of Art Museum Directors.

The Association of Art Museum Directors, representing 244 art museum directors in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, aids its members in establishing and maintaining the highest professional standards for themselves and the museums they represent. It serves as a forum for the exchange of information and the exploration of ideas, and as a voice with which museum directors may express their joint perspectives and those of their institutions.

Membership in the Association is based on the qualifications of both the individual director and the specific art museum. The applications are reviewed by the Membership Committee and recommendations are made to the Board of Trustees, with election to membership made by that body.

Schiffer said he is honored to become a member of this exclusive organization. "Membership in the AAMD will enable me to represent the Figge with leaders of the most prominent art museums across North America, and will keep us in touch with new ideas and best practices in the museum world," he added.

Further information about AAMD is available at www.aamd.org.

Davenport, Iowa (June 19, 2015) - Building a Masterpiece, Celebrating 90 Years. The Figge Art Museum will celebrate the 10th anniversary of its opening and the 90th anniversary of the opening of its predecessor, the Davenport Municipal Art Gallery, on August 6, 2015. Anniversary events begin on Saturday, June 20 with the kickoff of free museum admission for all visitors. Thanks to the generous support of the Riverboat Development Authority everyone will have access to the museum free of charge until September 20, 2015.

 

During the three months of free admission, over 50 museum events are planned with the majority being free of charge. Events will include an opening reception and curator talk for American Moderns on Paper: Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art on June 25; the Figge's  10th Birthday Celebration on August 6, an all-day event filled with special activities, performances and art projects, a September 10 special evening with Figge Architect Sir David Chipperfield; and a number of artist talks, tours, opening receptions, curator talks, PechaKucha nights, the Figge's in-house outreach series, art films and more. For detailed descriptions and a complete list of events visit: www.figgeartmuseum.org.

For the first day of free admission on Saturday, the museum will hostI Heart Figge Family Day sponsored by MidAmerican Energy, Quad-City Times and Riverboat Development Authority with planned activities from 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. inspired by the American Moderns on Paper: Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art exhibition opening Saturday on the third and fourth floor galleries and the I Heart Figge exhibition currently on view in the Mary Waterman Gildehaus Community Gallery. Activities will include drawing, painting, creating storybooks, collage art and more.

Visitors and those passing by the museum Friday, June 19 - Sunday, June 21, will have the opportunity to view the Muscatine River Monster, an inflatable sculpture installation and interactive character, on the Bechtel Plaza in front of the museum. The monster will be up during business hours and all are invited to stop by and experience the sculpture first-hand.

 

"We are thrilled to partner with the Riverboat Development Authority to make world-class art available to everyone in the Quad Cities this summer, free of admission fees," said Executive Director Tim Schiffer. "We hope to see many new faces, along with our regular visitors who come for our programs and special events."

 

Exhibitions on view during the free admission period will include : American Moderns on Paper: Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (through September 20), I Heart Figge (through September 13), Terry Rathje: Allinittogether (through September 1), The Model Museum (through September 20), Corn Zone (June 30-October 11) and A Gift for the Quad Cities: The Figge Art Museum 10th Anniversary Exhibition (July 5-October 4, 2015).

The museum is also partnering with Live Uncommon, a nonprofit supporting community involvement and fitness, who will present a special summer series of family-friendly events on the Bechtel Plaza at the Figge. The first event in the series is The Figge 5Kickoff at 1 p.m. Saturday followed by live music until 4 p.m. Other events in the series will include dance, yoga, Zumba, 5ks, school yard workouts and more! The series will culminate with the Figge Finale 5k on September 5. For a complete list of Summer Series Uncommon on the Figge Plaza visit www.liveuncommon.org.

 

Visit the Figge this summer and take advantage of free admission and the free anniversary events so you can see for yourself how the museum is Building a Masterpiece, Celebrating 90 Years and bringing art and people together.

 

About the Muscatine River Monster 

A Story of Invention and Re-invention of America's Heartland. The Muscatine River Monster is an inflatable sculpture installation and interactive character. The purpose is help people think about the stories their communities are living - and to amaze and delight anyone who experiences it.  Through highlighting Muscatine's incredible and ongoing story of innovation, the "Legend of the Kraken" shows how cities across the Midwest can be great places for creative and enterprising people to build their dreams. The River Monster character interacts with fans through its social media channels.  The online voice of the River Monster is described as an "enthusiastic supporter of creative and innovative ideas." 

