04.01.2015 Views

View PDF - Chrysler Museum of Art

View PDF - Chrysler Museum of Art

View PDF - Chrysler Museum of Art

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

CHRYSLER<br />

the<br />

THE MAGAZINE OF THE CHRYSLER MUSEUM OF ART<br />

CALENDAR<br />

September/October 2009<br />

OF EVENTS<br />

p 5 Exhibitions • p 8 News • p 10 Daily Calendar • p 16 Public Programs • p 19 Member Programs


G E N E R A L I N F O R M A T I O N<br />

COVER<br />

Mummy Mask<br />

<strong>of</strong> a Man (detail)<br />

Roman Period, early<br />

1st century A.D.<br />

Stucco, gilded<br />

and painted<br />

20 1 /4 x 13 x 7 7 /8 in.<br />

(51.5 x 33 x 20 cm)<br />

place made:<br />

Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin<br />

Wilbour Fund<br />

Contact Us<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

245 W. Olney Road<br />

Norfolk, VA 23510<br />

Phone: (757) 664-6200<br />

Fax: (757) 664-6201<br />

E-mail: museum@chrysler.org<br />

Website: www.chrysler.org<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Hours<br />

Wednesday, 10 a.m.–9 p.m.<br />

Thursday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.<br />

Sunday, 12–5 p.m.<br />

The <strong>Museum</strong> galleries are closed each<br />

Monday and Tuesday, as well as on<br />

major holidays.<br />

Admission<br />

General admission to the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong> and its world-class permanent<br />

collection is free. Voluntary<br />

contributions are happily accepted and<br />

are tax-deductible.<br />

Modest admission charges will be<br />

announced in advance <strong>of</strong> each visiting<br />

exhibition.<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Members and children 5 and<br />

younger will be admitted free to<br />

all exhibitions.<br />

Accessibility<br />

Free parking is available in two visitor<br />

lots or on nearby side streets.<br />

The <strong>Chrysler</strong> is wheelchair accessible<br />

via the ramp at the side entrance closest<br />

to the visitor parking lots.<br />

Complimentary wheelchairs and baby<br />

strollers are available near all entrances.<br />

Gallery Hosts are available to assist<br />

patrons with special needs.<br />

Jean Outland <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

Library<br />

Open Wednesday–Friday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.<br />

Wednesday evening hours are also<br />

available by appointment only.<br />

(757) 965-2035<br />

lchristiansen@chrysler.org<br />

The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop<br />

Open during <strong>Museum</strong> hours<br />

(757) 333-6297<br />

Cuisine & Company<br />

at the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

Wednesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–3 p.m.<br />

Sunday, 12–3 p.m.<br />

(757) 333-6291<br />

Historic Houses<br />

Free Admission<br />

The Moses Myers House<br />

Corner <strong>of</strong> Bank and Freemason Sts., Norfolk<br />

Hours: Wednesday–Saturday,<br />

10 a.m.–4 p.m.; Sunday, 12–4 p.m.<br />

Tours are hourly through 3 p.m.<br />

(757) 333-1086<br />

The Norfolk History <strong>Museum</strong> at the<br />

Willoughby-Baylor House<br />

601 E. Freemason Street, Norfolk<br />

Hours: Wednesday–Saturday,<br />

10 a.m.–4 p.m.; Sunday, 12–4 p.m.<br />

(757) 333-1091<br />

Tours start at the<br />

Freemason Street Reception Center<br />

401 E. Freemason Street, Norfolk<br />

(757) 441-1526<br />

Department Directory<br />

Office <strong>of</strong> the Director 333-6234<br />

Development 333-6253<br />

Communications 333-6295<br />

Special Events 333-6233<br />

Finance & Administration 333-6224<br />

Education 333-6269<br />

Historic Houses 333-1086<br />

Security 333-6237<br />

Curatorial 965-2033<br />

Library 965-2035<br />

Visitor Services 965-2039<br />

Facility Rental<br />

(757) 333-6233<br />

www.chrysler.org/rentals.asp<br />

events@chrysler.org<br />

Membership<br />

(757) 333-6298<br />

www.chrysler.org/membership.asp<br />

Group and School Tours<br />

(757) 333-6269<br />

www.chrysler.org/programs.asp<br />

Volunteers<br />

(757) 333-6220<br />

www.chrysler.org/membership<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees<br />

2009–2010<br />

Robert M. Boyd<br />

Carolyn K. Barry<br />

Nancy W. Branch<br />

Jerry A. Bridges<br />

Macon F. Brock, Vice Chairman<br />

Robert W. Carter<br />

E. John Field<br />

Andrew S. Fine<br />

David R. Goode<br />

Cyrus W. Grandy V<br />

Adrianne R. Joseph<br />

Linda H. Kaufman, Secretary<br />

Sandra W. Lewis<br />

Henry Light<br />

Edward L. Lilly<br />

Vincent J. Mastracco, Jr.<br />

Patterson N. McKinnon<br />

Charles W. (Wick) Moorman, Chairman<br />

Susan Nordlinger<br />

Richard D. Roberts<br />

Anne B. Shumadine<br />

Thomas L. Stokes, Jr.<br />

Josephine L. Turner<br />

Leah Waitzer<br />

Lewis W. Webb III<br />

Wayne F. Wilbanks<br />

The <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong> is partially<br />

supported by grants from the City <strong>of</strong><br />

Norfolk, the National Endowment for<br />

the <strong>Art</strong>s, the Virginia Commission for the<br />

<strong>Art</strong>s, the Business Consortium for <strong>Art</strong>s<br />

Support, and The Webster Foundation.<br />

This publication is produced<br />

by the Communications<br />

Department; Cheryl Little,<br />

Publications and<br />

Public Relations<br />

Coordinator; Abigail Lee,<br />

Communications Intern.<br />

Unless otherwise noted,<br />

all <strong>Museum</strong> images are<br />

by Ed Pollard, <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Photographer.<br />

These exhibitions were “ very inspiring. Thank you!<br />

This was the first time bringing my sons to a museum.<br />

We will be back again.<br />

A visitor to <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> ” Glass 2 at the <strong>Chrysler</strong>


D I R E C T O R ’ S N O T E<br />

WE’VE BEEN DREAMING OF THIS…<br />

…and for a long time. The <strong>Chrysler</strong> has always been serious about<br />

making its collections and programs truly accessible to people <strong>of</strong> all<br />

ages and backgrounds. Over the years we have worked hard to make<br />

the <strong>Museum</strong> a friendly and welcoming place, and to ensure that the<br />

works <strong>of</strong> art in our care are meaningful and relevant to the lives <strong>of</strong> our<br />

visitors. But in spite <strong>of</strong> these efforts, one formidable barrier has<br />

remained to achieving our mission <strong>of</strong> “bringing art and people together<br />

to enrich and transform lives”—the charge at the door.<br />

Of course, admission has always been free to our Members and, for a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> years, to the general public on Wednesdays. In fact, all <strong>of</strong> us<br />

here at the <strong>Chrysler</strong> look forward to Wednesdays. More than twice as<br />

many people come on that day than on any other day <strong>of</strong> the week, and<br />

the crowd is wonderfully diverse and enthusiastic. We want the<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> to be like that every day.<br />

So, in a difficult economic climate, when many cultural organizations are increasing their admission<br />

charges, the <strong>Museum</strong>’s Trustees have taken a bold step in the opposite direction. Believing that now, more<br />

than ever, the experience <strong>of</strong> original works <strong>of</strong> art can make a real and positive difference in the lives <strong>of</strong> the<br />

people <strong>of</strong> our community, they have voted to remove the <strong>Museum</strong>’s general admission charge.<br />

That means that all 62 <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Museum</strong>’s permanent collection galleries will be open and accessible to the<br />

public, without charge, whenever the <strong>Chrysler</strong> is open. Under our new policy, some special exhibitions<br />

will carry a modest admission fee (as usual, though, Members will be admitted free), but, as you’ll read in<br />

this magazine, we’re also launching a whole range <strong>of</strong> new programs to complement our new admission<br />

policy. There are new tours and gallery programs, special events for Members, new partnerships with<br />

performing arts groups, and a new schedule <strong>of</strong> programs for Wednesday evenings—all designed to make<br />

the <strong>Chrysler</strong> an even more lively and enjoyable place.<br />

We hope that free admission will open up the <strong>Museum</strong> to a whole new audience, that it will build a<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> shared community ownership <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Chrysler</strong> and its collections, and that it will make it easy for<br />

people to drop in and spend a few minutes in the galleries whenever they feel a need for some beauty,<br />

inspiration, or insight.<br />

William J. Hennessey<br />

Director<br />

A final note: Our new “free to all” policy has been made possible by special gifts from a number <strong>of</strong><br />

generous local donors and foundations. We are deeply grateful to them, but we will need the continued<br />

support <strong>of</strong> our Members to sustain it. In addition to very real tangible rewards, <strong>Chrysler</strong> membership<br />

now also carries with it the satisfaction <strong>of</strong> knowing that your investment in the <strong>Museum</strong> is making the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>’s resources available to others who might not otherwise be able to visit. Please help us keep the<br />

doors open for everyone in our community. Become a Member today!<br />

FREE<br />

GENERAL<br />

ADMISSION<br />

Begins Wednesday,<br />

September 2<br />

Admission to our permanent<br />

collection is free to everyone<br />

whenever the <strong>Museum</strong> galleries<br />

are open.<br />

The <strong>Chrysler</strong> is open to the<br />

public on Wednesdays from<br />

10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Thursdays,<br />

Fridays, and Saturdays from<br />

10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and<br />

Sundays from 12 to 5 p.m.<br />

The <strong>Museum</strong> galleries will<br />

remain closed on Mondays<br />

and Tuesdays.<br />

Parking at the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong> is free.<br />

Special exhibitions will<br />

carry modest admissions<br />

charges, as noted.<br />

Admission to special<br />

exhibitions is ALWAYS FREE<br />

to <strong>Museum</strong> Members and<br />

children 5 and younger.<br />

All current coupons and free<br />

admission cards will be<br />

honored toward entry to<br />

special exhibitions.<br />

On Bunny and Perry Morgan<br />

Family Days, the entire<br />

<strong>Museum</strong>—including all<br />

special exhibitions—will be<br />

open free <strong>of</strong> charge!<br />

1


C O V E R S T O R Y<br />

Canopic Jar <strong>of</strong> Hor Depicting a Jackal<br />

Late Period, 664 – 525 B.C. or later<br />

Limestone; 11 9 /16 (29.3 cm) height x 5 1 /4 in. (13.4 cm) diameter<br />

place made: Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund<br />

TO LIVE FOREVER:<br />

EGYPTIAN TREASURES FROM<br />

THE BROOKLYN MUSEUM<br />

October 14, 2009 through January 3, 2010<br />

in the Large Changing Gallery<br />

October 14 marks the public debut <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the most extraordinary<br />

exhibitions ever hosted by the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong>—To Live Forever:<br />

Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong>. In its first-ever special exhibition<br />

<strong>of</strong> ancient Egyptian art, the <strong>Chrysler</strong> has drawn from the extensive holdings<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong>, renowned as one <strong>of</strong> the richest collections <strong>of</strong> such art in the<br />

United States and, indeed, in the world outside <strong>of</strong> Egypt. The <strong>Chrysler</strong> is proud to be the only Mid-<br />

Atlantic venue for this remarkable display <strong>of</strong> age-old Egyptian artifacts related to their quest to achieve<br />

eternal life.<br />

For ancient Egyptians, death was an enemy that could be defeated through proper preparation in life. The<br />

120 objects in the exhibition—including mummies, c<strong>of</strong>fins, sarcophagi, and funerary shrouds—trace the<br />

Egyptians’ all-consuming effort to outfit their tombs to please the gods, subdue death, and allow them to<br />

“live forever” in the afterlife.<br />

To Live Forever commences with an introduction to the Egyptians’ religious beliefs and the array <strong>of</strong> gods<br />

and legends that inspired them to spend a large part <strong>of</strong> their mortal lives preparing for immortality. The<br />

stories <strong>of</strong> Osiris and Isis, their son Horus, Osiris’s evil brother Seth, and the sun god Re unfold<br />

amid a rich display <strong>of</strong> golden c<strong>of</strong>fins, funerary statues, papyri, stone reliefs, and amulets.<br />

Anthropoid C<strong>of</strong>fin <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Servant <strong>of</strong> the Great Place,<br />

Teti (detail)<br />

New Kingdom,<br />

Dynasty 18, ca. 1339 B.C. –<br />

1307 B.C.<br />

Wood, painted<br />

33 1 /4 x 18 13 /16 x 81 1 /2 in. (84.5<br />

x 47.8 x 207 cm)<br />

place purchased: Thebes,<br />

Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund


C O V E R S T O R Y<br />

Image <strong>of</strong> a Ba-bird on a<br />

Footpiece from a C<strong>of</strong>fin<br />

Third Intermediate Period,<br />

Dynasty 22, 945 – 712 B.C.<br />

Wood and plaster, painted<br />

11 x 2 1 /16 x 12 5 /8 in.<br />

(28 x 5.3 x 32 cm)<br />

place made: Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund<br />

Mummy <strong>of</strong> Demetri(o)s<br />

Roman Period, 30 B.C. – 395 A.D.<br />

Painted cloth, gold, human remains<br />

13 3 /8 x 15 3 /8 x 74 13 /16 in. (34 x 39 x 190 cm)<br />

place found: Roman Cemetery, Hawara, Egypt<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund<br />

Gaming Board Inscribed for Amenhotep III with<br />

Separate Sliding Drawer<br />

New Kingdom, reign <strong>of</strong> Amenhotep III, ca. 1390 – 1353 B.C.<br />

Faience, glazed; 2 3 /16 x 3 1 /16 x 8 1 /4 in. (5.5 x 7.7 x 21 cm)<br />

reportedly from: Thebes, Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund<br />

The exhibition then moves through the practical process <strong>of</strong> preparing for death, beginning with<br />

mummification—the silk-shrouded mummy <strong>of</strong> Demetrios is featured here—and proceeding to the funeral<br />

and the tomb itself. Along the way, the exhibition focuses on the basic, practical realities that both rich<br />

and poor faced while outfitting themselves for death. Furnishing a tomb was, after all, the biggest expense<br />

in an ancient Egyptian’s life. The c<strong>of</strong>fin alone could cost more than a year’s salary, encouraging the less<br />

affluent to find more inventive ways to furnish their eternal resting place with less costly materials. The<br />

exhibition’s emphasis on the economics <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong>fers new insight into the daily thinking <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Egyptians and invites new respect for the sheer cost and even extravagance <strong>of</strong> reserving gold, limestone,<br />

jewels, and other precious materials not for the here and now, but for the hereafter.<br />

As To Live Forever unfolds, it <strong>of</strong>fers rare examples <strong>of</strong> every sort <strong>of</strong> art object that would have been found in a<br />

tomb or temple: ka statues <strong>of</strong> the deceased to provide a resting place for the spirit; votive sculptures to<br />

placate the gods; household items such mirrors, vessels, and knives; canopic jars to hold the stomach,<br />

intestines, lungs, and liver <strong>of</strong> the deceased after extraction during mummification; golden mummy masks,<br />

headrests, foot pieces, and identification tags; as well as amulets and jewelry, gaming boards, and a small<br />

army <strong>of</strong> shabtys, the miniature servant figurines that were placed in the tomb to labor for the deceased in the<br />

eternal fields <strong>of</strong> Osiris.<br />

An exhibition <strong>of</strong> extraordinary rarity and quality, To Live Forever <strong>of</strong>fers a once-in-a-generation opportunity to<br />

experience the full range and wonder <strong>of</strong> ancient Egyptian art—right here in Hampton Roads.<br />

ADMISSION TO THE EXHIBITION<br />

To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

$7 for Adults (18 and older)<br />

$5 for Seniors, Teachers, Military, and Students with Current ID<br />

$3 for Children 6-17 (and school tours)<br />

ALWAYS FREE for <strong>Museum</strong> Members and Children 5 and younger<br />

To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong> has been organized by the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong>.<br />

Local presentation <strong>of</strong> the exhibition has been made possible through the generous support <strong>of</strong><br />

the Business Exhibition Council <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong>, For <strong>Art</strong>’s Sake, and an anonymous friend <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Museum</strong>.


E X H I B I T I O N S<br />

TO LIVE FOREVER HIGHLIGHT EVENTS<br />

4<br />

Members’ Opening Weekend<br />

For an exhibition this big, the <strong>Chrysler</strong> expanded its Members’ Opening to<br />

a full weekend <strong>of</strong> exciting events. Come celebrate To Live Forever: Egyptian<br />

Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong> with three days <strong>of</strong> special benefits designed<br />

exclusively for <strong>Museum</strong> Members.<br />

Friday, October 9<br />

Dance Like an Egyptian!<br />

8–11 p.m. in Huber Court<br />

For <strong>Art</strong>’s Sake helps the <strong>Chrysler</strong> kick <strong>of</strong>f<br />

its quest to live forever with a Sphinx-sized night <strong>of</strong><br />

dancing to the undead. Cursed with the funk <strong>of</strong><br />

5,000 years (and the grave clothes to prove it), Here<br />

Come the Mummies promise to wake even the ancients<br />

in their search for the ultimate riff. This is one pharaonic<br />

party you won’t want to miss! Reservations are required<br />

for this free Members-only event. RSVP by Monday,<br />

October 5 to (757) 333-6253, www.chrysler.org, or<br />

RSVP@chrysler.org.<br />

Saturday, October 10<br />

Members’ Exhibition Preview Day<br />

10 a.m.–5 p.m.<br />

Enjoy a full day <strong>of</strong> advance access to To Live Forever before<br />

its October 14 public opening. Admission to the<br />

exhibition is always free to Members. Be sure to visit<br />

The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop for some souvenirs during the<br />

Members’ Opening Weekend Sale (see the back cover for<br />

limited To Live Forever sale bonuses and <strong>of</strong>fers).<br />

Sunday, October 11<br />

Members’ Exhibition Preview<br />

Special Lecture: Preparing to Live Forever<br />

Catalogue Signing<br />

12–5 p.m.<br />

Peruse To Live Forever or discuss the exhibition with other<br />

Members over c<strong>of</strong>fee and light refreshments in the<br />

Diamonstein Education Workshop from noon to 2 p.m.<br />

Then join us in the Kaufman Theatre where Edward<br />

Bleiberg, Curator <strong>of</strong> Egyptian, Classical, and Ancient Middle<br />

Eastern <strong>Art</strong> at the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong>, will detail the spiritual<br />

and material struggles that ancient Egyptians underwent in<br />

order to achieve immortality. A catalogue signing follows<br />

the lecture in Huber Court. To Live Forever catalogues are<br />

available for purchase in The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop for $24.95.<br />

Not a Member It’s not too late to join the fun!<br />

Contact Brian Wells at (757) 333-6298 or bwells@chrysler.org.<br />

To Live Forever<br />

at the CMA<br />

Unless otherwise indicated, all<br />

programs are free for <strong>Museum</strong> Members<br />

and children 5 and younger, or are included<br />

with paid admission to the exhibition.<br />

Audio Tours by Edward Bleiberg<br />

Throughout the exhibition<br />

To Live Forever Gallery Talks<br />

Wednesdays and Fridays at 12:30 p.m.<br />

and Sundays at 2 p.m.<br />

School Tours<br />

Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, October 14 to December 18<br />

Cost is only $3 per student. Call (757) 333-6269 or e-mail<br />

education@chrysler.org for scheduling.<br />

Sleep with the Mummies: A Masquerade for Families<br />

Friday, October 23 at 7 p.m.<br />

Catch mummy madness at this pre-Halloween sleepover for<br />

families with kids ages 6-12. It’s sure to sell out quickly, so<br />

reserve your spots today. For details, see page 16.<br />

Tickle My Ears: Walk Like an Egyptian<br />

Thursday, December 3 at 11 a.m.<br />

Sunk Relief <strong>of</strong><br />

Queen Neferu<br />

Middle Kingdom, reign <strong>of</strong><br />

Mentuhotep II, Dynasty 11,<br />

ca. 2008 B.C. – 1957 B.C.<br />

Limestone, painted<br />

7 1 /2 x 9 15 /16 x 3 /4 in.<br />

(19 x 23.6 x 1.9 cm)<br />

place made: (Theban Tomb<br />

no. 319), Tomb <strong>of</strong><br />

Queen Neferu, Thebes<br />

(Deir el-Bahri), Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour<br />

Fund<br />

Bunny and Perry Morgan Family Day<br />

Sunday, December 6 from 12–5 p.m.<br />

INCLUDING FREE ADMISSION FOR TO LIVE FOREVER!<br />

Egypt in Film<br />

Explore ancient Egypt through three free blockbuster movies.<br />

Cleopatra—Sunday, November 8<br />

at 1 p.m.<br />

The Prince <strong>of</strong> Egypt—Wednesday, December 30<br />

at 3 p.m.<br />

The Lion King—Sunday, January 3<br />

at 3 p.m.<br />

Block Statue <strong>of</strong> a High Official <strong>of</strong> the Ptolemaic Period<br />

