The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Museum’s roots run deep in metro Atlanta

Oglethorpe University Museum of Art celebrates 25 years with exhibit.

- By Fleming Smith Margaret.Smith@coxinc.com

Museums abound in Atlanta, but while many are familiar with the High Museum, there are several lesser-known museums with rich offerings, such as the Oglethorpe University Museum of Art.

The OUMA is now celebratin­g its 25th anniversar­y with “OUMA in Retrospect,” an exhibition of 10 percent of its permanent collection, including several works from famous artists such as Henri Matisse and Salvador Dalí. The majority of the works were donated, many from Atlanta families.

Elizabeth Peterson, the museum’s director since 2012, said its mission is broad: internatio­nal or national, spiritual or religious, realist or figurative. The museum spans seven centuries from the 14th to the 20th, with a few 21st century pieces.

While the museum’s strengths lie in 18th and 19th century French works on paper and art from the Far East, including OUMA’s 166piece Japanese porcelain collection, the galleries in the museum show a wide variety of styles and mediums.

With about 1,250 students at the university, “it’s very rare for a school of our size to have a museum of this caliber,” said John Daniel Tilford, the museum’s curator.

Lloyd Nick, a former professor of painting at the university, founded the museum in 1993 with a focus on art from the Far East. In the five years since Tilford and Peterson joined the museum, the permanent collection has grown from about 200 works to approximat­ely 700.

While OUMA serves as a museum for the Atlanta community, it also strives to serve students and professors, working closely with them to find connection­s between the university’s classes and the museum’s exhibition­s.

“There has been this enormous drive in the profession, especially in academic university museums, to make ourselves legitimate and valid and relevant, because if we’re not part of the curriculum, we shouldn’t be here,” Tilford said.

“We want to be a teaching, learning museum,” Peterson added. For that purpose, last year she organized an exhibit on Hispaniola: “A Celebratio­n of Haiti and the Dominican Republic.” In addition to curating an exhibit of Haitian art, Peterson worked with the school’s French, Spanish, music and theater department­s to organize a series of lectures, films and performanc­es to tie into the exhibit and the classes students were taking.

Each semester, the museum also chooses about 35 to 45 works that align with course offerings to display in the Skylight Gallery. Professors often hold their classes in

the museum galleries, Peterson said.

The OUMA also wants its art to be accessible to the community outside the school, even if patrons can’t visit the museum. Tilford has often visited local retirement communitie­s to bring art pieces with him for the residents to enjoy.

Peterson and Tilford have worked to cultivate strong relationsh­ips with local collectors, as well as with fellow museums like the High. “It’s much easier for us to borrow from collectors in Atlanta, but it also pleases the community to see these things on view,” Tilford said. “We like working with our neighbors.”

When Tilford looked through more than 700 works

in the permanent collection to choose what would be included in the anniversar­y exhibition, he considered which works were the strongest representa­tive examples of their style and genre while also being representa­tive of the families that donated them.

“You’re honoring the donors, but you’re also making sure that it’s the strongest representa­tion of the permanent collection,” Tilford explained.

The museum hopes to continue its rapid collection growth, particular­ly in acquiring more works by AfricanAme­rican artists. If the collection continues to grow at its current pace, Tilford said they would have “ambitious plans” for a future home for the museum, depending on the university’s wishes.

To Tilford, OUMA “provides a more intimate experience” than most museums for its more than 5,000 visitors each year. “You feel closer to the art; you don’t feel like you’re in some huge warehouse or that you’re behind guards at a palace. You can feel comfortabl­e with the art,” he said.

The OUMA will hold a party and lecture for the exhibit on Aug. 23.

 ?? IMAGES GIFTS OF DR. AND MRS. MICHAEL SCHLOSSBER­G. CONTRIBUTE­D BY OGLETHORPE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART ?? On the left, “Amitabha Buddha,” a Japanese work from the 14th century. Acquisitio­n by Lloyd Nick. On the right, “Le Pensée (Study for the tomb of Madam d’Agoult)” by Henri Chapu.
IMAGES GIFTS OF DR. AND MRS. MICHAEL SCHLOSSBER­G. CONTRIBUTE­D BY OGLETHORPE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART On the left, “Amitabha Buddha,” a Japanese work from the 14th century. Acquisitio­n by Lloyd Nick. On the right, “Le Pensée (Study for the tomb of Madam d’Agoult)” by Henri Chapu.
 ??  ?? “The Factory 8am” by Georgia artist Mattie Lou O’Kelley.
“The Factory 8am” by Georgia artist Mattie Lou O’Kelley.
 ?? IMAGES GIFTS OF MR. AND MRS. H. C. CARSON. CONTRIBUTE­D BY OGLETHORPE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART ?? “Blue Jay” by John James Audubon.
IMAGES GIFTS OF MR. AND MRS. H. C. CARSON. CONTRIBUTE­D BY OGLETHORPE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART “Blue Jay” by John James Audubon.
 ??  ?? “Study for the Footbridge” by Georgia artist Hattie Saussy.
“Study for the Footbridge” by Georgia artist Hattie Saussy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States