 

History of the Figge Art Museum

The museum first opened in October 1925 in the former Battery B Armory building on fifth Street in downtown Davenport, with a collection of 334 paintings donated by former mayor Charles August Ficke. In order to accept the gift, the city persuaded the State of Iowa to pass a law allowing it to open and maintain a municipal art gallery.

 

By the 1950s, the collection had grown through multiple gifts and purchases made possible by support groups such as the Friends of Art, and the armory building had begun to deteriorate. The City Park Commission approved the construction of a new museum campus on a 12-acre tract on West 12th Street for the art museum and the Davenport Public Museum, now the Putnam Museum. The new gallery opened in May 1963. The museum was accredited by the American Association of Museums in 1983 and was later renamed the Davenport Museum of Art. As the collection and the museum's programs and events continued to expand, the building was no longer adequate. The City of Davenport granted permission ot the museum leadership to select a site in downtown Davenport.

 

An eight-member selection committee was formed to plan the new facility and choose a project architect and after an international competition with 54 prominent firms responding with materials about their prior work and profiles of their practices, British architect Sir David Chipperfield was awarded the contract for the design. The museum ceased to be a City entity, and transferred to nonprofit status, with the City of Davenport retaining ownership of its collection.

 

The 114,000 square-foot building was funded through lead gifts from the V.O. Figge and Elizabeth Kahl Figge Charitable Foundation, the Vision Iowa grant program, the City of Davenport, Scott County Iowa and gifts from other foundations, families, individuals, businesses and organizations. The total construction cost was $46 million. The U.S. architect of record was Herbert Lewis Kruse Blunck of Des Moines, and the general contractor was Russell Pepper Construction.

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7, but FREE TO ALL FROM JUNE 20-SEPTEMBER 20, 2015. Admission is always free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

Davenport, Iowa (June 17, 2015) - The Figge Art Museum will welcome a new traveling exhibition to the third and fourth floor galleries beginning Saturday. American Moderns on Paper: Materworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art will provide a front row seat to the development of American art during perhaps its most dynamic period (the early 20th century) through a priceless collection of personal and spontaneous works?those done on paper.

The exhibition features 87 works by 44 artists, created between 1902 and 1962, and ranging in style from the urban realism of John Sloan to the pioneering abstractions of Arthur Dove. Signature works by American masters such as Georgia O'Keeffe and Edward Hopper, as well as works by lesser-known, but influential artists such as Peggy Bacon and William Baziotes will be on view.

During the period in which these works were created the United States and New York City in particular became the world center of innovation in the visual arts. Many artists in the exhibition emigrated from Europe, while others were Americans who made frequent trips to travel and study in Paris and other European capitals, absorbing the influences of Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and other modernists.

The artists in American Moderns on Paper responded in different ways to the influence of the Europeans and to the dynamic changes of the 20th century. John Marin, for instance, incorporated Cubist elements into his cityscapes to express the energy of New York's bridges and skyscrapers. Works by Charles Burchfield, Ellsworth Kelly and others continue the great tradition of landscape in American art, giving it a modern vocabulary.

American Moderns on Paper: Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art is presented with the generous support of the Riverboat Development Authority in celebration of the Figge's 10th anniversary, with additional support from Genesis Health System and Per Mar Security Services and will be on view June 20-September 20, 2015.

Davenport, Iowa (May 6, 2015) - The Beaux Arts Spring Fair is this Saturday, May 9 from  10 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sunday, May 10 from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. on the Bechtel Plaza in front of the Figge Art Museum.

Over 100 artists from Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, South Dakota, California and Arizona will take over the plaza and surrounding streets with a variety of handmade creations. From paintings, clay, wood and glass to jewelry, photography, fiber and sculptures, a wide variety of one-of-a-kind items will be available for purchase.

Spin art will be offered for kids of all ages from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. each day and local musicians will be entertaining the crowd throughout the weekend.

Admission to the fair is free and museum admission will be reduced to $2 both Saturday and Sunday. The museum will be FREE to all mothers on Sunday for Mother's Day.

All proceeds from the Beaux Arts Fair benefit programming and exhibitions at the Figge Art Museum. For more information on the fair, please visit www.beauxartsfair.com.

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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Davenport, Iowa (April 6, 2015) - The Figge Art Museum is launching an exciting new platform that will enrich the visitor experience. The Figge mobile audio tour is designed to deliver behind-the-scenes content and facts about hand-selected works right to a visitor's own cell phone or tablet-completely free of charge.

"The tour allows us to build a relationship between objects in our collection and visitors," said Raelene Pullen, director of development. "We've worked to create a breadth of objects from different collections, so there's something for everyone to call into."