Ptolemaic Period, 305 – 30 B.C.<br />

Diorite; 15 3 /8 x 6 9 /16 x 7 7 /8 in. (39 x 16.7 x 20 cm)<br />

possible place made: Thebes (Karnak), Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund


E X H I B I T I O N S<br />

CURRENTLY ON VIEW<br />

ABOVE<br />

Taji Patterson<br />

Gallery Host<br />

Holding On to What's<br />

Inside, 2008<br />

Color pencil, pastel, and<br />

charcoal on paper<br />

CENTER<br />

Cheena Nicole Raiford<br />

Exhibitions Preparator<br />

NṒH, 2007<br />

Woodcut<br />

RIGHT<br />

Anita Pope<br />

Exhibitions Preparator<br />

Stearns Creek, 2009<br />

Inkjet print<br />

Untitled I, 1996<br />

Charcoal on paper<br />

Untitled II, 1996<br />

Charcoal and pastel on paper<br />

Photos by Jake Gillespie for<br />

the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

After Hours: Works by the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> Staff<br />

Through October 11, 2009<br />

in the Waitzer Community Gallery<br />

Our first-ever staff exhibition echoes the range <strong>of</strong> mediums<br />

on display in the <strong>Museum</strong>’s permanent collection—<br />

paintings, sculptures, photographs, glass, porcelain, prints,<br />

and drawings. The pieces by these 23 employees truly<br />

demonstrate the creative energy and hidden talents <strong>of</strong><br />

those who work here.<br />

Dutch “Golden Age”<br />

Paintings<br />

June 25, 2009 –<br />

January 17, 2010 in the<br />

Kaufman Furniture Gallery<br />

Many <strong>of</strong> the Netherlands’<br />

greatest 17th-century painters are<br />

represented in this intimate<br />

exhibition <strong>of</strong> privately held gems.<br />

Displayed among the fine<br />

antiques are portraits <strong>of</strong> a<br />

wealthy Calvinist couple by<br />

Gerard Ter Borch, a candlelit<br />

morality scene by Godfried<br />

Schalcken, and an expressive<br />

likeness <strong>of</strong> a Haarlem historian by<br />

Rembrandt van Rijn<br />

Self-Portrait With Shaded Eyes, 1634<br />

Oil on panel, 27 7 /8 x 21 3 /4 in.<br />

©IGRAT 2006 LLC<br />

Frans Hals. The highlight is a one-time genre painting <strong>of</strong> a<br />

Russian-garbed man; only recently, after the removal <strong>of</strong> layers<br />

<strong>of</strong> over-painting, has the work been acknowledged as a selfportrait<br />

by Rembrandt van Rijn. This fine assortment is on loan<br />

to the <strong>Chrysler</strong> from a generous collector in New York.<br />

Norfolk and Western Railway Photographs<br />

by O. Winston Link<br />

Through October 18, 2009<br />

in the Kaufman Theatre Lobby<br />

This exhibition displays the power and majesty <strong>of</strong> the steampowered<br />

locomotive as seen through the remarkable eye <strong>of</strong><br />

photographer O. Winston Link. The photographs are drawn<br />

from the collection <strong>of</strong> Susan and David Goode.<br />

O. Winston Link (American,<br />

1914–2001)<br />

Solitude Siding and Train<br />

No. 2, Near Arcadia,<br />

Virginia, 1957<br />

Loan, with intent to give,<br />

from David and<br />

Susan Goode<br />

© O. Winston Link Trust<br />

5


E X H I B I T I O N S<br />

CURRENTLY ON VIEW<br />

Suzanne Opton (American, b. 1954)<br />

Soldier: Claxton – 120 Days in Afghanistan,<br />

Fort Drum, New York, 2005,<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> purchase<br />

©Suzanne Opton<br />

Mathew B. Brady Studio (American,<br />

1823–1896)<br />

General William Tecumseh Sherman,<br />

1866/1869<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> David L. Hack and by exchange<br />

Walter P. <strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr.<br />

6<br />

Edward Steichen (American, 1879–1973)<br />

Infrared <strong>View</strong> <strong>of</strong> Officers Gathered on the Deck <strong>of</strong> USS Lexington, November, 1943<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> purchase, in memory <strong>of</strong> Alice R. and Sol B. Frank<br />

At the Front<br />

August 14, 2009 – January 17, 2010<br />

in the Frank Photography Gallery<br />

Through photographs and paintings from the <strong>Museum</strong><br />

collection, some very recently acquired, this small exhibition<br />

provides an opportunity to explore the interior emotional life <strong>of</strong><br />

the pr<strong>of</strong>essional soldier. Working in unexpected ways, some <strong>of</strong><br />

the artists in this show work to take us inside the heads <strong>of</strong> those<br />

who are called upon to face death on a daily basis. Others give<br />

us unexpectedly revealing glimpses <strong>of</strong> historic personalities, or<br />

shine a light on military life <strong>of</strong>f the battlefield.<br />

Fifty Years Later:<br />

The Lessons <strong>of</strong> Massive Resistance<br />

Ongoing at the Norfolk History <strong>Museum</strong> at the<br />

Willoughby-Baylor House<br />

Held over from the <strong>Museum</strong>’s full exhibition last winter, this<br />

multimedia timeline highlights the desegregation <strong>of</strong> Norfolk’s<br />

public schools through the photographs, documents, and<br />

clippings <strong>of</strong> the people and places that forever changed<br />

public education in Norfolk.<br />

Moses Myers, Merchant <strong>of</strong> Norfolk<br />

Ongoing at the Moses Myers House<br />

Supported by a generous gift from Mr. T. Parker Host, this<br />

permanent exhibition explores the business <strong>of</strong> maritime<br />

commerce through the life <strong>of</strong> Moses Myers.<br />

Photography at the <strong>Chrysler</strong>:<br />

Recent Acquisitions<br />

Ongoing<br />

This exhibition features a changing selection <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

exciting historical and contemporary photographs added to<br />

the <strong>Museum</strong>’s collection in recent years.<br />

Cameo Performances: Masterpieces <strong>of</strong> Cameo<br />

Glass from the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s Collection<br />

Ongoing<br />

This show explores the history <strong>of</strong> cameo glass from ancient<br />

Roman examples through the popular resurgence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

technique in England during the late-19th century.<br />

EXTENDED through Winter 2010<br />

Green Eye <strong>of</strong> the Pyramid<br />

by Stanislav Libenský and Jaroslava Brychtová, in the<br />

Prints and Drawings Gallery<br />

Semi-Reclining Dress Impression with Drapery<br />

by Karen LaMonte, in the Oval Gallery<br />

Thanks to the generosity <strong>of</strong> Lisa and Dudley Anderson, these<br />

two remarkable pieces from their private collection, both on<br />

display for <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Glass 2, will enjoy an extended run here at<br />

the <strong>Museum</strong>.


E X H I B I T I O N S<br />

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS<br />

Barton Myers: Norfolk Visionary<br />

September 30 at the Moses Myers House<br />

Mayor Barton Myers transformed his city from a prosperous<br />

coastal town into a thriving modern metropolis. Thanks to a<br />

generous gift from T. Parker Host, the Moses Myers House<br />

honors this “first citizen <strong>of</strong> Norfolk” with a display <strong>of</strong> objects<br />

and images highlighting his extraordinary life.<br />

To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures<br />

from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

October 14, 2009 –<br />

January 3, 2010<br />

in the Large<br />

Changing Gallery<br />

For more information on this<br />

blockbuster exhibition,<br />

please see this issue’s cover<br />

story on pages 2-3.<br />

Upper Part <strong>of</strong> a False Door <strong>of</strong> Sethew, Old Kingdom, ca. 2500-2350 B.C.E.<br />

Limestone, painted 22 1 /16 x 20 1 /2 x 4 15 /16 in. (56 x 52 x 12.5 cm)<br />

place found: Giza, Egypt, Africa Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund<br />

Photographs<br />

by Eliot Porter<br />

October 24, 2009 –<br />

February 28, 2010<br />

in the Kaufman<br />

Theatre Lobby<br />

Continuing our downstairs<br />

series highlighting great<br />

photography from the<br />

<strong>Museum</strong>’s permanent<br />

collection, this exhibition<br />

focuses on the striking color<br />

landscapes and nature images<br />

<strong>of</strong> Eliot Porter (1901–1990).<br />

<strong>Art</strong>ist, chemist, physician, and<br />

naturalist Porter was among<br />

the first to adopt the newly<br />

developed dye transfer process.<br />

Beginning in 1939 Porter<br />

literally created a new way <strong>of</strong> presenting<br />

nature. His large-format prints combine<br />

precise observation with rich and<br />

resonant color.<br />

Eliot Porter (American, 1901–1990)<br />

Aspens by Lake from Trees portfolio,<br />

1988, Gift <strong>of</strong> Joseph C. French, Jr. and<br />

John Wawrzonek<br />

©Amon Carter <strong>Museum</strong> Archive<br />

Action Paintings at the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

October 17, 2009 – April 11, 2010<br />

in the Waitzer Community Gallery<br />

In the pivotal years around World War II, a group <strong>of</strong> American<br />

avant-garde artists centered in New York began to create a new<br />

form <strong>of</strong> painting that challenged both aesthetic tradition and<br />

public expectation. Their canvases no longer depicted<br />

recognizable subjects, but instead focused on the act <strong>of</strong> painting<br />

itself. Influenced by Freudian psychology and emerging notions<br />

<strong>of</strong> the subconscious, firebrands like Jackson Pollock and Franz<br />

Kline channeled their spontaneity and creative dictates into a<br />

vital form <strong>of</strong> abstraction. The canvas became “an arena in which<br />

to act,” their work, “action painting.” With pigment dripped,<br />

flung, stroked, and slashed across their canvases, these young<br />

rebels forged a radically new vocabulary <strong>of</strong> artistic gesture that<br />

helped birth Abstract Expressionism and dominated progressive<br />

American painting well into the 1960s.<br />

As an enthusiastic collector <strong>of</strong> Action Painting, Walter P. <strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr. befriended many <strong>of</strong> the movement’s founders and<br />

purchased major examples <strong>of</strong> their work. Though many <strong>of</strong> these acquisitions (including canvases by Hans H<strong>of</strong>fmann,<br />

Pollock, and Kline) are today on display in our McKinnon Galleries <strong>of</strong> Modern <strong>Art</strong>, many more have remained in our<br />

storage vaults—until this exhibition that encourages viewers to revel in the pure optical pleasure <strong>of</strong> paint applied to<br />

canvas and to survey a wide range <strong>of</strong> responses, from intensely emotional to the lyrical and serene.<br />