Each tour stop has been crafted by Figge staff, with special guest recordings by prominent Quad Cities community members including Artist Rose Franzen, Davenport Alderman Barney Barnhill, Dispatch-Argus Reporter Jonathan Turner, Marketing Director and Owner of Happy Joe's Kristel Whitty, Vice President of John Deere Foundation Nate Clark, Figge Executive Director Tim Schiffer, Quad City Arts Executive Director Carmen Darland, Music Educator Ron May, Lawyer Henry Nueman, Creative Arts Academy Department Chair Joel Franken and many more.

The tour currently has over forty different mobile stops including: The Figge Art Museum building, designed by Sir David Chipperfield, Half-Moon by Deborah Butterfield, Self Portrait by Grant Wood, Soundsculpture by Henry Bertoia. Moonlight by Ralph Blakelock, Vase de Fleurs sur un Table (Flower Vase on a Table) by Pablo Picaso, Elegy to the Spanish Republic by Robert Motherwell among others.

To participate, visitors simply dial the Figge's local tour number 563.424.3997 or scan the QR code. Once connected, participants will hear a short greeting and instructions to continue the mobile tour.

The mobile tour has been gifted by the Hunt and Diane Harris Family Foundation in honor of Tom and Mary Waterman Gildehaus to continue their vision for the Figge as a world-class art facility serving both residents and visitors.

Hunt Harris, Figge Board of Trustees member and chief sponsor of the museum's mobile tour, said the investment is a long-awaited and welcome addition to the Figge. "Art museums can be intimidating to those of us without art backgrounds. Having an audio explanation of major works makes the museum a less intimidating place and enhances our understanding and appreciation of the works before us," he added.

 

The Figge joins more than 1,200 U.S. and international venues using this technology, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian and Iowa's own Des Moines Art Center.

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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Davenport, Iowa (March 30, 2015) - Opening Saturday at the Figge Art Museum in the fourth floor gallery is the University of Iowa Art Faculty Biennial exhibition.

Curated by University of Iowa Museum of Art (UIMA) Museum Director Dr. Sean O'Harrow, the UIMA will kick off the spring season with this annual exhibition featuring the recent work of world renowned UI Studio Arts professors including: Eliza Au, Isabel Barbuzza, Peter Chanthanakone, Monica Correia, John Dilg, Laurel Farrin, Sue Hettmansperger, Anita Jung, Sarah Kanouse, Michele Lauriat, Amanda Lechner, Steve McGuire, Daniel Miller, Virginia Myers, Jeff Rich, Ronald M. Rozencohn, James Snitzer, Margaret Stratton, Serina Sulentic, Serhat Tanyolacar, Breanne Trammell, Josh Van Stippen, Susan Chrysler White, Rachel Williams, Jon Winet and Kee-Ho Yuen.

As a direct reflection of the range of medium taught in the Studio Arts program, the pieces and installations on display will include works of paint, sculpture, inter-media, mixed-media, metal arts, photography, 3-dementional design and graphic design. This year, works by the fellows of the Grant Wood Colony will also be included.

A free public reception celebrating the opening of this exhibition as well as the Eye on UI: Brodsky, Dorfman, Kipniss, Lanyon exhibition will take place at 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 11 with light appetizers and a cash bar. Free and open to the public.

University of Iowa students, faculty and staff receive free admission to the Figge with their UI ID cards; UIMA members get in free with their UIMA Membership cards.

The exhibition will be on display April 4 - May 31, 2015.

Companion Programming:

Dancers in Company Performance

6 p.m. Thursday, April 9

Free Admission
Dancers in Company consists of twelve dancers, undergraduates and graduate students from the University of Iowa. The group will return to the Figge for a performance in the lobby as part of a night that celebrates the artistic traditions at the University of Iowa. Presently, the company is directed by Charlotte Adams. Sponsored by the River Cities' Reader.

Artist Talks

7 p.m. Thursday, April 9
Free Admission
University of Iowa faculty from the School of Art will speak about their pieces included in the exhibition University of Iowa Art Faculty Biennial (April 4-May 31).

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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Davenport, Iowa (March 30, 2015) - Opening Saturday at the Figge Art Museum in the fourth floor gallery is the University of Iowa Art Faculty Biennial exhibition.