Michael Goldberg<br />

(American,<br />

1955-1956)<br />

Red Sunday<br />

Morning, 1955–56<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> Walter P.<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr.<br />

7


N E W S<br />

Pam Sasser (left) and Margaret Blackwell <strong>of</strong> Northrop Grumman (right)<br />

catch sight <strong>of</strong> the live glassblowing in Mary’s Garden.<br />

Hank Boyd <strong>of</strong> BB&T (left) and his wife, Debbie (right), spend a few<br />

moments in conversation with <strong>Museum</strong> Trustee Dr. Ed Lilly (center).<br />

David Embree <strong>of</strong> Williams Mullen (left) and Stephen White and Bob Sasser<br />

<strong>of</strong> Dollar Tree Stores, Inc. represent two <strong>of</strong> the longtime corporate Members<br />

<strong>of</strong> the BEC.<br />

BEC BRINGS THE NILE<br />

TO NORFOLK<br />

As the leading business support<br />

group for Hampton Roads’<br />

premiere cultural institution, the<br />

Business Exhibition Council is critical<br />

to achieving the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s mission <strong>of</strong><br />

“bringing people and art together to<br />

enrich and transform lives.” In the past<br />

10 years, the BEC has contributed<br />

more than $1,000,000 toward<br />

underwriting exhibitions that bring<br />

international masterpieces to the<br />

communities <strong>of</strong> Hampton Roads. Its<br />

generosity has helped to fund such fine<br />

shows as American Chronicles: The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Norman Rockwell, Rembrandt’s Etchings: The<br />

Embrace <strong>of</strong> Darkness and Light, and From<br />

Goya to Sorolla: Masterpieces from The<br />

Hispanic Society <strong>of</strong> America, to name but a<br />

few recent favorites.<br />

At their annual <strong>Art</strong> Selection Dinner on<br />

May 21, BEC Members mixed in Mary’s<br />

Garden while Glass Curator Kelly<br />

Conway narrated a live glassblowing<br />

demonstration by Ed Francis. Members<br />

later enjoyed an evening <strong>of</strong> dining<br />

amid the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s exceptional glass<br />

collection. After an informative<br />

exhibition presentation by Chief<br />

Curator Jeff Harrison, BEC Members<br />

also announced their 2009-2010<br />

underwriting choice: To Live Forever:<br />

Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong>.<br />

For information on how your firm<br />

can benefit from membership in the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>’s Business Exhibition Council,<br />

please contact the <strong>Museum</strong>’s Director<br />

<strong>of</strong> Development, Edwina Bell, at<br />

(757) 965-2032 or email her at<br />

ebell@chrysler.org.<br />

2008 – 2009<br />

American Funds Group<br />

Bank <strong>of</strong> America<br />

BB&T<br />

Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.<br />

Earl Industries, LLC<br />

Gannett Media Technologies<br />

International<br />

Honeywell International, Inc.<br />

Kaufman & Canoles<br />

KPMG, LLC<br />

Maersk Line, Limited<br />

Norfolk Southern Corporation<br />

Northrop Grumman—Newport News<br />

Rutter Mills, LLP<br />

Signature Financial Management, Inc.<br />

STIHL, Inc.<br />

Summer Land Development<br />

Company<br />

SunTrust Bank<br />

The Runnymede Corporation<br />

The Virginian-Pilot<br />

Virginia Natural Gas, Inc.<br />

VIRTEXCO Corporation<br />

Wachovia, NA<br />

Wall, Einhorn & Chernitzer, P.C.<br />

Williams Mullen<br />

Willis HRH<br />

SunTrust Bank’s Ben Vanderberry and <strong>Museum</strong> Trustee<br />

Anne Shumadine anticipate the arrival <strong>of</strong> dinner in one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Museum</strong>’s 19th-century glass galleries.<br />

Photos by Jake Gillespie for the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

8


N E W S<br />

Unknown (Egyptian)<br />

Sarcophagus <strong>of</strong> Psamtik-Seneb<br />

(detail), Late Period, Dynasty 26, ca. 664–525 B.C.<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> Walter P. <strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr.<br />

RENOVATED<br />

EGYPTIAN AND<br />

AFRICAN GALLERIES<br />

REOPEN<br />

In anticipation <strong>of</strong> October’s arrival<br />

<strong>of</strong> the special exhibition To Live<br />

Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the<br />

Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong>, the <strong>Chrysler</strong> spent<br />

much <strong>of</strong> the summer refreshing and<br />

reinstalling our own galleries <strong>of</strong><br />

Egyptian and African art. Each has<br />

been repainted, relighted, and recarpeted. More important, the works on view have<br />

been newly researched and are now accompanied by descriptive labels reflecting<br />

the findings <strong>of</strong> that scholarship.<br />

Despite their modest size, the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s Egyptian and African galleries are among<br />

our visitors’ favorite spaces. They also contain remarkable works <strong>of</strong> art that we<br />

wanted to look their<br />

best when To Live<br />

Forever opens this fall.<br />

When you visit the<br />

exhibition, stop by<br />

and experience our<br />

renovated Egyptian<br />

and African galleries<br />

in a totally new light.<br />

THE CHRYSLER GOES GREEN<br />

Senufo peoples (Ivory Coast, Africa)<br />

Helmet Mask (Kponyugu), Early- to mid-20th century<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> Walter P. <strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr.<br />

The <strong>Museum</strong> has launched a comprehensive “green” initiative to conserve<br />

energy, lower operating costs, and ensure that we do our part to make more<br />

responsible use <strong>of</strong> our environment. Director <strong>of</strong> Facilities Tim Fink reports that so<br />

far his staff has added new energy-saving lighting controls and fixtures, and has<br />

equipped restrooms with new hand dryers. Each staff <strong>of</strong>fice now boasts its own<br />

waste paper recycling bin and the <strong>Museum</strong>’s expanded program will also be<br />

recycling glass, plastic, aluminum, and other metals. Landscaping and janitorial<br />

projects will include environmentally friendly products and efforts to conserve<br />

water. Even the new brown carpeting in our refurbished Egyptian, African, and<br />

Greco-Roman galleries is green—made with at least 15 percent recycled material<br />

and affixed with water-based glue to prevent fumes.<br />

In addition, with support from a grant from The Norfolk Foundation, the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> has commissioned a major engineering study <strong>of</strong> our HVAC plant to<br />

help us plan for the replacement <strong>of</strong> aging equipment with more energy-efficient<br />

models. Already, the Moses Myers House has been refitted with a highefficiency<br />

geothermal heating and cooling system. The <strong>Museum</strong> will keep you<br />

posted as the greening continues.<br />

DILLARD SENT TO<br />

TIME OUT IN CHICAGO<br />

Channon Dillard hasn’t been naughty.<br />

To the contrary, she was one <strong>of</strong> only<br />

20 museum educators<br />

chosen to participate<br />

in the 2009 Teaching<br />

Institute in <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Education, or TIME,<br />

at the <strong>Art</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong><br />

Chicago. Dillard,<br />

who coordinates the<br />

CMA’s children’s<br />

programs, attended<br />

the seminar<br />

specifically tailored<br />

for museum<br />

educators with an<br />

interest in gallery<br />

teaching this<br />

past August.<br />

Photo by Jake Gillespie for the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

The strenuous one-week program included<br />

an analytical study <strong>of</strong> the theory and<br />

practice <strong>of</strong> gallery teaching and a survey<br />

<strong>of</strong> the literature and history <strong>of</strong> teaching in<br />

American museums. It also included<br />

countless hours in the Institute’s galleries,<br />

experiencing the works <strong>of</strong> art and<br />

discussing them with colleagues and<br />

museum guests. Dillard was especially<br />

pleased to have studied under top-notch<br />

instructors in the field, including Rika<br />

Burnham, Head <strong>of</strong> Education at The Frick<br />

Collection, and Elliott Kai-Kee, Education<br />

Specialist at the J. Paul Getty <strong>Museum</strong>.<br />

The program was <strong>of</strong>fered through the<br />

Teacher Institute in Contemporary <strong>Art</strong>,<br />

directed by Philip Baranowski at the<br />

School <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Art</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong> Chicago,<br />

and was generously supported by the<br />

Samuel H. Kress Foundation.<br />

9


C A L E N D A R<br />

SEPTEMBER<br />

2 Wed. 10 a.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Milestone FREE General Admission to the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection begins<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

6:15 p.m. The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Jazz / The Fine <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wine Reggie Gist<br />

7:15 p.m. <strong>Art</strong> Riff! Samson Bringing Honey to His Parents by Guercino<br />

3 Thurs. 11 a.m. Tickle My Ears: Stories and <strong>Art</strong> at the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Pinks, Purples, Blues, and Greens in Mary's Garden<br />

2 p.m. Senior <strong>Art</strong> Forum The <strong>Art</strong>istic Career <strong>of</strong> Exhibitions Designer Willis Potter<br />

5 Sat. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Architour<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Collecting with Vision: Treasures from the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

6 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Architour<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

9 Wed. 10 a.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Shop Event Fall Book Sale begins<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

12 Sat. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Ladies <strong>of</strong> Norfolk—The Myers Women<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Collecting with Vision: Treasures from the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

13 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Ladies <strong>of</strong> Norfolk—The Myers Women<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

16 Wed. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

7 p.m. Norfolk History Series Remembering George Tucker<br />

17 Thurs. 1 p.m. Flower Guild Event Flower Arranging Club<br />

19 Sat. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program …If You Lived During Slavery<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Collecting with Vision: Treasures from the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

20 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program …If You Lived During Slavery<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

5 p.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Shop Event Fall Book Sale ends<br />

23 Wed. 11 a.m. Norfolk Society <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong>s Lecture The Hidden Met by Phillippe de Montebello<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

26 Sat. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Divided City—Norfolk's Civil War<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Collecting with Vision: Treasures from the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

27 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Divided City—Norfolk's Civil War<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

30 Wed. 10 a.m. Exhibition Opens Barton Myers: Norfolk Visionary at the Moses Myers House<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

7 p.m. <strong>Art</strong> in Motion Strangers on a Train<br />

Kelly Conway<br />

Curator <strong>of</strong> Glass<br />

Stop, Caution, Go, 2009<br />

Blown glass<br />

10<br />

Eliot Porter (American, 1901–1990),<br />

Old Cottonwood Tree from Trees<br />

portfolio, 1988, Gift <strong>of</strong> Joseph C.<br />

French, Jr. and John Wawrzonek<br />

©Amon Carter <strong>Museum</strong> Archive


C A L E N D A R<br />

Amulet Representing the Soul as a<br />

Human-Head Falcon<br />

Late Period, 664 – 332 B.C.<br />

Gold; 7 /8 x 1 5 /8 x 1 /4 in. (2.2 x 4.2 x 0.6 cm)<br />

place found: Saqqara, Egypt, Africa<br />

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund<br />

OCTOBER<br />

1 Thurs. 11 a.m. Tickle My Ears: Stories and <strong>Art</strong> at the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Animals, Animals, Animals in the McKinnon Galleries <strong>of</strong><br />

Modern <strong>Art</strong><br />

2 p.m. Senior <strong>Art</strong> Forum Through the Lens <strong>of</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> Photographer Ed Pollard<br />

2 Fri. 6 p.m. Friends <strong>of</strong> African-American <strong>Art</strong> Event 4th Annual Q-Down<br />

3 Sat. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program The Myers: A Jewish-American Family<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Collecting with Vision: Treasures from the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

4 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program The Myers: A Jewish-American Family<br />

1 p.m. Historic Houses Special Event Sukkot: The Feast <strong>of</strong> Ingathering at the Moses Myers House<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

7 Wed. 7 a.m. Friends <strong>of</strong> Historic Houses Event Annual Road Trip: James Madison's Montpelier<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

6:15 p.m. The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Jazz / The Fine <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wine Latin Jazz Conspiracy<br />

7:15 p.m. <strong>Art</strong> Riff! The <strong>Art</strong>ist in His Studio by Nicolas de Largillierre<br />

9 Fri. 10 a.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Shop Event To Live Forever sales bonuses begin<br />

8 p.m. To Live Forever Members' Opening Weekend Party Dance Like an Egyptian! (<strong>Museum</strong> membership and<br />

RSVPs required by 10/5/09)<br />

10 Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Members' Exhibition Preview Day To Live Forever open exclusively to <strong>Museum</strong> Members<br />

1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Architour<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Collecting with Vision: Treasures from the <strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

11 Sun. noon–5 p.m. Members' Exhibition Preview Day/Refreshments To Live Forever open exclusively to <strong>Museum</strong> Members<br />

1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Architour<br />

2 p.m. Members' Special Lecture Preparing to Live Forever by Edward Bleiberg (<strong>Museum</strong><br />

membership required)<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

3:30 p.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Shop Event To Live Forever catalogue signing with Edward Bleiberg<br />

5 p.m. Exhibition Closes After Hours: Works by the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> Staff<br />

5 p.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Shop Event To Live Forever sales bonuses end<br />

14 Wed. 10 a.m. Exhibition Opens To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

7 p.m. Norfolk History Series Witchcraft in Colonial Virginia<br />

15 Thurs. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk American Portraits<br />

16 Fri. 11 a.m.–3 p.m. <strong>Museum</strong> Shop Event The Island Pearl Jewelry Trunk Show<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

8 p.m. Music in the <strong>Museum</strong> Concert Tidewater Classical Guitar Society: Jason Vieaux<br />

17 Sat. 10 a.m.–noon Friends <strong>of</strong> African-American <strong>Art</strong> Event <strong>Art</strong> Class: The Quest to Live Forever<br />

10 a.m. Exhibition Opens Action Painting at the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Ladies <strong>of</strong> Norfolk—The Myers Women<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk American Portraits<br />

18 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Ladies <strong>of</strong> Norfolk—The Myers Women<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

5 p.m. Exhibition Closes Norfolk & Western Railway Photographs by O. Winston Link<br />

21 Wed. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

22 Thurs. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk American Portraits<br />

23 Fri. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

7 p.m.–8 a.m. Special Event Sleep with the Mummies: A Masquerade for Families<br />

(RSVP by 10/9/09)<br />

24 Sat. 10 a.m. Exhibition Opens Photographs by Eliot Porter<br />

1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program …If You Lived During Slavery<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk American Portraits<br />

25 Sun. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program …If You Lived During Slavery<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

26 Mon. 8 p.m. Music in the <strong>Museum</strong> Concert The Feldman Chamber Music Society: Stradivari String Quartet<br />

28 Wed. 11 a.m. Norfolk Society <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong>s Mabel Brown Lecture The New <strong>Museum</strong> in the 21st Century<br />

by Mary Sue Sweeney Price<br />

12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

7 p.m. <strong>Art</strong> in Motion Rivers and Tides<br />

29 Thurs. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk American Portraits<br />

30 Fri. 12:30 p.m. Gallery Talk To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

31 Sat. 1 p.m. Historic Houses Weekend Program Divided City: Norfolk's Civil War<br />

2 p.m. Gallery Talk American Portraits<br />

11


N E W S<br />

SPRING PROGRAMS<br />

AT THE CHRYSLER<br />

It was a busy Spring at the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> with special events<br />

for Members, support groups,<br />

and visitors.<br />

Mother’s Day<br />

LEFT: Mother’s Day Brunch was, again, a sold-out event as Hampton Roads<br />

families honored their Moms with a special meal and an <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Glass 2 tour at the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>. Photo by Jake Gillespie<br />

RIGHT: Todd Rosenlieb Dance performed a special choreography inspired by the<br />

“dance” <strong>of</strong> the hot glass studio on Mother’s Day afternoon. Photo by Scott Howe<br />

Bunny And Perry Morgan Family Day<br />

ABOVE: Rain didn’t dampen the spirits <strong>of</strong> the more than 1,000 people who<br />

attended the May 17 Bunny and Perry Morgan Family Day at the <strong>Chrysler</strong>.<br />

Everyone enjoyed free admission,<br />

snow cones, and the special ingallery<br />

art projects.<br />

BELOW: In honor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Glass 2,<br />

Family Day featured Dean Shostak<br />

playing the glass armonica, an<br />

instrument invented by Benjamin<br />

Franklin. The Williamsburg<br />

musician also played a glass violin<br />

and crystal handbells.<br />

Photos by Alexandra Hunter<br />

Mowbray Arch Society<br />

ABOVE: Horticultural expert Gordon Hayward lectured on<br />

fine art as an inspiration for garden design, then personalized<br />

copies <strong>of</strong> his award-winning book.<br />

BELOW: Larry Goldrich and Dot Doumar mingle with Ben<br />

and Rachel Cottrell (left to right) in Huber Court during the<br />

May 14 Spring Program for the Mowbray Arch Society.<br />

Photos by Jake Gillespie for the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

12


N E W S<br />

A LANDMARK YEAR<br />

The <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> saw an astounding increase—more than 33 percent—in its total number <strong>of</strong> guest visits over<br />

the last fiscal year. Attendance from July 1, 2008 through June 30, 2009 was 162,608, up from 119,098 in the<br />

previous year. The totals include visits by Members, school groups, and other patrons. The number <strong>of</strong> guests visiting<br />

on Wednesdays and special free-admission days were especially high.<br />

Perhaps even more impressive is our Net Promoter Score—the measure <strong>of</strong> the enthusiasm with which visitors<br />

recommend the experience <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Chrysler</strong> to others. This prime metric <strong>of</strong> customer satisfaction already was high by<br />

business standards at 87.88 percent. In 2008-2009, it shot up to an unprecedented 94.74 percent!<br />

“Thanks to the success <strong>of</strong> exhibitions like <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Glass 2 and American Chronicles: The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Norman Rockwell —coupled with<br />

the exciting range <strong>of</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> programs and the exceptional welcome that Visitor Services extends to every guest—<br />

this has been a record-setting year at the <strong>Chrysler</strong>,” says Director Bill Hennessey.<br />

NORFOLK’S NATIONAL TREASURE<br />

The National Register <strong>of</strong> Historic Places has named our<br />

own Moses Myers House as a site <strong>of</strong> national<br />

significance, the <strong>Chrysler</strong> is proud to announce.<br />

Since 1966, The National Register has formed America’s<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficial list <strong>of</strong> buildings, sites, and objects worthy <strong>of</strong><br />

preservation with the goal <strong>of</strong> protecting our country’s most<br />

valuable historic, archaeological, and cultural resources.<br />

Properties named nationally significant must possess<br />

exceptional value in illustrating or interpreting the<br />

intellectual and cultural heritage <strong>of</strong> the United States. Of the<br />

more than 85,000 listings on The National Register, fewer<br />

than 10 percent are listed as nationally significant.<br />

The Moses Myers House clearly fits that standard. Built in<br />

what was a very rural setting in the 1790s, it set a new<br />

standard <strong>of</strong> sophistication for the rapidly expanding city <strong>of</strong><br />

Norfolk. The<br />

Federal-style<br />

home and its<br />

collection provide<br />

a rare example <strong>of</strong><br />

early-American<br />

Jewish life,<br />

including five<br />

generations worth<br />

<strong>of</strong> records and<br />

artifacts, as well<br />

as uninterruped<br />

occupancy <strong>of</strong> the<br />

family home for<br />

nearly 150 years.<br />

FRONT ROW (left to right): Emma Tisdale, Gabrielle Barr, Jessica Dame, Jodi<br />

DeBruyne, Sonia de Laforcade, Janelle Wilson. BACK ROW (left to right): Brendan<br />

Higgins, Michelle West, Nancy Reid, Madison Brennamen, Francheska Alcantara,<br />

Loren Shell, Abigail Lee, Caroline Chandler. Not pictured: Andrea Roehrs.<br />

Photo by Alexandra Hunter<br />

INTERNS LIFT THE<br />

SUMMER WORKLOAD<br />

Ever wonder what it’s like to work in a museum<br />

Our summer interns now know first-hand. Each year,<br />

college and graduate students from across the Mid-Atlantic<br />

area gain hands-on vocational experience by working in<br />

departments <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Chrysler</strong> that best match their interests.<br />

In addition to the work their supervisors assign them,<br />

weekly discussions and special events enable them to gain<br />

insight into the fascinating world <strong>of</strong> museum work. This<br />

summer’s 15 interns represented 11 schools in four states.<br />

To apply for a <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> internship, visit<br />

www.chrysler.org/jobs.asp or contact Alexandra Hunter<br />

at (757) 333-6268 or ahunter@chrysler.org.<br />

13


N E W S<br />

MUSIC IN THE MUSEUM<br />

As an ancient ideal, the museum was the home for all the<br />

arts—both visual and performing. The <strong>Chrysler</strong> hopes to<br />

make this ideal a reality with the initiation <strong>of</strong> Music in the<br />

<strong>Museum</strong>, which will make our own Kaufman Theatre the<br />

primary home for many <strong>of</strong> the region’s pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />

performance groups.<br />

The program is designed to encourage audience crossover,<br />

lower costs for performing arts partners, and <strong>of</strong>fer <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Members enhanced value for their patronage.<br />