Curated by University of Iowa Museum of Art (UIMA) Museum Director Dr. Sean O'Harrow, the UIMA will kick off the spring season with this annual exhibition featuring the recent work of world renowned UI Studio Arts professors including: Eliza Au, Isabel Barbuzza, Peter Chanthanakone, Monica Correia, John Dilg, Laurel Farrin, Sue Hettmansperger, Anita Jung, Sarah Kanouse, Michele Lauriat, Amanda Lechner, Steve McGuire, Daniel Miller, Virginia Myers, Jeff Rich, Ronald M. Rozencohn, James Snitzer, Margaret Stratton, Serina Sulentic, Serhat Tanyolacar, Breanne Trammell, Josh Van Stippen, Susan Chrysler White, Rachel Williams, Jon Winet and Kee-Ho Yuen.

As a direct reflection of the range of medium taught in the Studio Arts program, the pieces and installations on display will include works of paint, sculpture, inter-media, mixed-media, metal arts, photography, 3-dementional design and graphic design. This year, works by the fellows of the Grant Wood Colony will also be included.

A free public reception celebrating the opening of this exhibition as well as the Eye on UI: Brodsky, Dorfman, Kipniss, Lanyon exhibition will take place at 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 11 with light appetizers and a cash bar. Free and open to the public.

University of Iowa students, faculty and staff receive free admission to the Figge with their UI ID cards; UIMA members get in free with their UIMA Membership cards.

The exhibition will be on display April 4 - May 31, 2015.

Companion Programming:

Dancers in Company Performance

6 p.m. Thursday, April 9

Free Admission
Dancers in Company consists of twelve dancers, undergraduates and graduate students from the University of Iowa. The group will return to the Figge for a performance in the lobby as part of a night that celebrates the artistic traditions at the University of Iowa. Presently, the company is directed by Charlotte Adams. Sponsored by the River Cities' Reader.

Artist Talks

7 p.m. Thursday, April 9
Free Admission
University of Iowa faculty from the School of Art will speak about their pieces included in the exhibition University of Iowa Art Faculty Biennial (April 4-May 31).

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members, and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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Davenport, Iowa (January 21, 2015) - Starting Saturday, the Figge Art Museum will present the work of artist Yuriko Yamaguchi in the exhibition titled: Yuriko Yamaguchi: Interconnected in Art, Nature, Science and Technology.

 

A native of Japan and longtime resident of Washington D.C., Yamaguchi creates organic, web-like sculptures from nets of wire and resin forms cast from dried curls of potatoes, onion ends, leaves and seed pods found in nature. She scours the neighboring woods and local grocery stores in search of these aesthetically pleasing forms that she dries and cuts up until they bear only a passing resemblance to their former selves. She then creates a silicon rubber mold from the material she collects and mixes liquid resin with color dye, which she then pours into the mold.

Biological in origin but no longer natural, the resin pieces that she produces embody the delicate balance that exists between various dualities: the familiar vs. the unfamiliar, synthetic vs. natural, realism vs. abstraction, death and decay vs. life and rejuvenation. Through her art, she seeks to explore the constantly fluctuating but ever-present "interconnections" that bind us to one another and to the natural world.

According to Yamaguchi, "I [create] works that remind people that we are all connected in many overlapping webs woven out of the common forces that affect the human condition: family origin, economic stressors, religious beliefs, nature, time, place and technology. After all, we are only human beings who were born and will die, only to be replaced by others in the community of man."

Yamaguchi takes on a holistic world view that sees all existence as intrinsically interrelated. Social concerns, politics, technology, ecological issues and other aspects of our reality must not be understood in isolation, but within a broader context and her work resists definitive interpretations.

Yamaguchi currently teaches sculpture at George Washington University. She has exhibited her work both nationally and internationally, including the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Field Museum in Chicago, Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, the Ise Contemporary Art Museum in Japan and many others. Her artwork also is included in major museum collections both in the U.S. and abroad.

This exhibition will be on view January 24-May 31, 2015 and an exhibition catalogue will be available in the Museum Store. 

This project is made possible by a grant to EICCD from the U.S. Institute of Museum & Library Services.

Companion Programming:

Opening Reception & Artist Talk

Friday, January 23, 2015

5:30 p.m. Opening Reception

7 p.m. Yuriko Yamaguchi Talk

Mingle with artist Yuriko Yamaguchi and fellow Figge members at the opening reception. Yamaguchi will speak at 7 p.m. and provide insight into her artistic process.

Artist Talks

7 p.m. Thursday, May 7

Area artists will reflect on the work of Yuriko Yamguchi

Weekend Tours

1:30 p.m. February 1, 7, 15, 28

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays 12-5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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