While the <strong>Chrysler</strong> will promote Music in the <strong>Museum</strong> partners<br />

through its magazine, website, and e-News mailings,<br />

performing arts partners, in turn, will <strong>of</strong>fer <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Members discounted tickets to their programs. Virginia <strong>Art</strong>s<br />

Festival has agreed to <strong>of</strong>fer select concerts in Spring 2010<br />

through Music in the <strong>Museum</strong>, and two partners have agreed to<br />

present their full 2009-2010 concert series here:<br />

The Feldman Chamber Music Society will hold concerts<br />

on selected Monday evenings at 8 p.m. Each will include<br />

a complimentary wine and hors d’oeuvres reception at<br />

6:30 p.m. in Huber Court and a concert preview by<br />

WHRO’s Dwight Davis at 7 p.m. in the Kaufman Theatre.<br />

October 26, 2009—Stradivari String Quartet<br />

November 23, 2009—Juniper String Quartet<br />

January 25, 2010—Los Angeles Piano Quartet<br />

February 15, 2010—Concertanti<br />

March 8, 2010—Hugo Wolf String Quartet<br />

April 5, 2010—Garth Newel Piano Quartet<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> Members may purchase tickets at the door for<br />

$20 (a $5 savings).<br />

The Tidewater Classical Guitar Society holds its concerts<br />

here at the Kaufman Theatre on selected Friday evenings<br />

at 8 p.m.<br />

Friday, October 16, 2009—Jason Vieaux<br />

Friday, November 20, 2009—Andrew York<br />

February 6, 2010—Members Concert<br />

March 5, 2010—Gabriel Bianco<br />

April 27, 2010—David Russell<br />

(co-sponsored with Virginia <strong>Art</strong>s Festival)<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> Members may purchase tickets at the door for<br />

$15 (a $5 savings), or may buy discounted season tickets for $65<br />

directly from TCGS at P.O. Box 777, Norfolk, VA 23501.<br />

For information about becoming a Music in the <strong>Museum</strong><br />

performing arts partner, contact Scott Howe, Director <strong>of</strong><br />

Education and Public Programs, at showe@chrysler.org. For<br />

information on discounted performance tickets for <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

Members, contact Ruth Sanchez at (757) 333-6269 or<br />

rsanchez@chrysler.org.<br />

The Norfolk Society <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong>s<br />

Lecture Series features a<br />

fascinating array <strong>of</strong> speakers and<br />

topics. Each lecture begins at 11 a.m.<br />

in the <strong>Museum</strong>’s Kaufman Theatre,<br />

preceded by a c<strong>of</strong>fee reception at<br />

10:30 a.m. in Huber Court.<br />

Cost: Free to the public, with<br />

preferred seating for NSA members<br />

Wednesday, September 23, 2009<br />

The Hidden Met<br />

Philippe de Montebello<br />

Former Director, The Metropolitan <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

Wednesday, October 28, 2009 (Mabel Brown Lecture)<br />

The New <strong>Museum</strong> in the 21st Century<br />

Mary Sue Sweeney Price<br />

Director, The Newark <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Wednesday, November 18, 2009<br />

To Live Forever: Highlights <strong>of</strong> Conservation Treatment<br />

Lisa Bruno<br />

Head Conservator, The Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Wednesday, January 27, 2010<br />

Creating the New <strong>Art</strong> Gallery <strong>of</strong> Ontario:<br />

Why a Building is Not Just a Building<br />

Matthew Teitelbaum<br />

Director, <strong>Art</strong> Gallery <strong>of</strong> Ontario<br />

Wednesday, February 24, 2010<br />

Fashion Fakes and Finds: Fifty Years <strong>of</strong> Fluctuation in the<br />

Market for English Ceramics<br />

Christina Prescott-Walker<br />

Senior Vice President, Sotheby’s<br />

Wednesday, March 24, 2010<br />

A Gallery <strong>of</strong> Worthies:<br />

Thomas Jefferson and Jean-Antoine Houdon<br />

Anne Poulet<br />

Director, The Frick Collection<br />

Tuesday, April 27, 2010<br />

(Annual Meeting and Luncheon)<br />

Why <strong>Museum</strong>s Are Necessary<br />

Susan Stamberg<br />

Special Correspondent, National Public Radio<br />

For more information about the Society or<br />

NSA membership, please contact Pam Pruden at<br />

(757) 623-0875 or email her at pctpruden@verizon.net.<br />

14


N E W S<br />

The Docents began their 50th year <strong>of</strong><br />

service to the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong> on<br />

September 10, 2008 with the start <strong>of</strong> the<br />

first fall school tours. Photo by Ed Pollard<br />

DOCENTS MARK<br />

50 YEARS OF SERVICE<br />

May 19 marked the 50th anniversary <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s<br />

longest-standing partnership—its relationship with its<br />

docents. These volunteer tour guides undergo rigorous<br />

training in art history and teaching methods before they<br />

present any <strong>of</strong> the 24 tours they commit to giving each<br />

year. Several <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Museum</strong>’s docents have served as art<br />

ambassadors for decades. At their year-end luncheon,<br />

active, former, and emeritus docents, as well as current<br />

members <strong>of</strong> the Junior League, which helped launch the<br />

program in 1959, celebrated the program’s milestone.<br />

Crowning the many tributes <strong>of</strong> the day was an <strong>of</strong>ficial<br />

proclamation by Norfolk Mayor Paul Fraim praising the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>’s docent program for its “invaluable contributions”<br />

to education and self-discovery in the community.<br />

Former docents Vivian Duke (left) and Mary<br />

Lawrence Harrell (right) enjoyed celebrating<br />

the 50th anniversary <strong>of</strong> the program with<br />

active docents Glenda Knowles and Dodie<br />

Dougherty (center left and right, respectively).<br />

After the luncheon, outgoing president Chris<br />

Fockler installed new Docent Council<br />

members with a floral tribute. Incoming<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficers include (left to right) Richard Parise<br />

(parliamentarian), Pat Tayloe (correspondence<br />

secretary), and Frances Padden (treasurer).<br />

Photos by Jake Gillespie for the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

STUDENT GALLERY TO RETURN IN 2010<br />

For 36 years, The Virginian-Pilot’s Student Gallery celebrated high school artists from across greater Hampton Roads, Virginia’s<br />

Eastern Shore, and northern North Carolina. In Spring 2008, the last time that the newspaper funded the exhibition, more<br />

than 700 juniors and seniors submitted artwork to be judged. Of their works,<br />

92 pieces were honored with exhibition at the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong> or the<br />

Contemporary <strong>Art</strong> Center <strong>of</strong> Virginia in Virginia Beach.<br />

In 2009, due to the economic downturn, the paper was forced to cancel its<br />

sponsorship <strong>of</strong> the exhibition. Though some public school districts continued<br />

to feature high school artwork in juried public exhibitions, there was no<br />

region-wide recognition <strong>of</strong> these young artists.<br />

Thankfully, 2010 will be different. Representatives from schools and arts<br />

organizations across the region have been meeting since September 2008 to<br />

propose a new, viable model for the annual competition. Helping to lead this<br />

group has been Scott Howe, the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s Director <strong>of</strong> Education, who<br />

believes that the Student Gallery is too important for our community to lose.<br />

Joining as sponsors for the first time are the d’<strong>Art</strong> Center, the Selden Arcade,<br />

and the <strong>Chrysler</strong> <strong>Museum</strong>’s Docent Council.<br />

As a result <strong>of</strong> this community-wide effort, the Hampton Roads Student Gallery will return in February 2010. Award winners<br />

and finalists still will be recognized and displayed at the <strong>Chrysler</strong> and the CACV, but for the first time, the work <strong>of</strong> all<br />

participants will be on view for two weeks at the Selden Arcade in downtown Norfolk before judging.<br />

For information on how to enter artwork or to sponsor awards for the young artists, visit www.chrysler.org.<br />

15


P R O G R A M S<br />

16<br />

PUBLIC PROGRAMS<br />

GALLERY TALKS<br />

Gallery Talks are customized tours that highlight works<br />

in the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s permanent collection or the <strong>Museum</strong>’s<br />

visiting exhibitions. Each session begins at the<br />

<strong>Museum</strong>’s Information Desk in Huber Court at 12:30<br />

p.m. on Wednesdays, selected Thursdays, and selected<br />

Fridays, and at 2 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays.<br />

Collecting with Vision:<br />

Treasures from the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> Collection<br />

This Gallery Talk is<br />

available on selected<br />

Saturdays.<br />

September 5, 12, 19, 26<br />

October 3, 10<br />

Cost: Free<br />

Norfolk and Western<br />

Railway Photographs<br />

by O. Winston Link<br />

This Gallery Talk is<br />

available on selected<br />

Wednesdays and Sundays.<br />

September 2, 6, 16,<br />

20, 30<br />

Sunday, October 4<br />

Cost: Free<br />

Baroque <strong>Art</strong><br />

This Gallery Talk is<br />

available on selected<br />

Wednesdays and Sundays.<br />

September 9, 13, 23, 27<br />

October 7, 11<br />

Cost: Free<br />

Jean-Siméon Chardin<br />

(French, 1699–1779)<br />

Basket <strong>of</strong> Plums,<br />

ca. 1765<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> Walter P.<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr.<br />

To Live Forever:<br />

Egyptian Treasures from the<br />

Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

October 14, 16, 18, 21,<br />

23, 25, 28, 30<br />

Special Gallery Talks on<br />

this remarkable visiting<br />

exhibition are available on<br />

selected Wednesdays,<br />

Fridays, and Sundays.<br />

Space is limited, so sign<br />

up at the Information<br />

Desk 30 minutes in<br />

advance.<br />

Cost: Free to <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Members, or included<br />

with paid admission to<br />

the exhibition<br />

American Portraits<br />

This Gallery Talk is<br />

available on selected<br />

Thursdays and Saturdays.<br />

October 15, 17, 22, 24,<br />

29, 31<br />

Cost: Free<br />

Most public programs are free or are included with<br />

paid exhibition admission. Some special events have<br />

entry fees (as noted). In most cases, reservations are<br />

not required for individuals, but please call for<br />

group reservations.<br />

SLEEP WITH THE MUMMIES<br />

A MASQUERADE FOR FAMILIES<br />

Unknown (Egyptian)<br />

Anthropoid C<strong>of</strong>fin (detail), Roman Period, 30 B.C.–A.D. 395<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> Jack <strong>Chrysler</strong>, in memory <strong>of</strong> Walter P. <strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr.<br />

Friday, October 23 at 7 p.m. to<br />

Saturday, October 24 at 8 a.m.<br />

Do mummies have bad dreams<br />

Here’s your chance to find out.<br />

Wear your best Egyptian costume<br />

and join us for an entire night <strong>of</strong><br />

family-friendly activities, tours,<br />

snacks, and a film. Then, spread<br />

your sleeping bags under the<br />

night sky in Huber Court until<br />

Re returns with the morning sun.<br />

This event is open to families<br />

with children ages 6–12.<br />

Cost: $35 per person for<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Members, $55 per<br />

person for non-Members<br />

Spaces are limited. A paid<br />

reservation by Friday, October 9<br />

assures your family’s participation.<br />

For registration forms or<br />

more information, visit<br />

www.chrysler.org. To RSVP,<br />

call (757) 333-6239.<br />

TICKLE MY EARS:<br />

STORIES AND ART AT THE CHRYSLER<br />

Geared toward pre-kindergarten<br />

children, this program takes place on<br />

the first Thursday <strong>of</strong> every month and<br />

features stories, songs, and surprises to<br />

help young children appreciate art.<br />

This program is generously<br />

supported by Target.<br />

Cost: Free<br />

Pinks, Purples, Blues, and Green<br />

Thursday, September 3 at 11 a.m.<br />

in Mary’s Garden<br />

Animals, Animals, Animals<br />

Thursday, October 1 at 11 a.m. in the Modern Galleries<br />

COMING SOON: Walk Like an Egyptian<br />

Thursday, December 3 at 11 a.m. in the Large Changing Gallery<br />

A special focus on the exhibition To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures<br />

from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Cost: Free for children 5 and younger and <strong>Museum</strong> Members,<br />

or included with paid admission to the exhibition


P R O G R A M S<br />

Most public programs are free or are included with<br />

paid exhibition admission. Some special events have<br />

entry fees (as noted). In most cases, reservations are<br />

not required for individuals, but please call for<br />

group reservations.<br />

PUBLIC PROGRAMS<br />

WHAT’S NEW ON WEDNESDAYS<br />

Wednesdays are changing a bit here at the <strong>Chrysler</strong>. To round out our new free admission policy, we’re adapting our current<br />

programs and adding a slate <strong>of</strong> new events sure to please you and your family—films, theatrical performances, history lectures,<br />

musical events, and informal lessons about art. Of course, we’ll still host a popular jazz band and wine tasting on the first<br />

Wednesday <strong>of</strong> every month. As you read through the magazine, be sure to look for your old favorites, as well as find some<br />

fresh new <strong>of</strong>ferings on Wednesday nights.<br />

THE ART OF JAZZ<br />

The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Jazz, our monthly first-Wednesday music program features the best performers from across Hampton Roads. Sit in<br />

Huber Court to enjoy the band, which starts at 6:15 p.m., or listen from a distance as you peruse the galleries, open until 9 p.m.<br />

The Fine <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wine, an informal tasting sponsored by Farm Fresh, complements The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Jazz. <strong>Museum</strong> Members receive a<br />

$1 discount on each glass <strong>of</strong> wine and half-<strong>of</strong>f on all wine tasting. Other refreshments also are available for purchase.<br />

<strong>Art</strong> Riffs, short explorations <strong>of</strong> selected works <strong>of</strong> art, fill the quiet time when the band takes its first break. Guests meet at the main<br />

staircase in Huber Court at approximately 7:15 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, September 2<br />

In Concert: Reggie Gist<br />

<strong>Art</strong> Riff: Samson Bringing Honey to His Parents by Guercino<br />

Wednesday, October 7<br />

In Concert: Latin Jazz Conspiracy<br />

<strong>Art</strong> Riff: The <strong>Art</strong>ist in His Studio by Nicolas de Largillierre<br />

Giovanni Francesco Barbieri, called Guercino (Italian, 1591–1666)<br />

Samson Bringing Honey to His Parents, ca. 1625–26<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> Walter P. <strong>Chrysler</strong>, Jr., in honor <strong>of</strong> the Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees 1977–1985<br />

ART IN MOTION<br />

On the last Wednesday <strong>of</strong> each month, the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

connects its collection and exhibitions to films shown in the<br />

Kaufman Theatre.<br />

Cost: Free<br />

Strangers on a Train (1951)<br />

Wednesday, September 30 at 7 p.m.<br />

After viewing O. Winston Link’s photographs <strong>of</strong> Norfolk and<br />

Western Railway’s last steam locomotives, enjoy the suspense<br />

<strong>of</strong> a train ride with a psychotic socialite and a tennis star in<br />

this classic Alfred Hitchcock thriller.<br />

DRAWN FROM THE COLLECTION<br />

Dust <strong>of</strong>f your favorite pencils, pastels, charcoals, even<br />

crayons, and bring them with your thickest sketch pad to the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong> on Wednesday nights to draw among the masters in<br />

our galleries. Invite a friend or meet new ones. Your level <strong>of</strong><br />

experience doesn’t matter—everyone is welcome. Limited<br />

supplies are available for novices and an artist will be on hand<br />

to <strong>of</strong>fer guidance. This new club meets at the Information<br />

Desk at 7 p.m.<br />

Cost: Free<br />

A recent visitor left<br />

this crayon sketch <strong>of</strong><br />

Andrew Jackson, a<br />

neoclassical marble<br />

bust by Ferdinand<br />

August Pettrich in our<br />

Ricau Gallery <strong>of</strong><br />

American Sculpture.<br />

Rivers and Tides (2001)<br />

Wednesday, October 28 at 7 p.m.<br />

Consider the connections between the landscape photographs<br />

<strong>of</strong> Eliot Porter, on view in the Kaufman Theatre Lobby<br />

beginning October 24, and the environmental art <strong>of</strong> Andy<br />

Goldsworthy, the subject <strong>of</strong> this scenic documentary.<br />

17


P R O G R A M S<br />

PUBLIC PROGRAMS<br />

HISTORIC<br />

HOUSES<br />

PROGRAMS<br />

Most public programs are free or are included with<br />

paid exhibition admission. Some special events have<br />

entry fees (as noted). In most cases, reservations are<br />

not required for individuals, but please call for<br />

group reservations.<br />

Weekend Programs at the Historic Houses explore specific themes <strong>of</strong> the Moses Myers<br />

House in greater detail. Weekend programs are scheduled weekly at 1 p.m. on Saturdays<br />

and Sundays. For more information about programs at the Historic Houses, please call<br />

(757) 441-1526.<br />

SPECIAL EVENT<br />

Sukkot: The Feast <strong>of</strong> Ingathering<br />

Sunday, October 4 at 1 p.m. at<br />

the Moses Myers House<br />

Learn more about Norfolk’s<br />

Jewish heritage as the home <strong>of</strong><br />

Norfolk’s first Jewish residents<br />

highlights the festival <strong>of</strong> Sukkot.<br />

This commemoration <strong>of</strong> God’s<br />

protection over the Israelites in<br />

the wilderness also celebrates the<br />

gathering <strong>of</strong> the harvest. Help<br />

build and decorate a traditional<br />

sukkah! For information, please<br />

call (757) 441-1526.<br />

Randolph Rogers (American, 1825–1892)<br />

Ruth Gleaning, 1853<br />

Gift <strong>of</strong> James H. Ricau and<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> purchase<br />

Architour<br />

Saturday, September 5 and<br />

Sunday, September 6<br />

Saturday, October 10 and<br />

Sunday, October 11<br />

Go behind the scenes and uncover architectural<br />

evidence that reveals how the Myers House has<br />

changed over time to meet the needs <strong>of</strong> the<br />

people who have lived here. Find out how this<br />

evidence provides clues to daily life throughout<br />

the house.<br />

Ladies <strong>of</strong> Norfolk—The Myers Women<br />

Saturday, September 12 and<br />

Sunday, September 13<br />

Saturday, October 17 and<br />

Sunday, October 18<br />

Spend an hour in the company <strong>of</strong> the women<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Myers household and learn about the<br />

vital roles they played at home and in society.<br />

Meet the Myers’ daughters—Adeline, Augusta,<br />

and Mary Georgiana—and contrast their lives<br />

with that <strong>of</strong> Chary, a 14-year-old slave girl.<br />

…If You Lived During Slavery<br />

Saturday, September 19 and<br />

Sunday, September 20<br />

Saturday, October 24 and<br />

Sunday, October 25<br />

Learn more about Norfolk’s African-American<br />

heritage from the stories <strong>of</strong> enslaved and free<br />

African-Americans at the Moses Myers House<br />

through the Civil War. Experience history<br />

through their eyes by following in their<br />

footsteps throughout the Myers House, and<br />

explore the unique differences between slavery<br />

in cities and on plantations.<br />

Divided City—Norfolk’s Civil War<br />

Saturday, September 26 and<br />

Sunday, September 27<br />

Saturday, October 31<br />

Discover how the city <strong>of</strong> Norfolk was affected<br />

by America’s most destructive war. Through<br />

the experiences <strong>of</strong> the Myers family, find out<br />

how the war touched everyone in Norfolk at<br />

that time—soldiers and civilians, free and<br />

slave, white and African-American, Northern<br />

and Southern.<br />

The Myers—A Jewish-American Family<br />

Saturday, October 3 and<br />

Sunday, October 4<br />

Enter into the religious life <strong>of</strong> the Myers family<br />

and understand the challenges faced by early<br />

American Jews. Find out how the Myers family<br />

practiced their religion and how their beliefs<br />

found expression in their public lives.<br />

THE FALL<br />

BOOK SALE<br />

September 9 – 20<br />

in Huber Court near The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop<br />

Save 50% on a select group <strong>of</strong> fine art books.<br />

Choose from a large selection <strong>of</strong> titles,<br />

including art histories, how-to books,<br />

children’s books, and more.<br />

THE ISLAND PEARL<br />

JEWELRY<br />

TRUNK SHOW<br />

October 16 from 11 a.m.–3 p.m.<br />

in The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop<br />

Virginia Beach native Leighton Reeve’s<br />

extensive travels to India, Thailand, and<br />

China allow her to work directly with<br />

families to handcraft her beautiful pearl<br />

and semi-precious stone designs.<br />

18


P R O G R A M S<br />

Unless otherwise noted, no reservations are required<br />

for individuals, but please call for group reservations.<br />

PROGRAMS FOR MEMBERS & SUPPORT GROUPS<br />

MOWBRAY ARCH SOCIETY<br />

Fall Program<br />

Thursday, October 22 at 6 p.m.<br />

Members <strong>of</strong> the Mowbray Arch Society will celebrate the start<br />

<strong>of</strong> their 2009-2010 season by welcoming Robert Lehrman as<br />

their featured speaker. Recognized as one <strong>of</strong> the “Top 100<br />

Collectors” in the United States by both <strong>Art</strong> News and <strong>Art</strong> &<br />

Antiques, Lehrman is especially known for the fine collection <strong>of</strong><br />

American and European contemporary art that he has been<br />

building since 1979. He is also a patron <strong>of</strong> the arts and an<br />

active supporter and board member <strong>of</strong> many arts organizations.<br />

For more information on the Mowbray Arch Society, please<br />

call (757) 333-6253 or email Deborrah Grulke at<br />

dgrulke@chrysler.org.<br />

SENIOR ART FORUM<br />

This group for life-long learners meets one Thursday each<br />

month for a tour, discussion <strong>of</strong> art, and light refreshments in<br />

the Diamonstein Education Workshop.<br />

NORFOLK HISTORY SERIES<br />

The Norfolk Historical Society sponsors lectures in the<br />

<strong>Chrysler</strong>’s Kaufman Theatre on the second Wednesday <strong>of</strong><br />

each month. Refreshments are <strong>of</strong>fered after each event.<br />

Remembering George Tucker<br />

Wednesday, September 16 at 7 p.m.<br />

George Tucker entertained as well as instructed readers in his<br />

Virginian-Pilot local history column for many years. He<br />

believed that while history must be respected, it wasn’t<br />

always respectable. Join NHS President Louis Guy for<br />

reflections on the contributions <strong>of</strong> this local historian.<br />

Witchcraft in Colonial Virginia<br />

Wednesday, October 14 at 7 p.m.<br />

Learn about early American Halloween traditions in a<br />

presentation guaranteed to provide chills and thrills. Carson<br />

Hudson <strong>of</strong> Virginia Patriots leads an investigation into the<br />

witchcraft law, beliefs, and victims <strong>of</strong> early Virginia.<br />

Cost: Free to Members <strong>of</strong> the Friends <strong>of</strong> Historic Houses and<br />

the Norfolk Historical Society, $5 for all others. For more<br />

information, please call (757) 441-1526.<br />

FRIENDS OF<br />

THE HISTORIC HOUSES<br />

Annual Road Trip<br />

Wednesday, October 7 (all day)<br />

The <strong>Art</strong>istic Career <strong>of</strong> Exhibitions<br />

Designer Willis Potter<br />

Thursday, September 3 at 2 p.m.<br />

Through the Lens <strong>of</strong> <strong>Museum</strong> Photographer<br />

Ed Pollard<br />

Thursday, October 1 at 2 p.m.<br />

Willis Potter in the<br />

After Hours gallery<br />

Photo by Jake Gillespie<br />

for the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong><br />

Cost: Free for <strong>Museum</strong> Members, $5 for all others.<br />

COMING SOON<br />

To Live Forever: Egyptian Treasures from the Brooklyn <strong>Museum</strong><br />

Thursday, November 5 at 2 p.m.<br />

Cost: Free for <strong>Museum</strong> Members, or included with<br />

paid admission to the exhibition<br />

Once again, it's time for the Friends <strong>of</strong> Historic Houses to<br />

fasten their seatbelts and hit the road. This year's trip will<br />

travel to Orange, Va., where the Friends will tour Historic<br />

Montpelier, home <strong>of</strong> our nation's fourth president, James<br />

Madison, and his wife, Dolley. Often overlooked compared<br />

to Thomas Jefferson's Monticello, Montpelier is nestled at<br />

the foothills <strong>of</strong> the Blue Ridge Mountains and has been<br />

undergoing a massive restoration since 2004. Learn more<br />

about "The Father <strong>of</strong> the Constitution" and America's first<br />

First Lady in this exclusive tour <strong>of</strong> the house and grounds.<br />

Space is limited to 50 participants.<br />

For more details on this excursion or the Friends <strong>of</strong> Historic<br />

Houses, please call (757) 333-1086 or email John<br />

Christiansen at jchristiansen@chrysler.org.<br />

Cost: $85 for Members <strong>of</strong> Friends <strong>of</strong> Historic Houses,<br />

$100 for all others<br />

19


P R O G R A M S<br />

PROGRAMS FOR MEMBERS & SUPPORT GROUPS<br />

Unless otherwise noted, no reservations are required<br />

for individuals, but please call for group reservations.<br />

FRIENDS OF<br />

AFRICAN-AMERICAN ART<br />

FLOWER GUILD<br />

Flower Arranging Club<br />

Thursday, September 17 at 1 p.m.<br />

in the Diamonstein Education Workshop<br />

Come see what all the excitement is about at the next<br />

Flower Arranging Class. The Flower Guild <strong>of</strong>fers a<br />

class every other month and each session provides<br />

participants with an arrangement, container,<br />

mechanics, and several new skills and techniques for<br />

flower arranging. Space is very limited and past classes<br />

have been filled to capacity.<br />

Cost: $50 per person, paid by September 7<br />

To make your paid reservation, please contact<br />

Deborrah Grulke at (757) 333-6253 or<br />

dgrulke@chrysler.org.<br />

Fall Flower Guild Demonstration with Patrice Dupuis<br />

Tuesday, November 10 from 10 a.m.–noon<br />

in the Kaufman Theatre<br />

You won’t want to miss this exceptional session with<br />

Patrice Dupuis <strong>of</strong> Bloom, The <strong>Art</strong> <strong>of</strong> Flowers in<br />

Norfolk. Known for her innovative designs, Dupuis<br />

will present new decorating ideas for the holidays.<br />

Your Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, Christmas, and New<br />

Year’s floral arrangements will never be the same.<br />

The Flower Guild is honored that Dupuis, as a loyal<br />

member <strong>of</strong> this <strong>Chrysler</strong> support group for many<br />

years, has graciously agreed to share her talents<br />

for its benefit.<br />

Cost: $25 for Flower Guild Members,<br />

$45 for all others<br />

Tickets are available for purchase in the <strong>Chrysler</strong><br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Shop. For more information on the Flower<br />

Guild or this special event, please call (757) 333-6253<br />

or e-mail Deborrah Grulke at dgrulke@chrysler.org.<br />

4th Annual Q-Down<br />

Friday, October 2 at 6 p.m.<br />

in Huber Court<br />

Grab your hat and shine up<br />

your boots! It’s time again for<br />

the Annual Q-Down. This<br />

fun-filled evening always<br />

delivers with great music,<br />

dancing, and all-you-can-eat<br />

barbeque.<br />

Cost: $35 for FAAA Members,<br />

$40 for all others<br />

The FAAA 5th Annual<br />

<strong>Art</strong> Class Series<br />

The FAAA’s annual Q-Down always delivers a great evening <strong>of</strong><br />

evening <strong>of</strong> live music, dancing, and down-home food.<br />

The Friends <strong>of</strong> African-American <strong>Art</strong> launch another year <strong>of</strong> art classes with this<br />

fascinating docket:<br />

The Quest to Live Forever<br />

Saturday, October 17 from 10 a.m.–noon<br />

Join Director <strong>of</strong> Education Scott Howe and <strong>Chrysler</strong> Master Docent Pat Brown for<br />

an in-depth tour and discussion <strong>of</strong> To Live Forever and the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s fascinating<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> Egyptian art. Also view the <strong>Museum</strong>’s collection <strong>of</strong> African art in its<br />

newly refurbished gallery.<br />

The Hampton University <strong>Museum</strong> Collection<br />

Saturday, January 16, 2010<br />

Don’t miss Hampton University <strong>Museum</strong> Curator Vanessa Thaxton-Ward’s special<br />

tour <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the most prestigious permanent collections <strong>of</strong> African-American art<br />

in the United States.<br />

The Abstract <strong>Art</strong>istry <strong>of</strong> Felrath Hines<br />

Saturday, February 20, 2010<br />

Catch this exclusive tour <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s collection with Chief Curator Jeff<br />

Harrison as he presents the colorful Minimalism <strong>of</strong> this abstract artist and<br />

Civil Rights Movement leader.<br />

“Class Pictures” by Dawoud Bey<br />

Saturday, March 26, 2010<br />

See high school students in a whole new light. Bey's large-format, living-color<br />

photos reveal their inner souls, as do the brief autobiographies that accompany<br />

them. This class will be followed by a special FAAA lunch.<br />

Cost for the 4-CLASS SERIES: $70 for FAAA Members, $80 for all others<br />

Cost for EACH CLASS: $20 for FAAA Members, $25 for all others<br />

For more information on joining the FAAA or to RSVP for these events,<br />

please call (757) 333-6294 or email Jenny Kolin at jkolin@chrysler.org.<br />

20


P R O G R A M S<br />

Unless otherwise noted, no reservations are required<br />

for individuals, but please call for group reservations.<br />

PROGRAMS FOR MEMBERS & SUPPORT GROUPS<br />

TRAVEL ARTFULLY<br />

The <strong>Chrysler</strong>’s <strong>Art</strong> Travel Program <strong>of</strong>fers flexibility, price<br />

ranges from budget to luxury, and the convenience <strong>of</strong><br />

structured activities or the freedom <strong>of</strong> traveling<br />

independently. Your dream vacation awaits!<br />

PERU • March 22–April 10, 2010<br />

Join us on this<br />

exploration <strong>of</strong><br />

history and culture<br />

for a travel<br />

experience you will<br />

never forget.<br />

Nestled in the<br />

misty Andes<br />

Mountains, Peru is<br />

a rugged, storied<br />

land where vast Incan civilizations once flourished and<br />

Spanish conquistadors ruled. Enjoy cosmopolitan and<br />

colonial Lima and historic Cuzco, the former capital and<br />

holy city <strong>of</strong> the Incan empire. Marvel at the ruins in<br />

mesmerizing Machu Picchu and cruise on scenic Lake<br />

Titicaca to the Floating Island <strong>of</strong> Los Uros and Isla Taquile<br />

for a truly unique experience.<br />

Cost: $3,195 per person, double occupancy (plus airfare)<br />

PROGRAMS FOR<br />

MASTERPIECE SOCIETY MEMBERS<br />

NEW YORK • November 11 – 15, 2009 • SOLD OUT!<br />

PALM BEACH, FLORIDA • February 2010<br />

Back by popular demand: chase away the Winter with this encore<br />

Masterpiece Society trip to wonderful Palm Beach. Enjoy the art scene<br />

with visits to galleries, private collections, the Norton <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Art</strong>,<br />

and, <strong>of</strong> course, the five-star art, jewelry, and antique fair!<br />

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON • June 15 – 19, 2010<br />

Glass lovers—join Curator <strong>of</strong> Glass Kelly Conway for this excursion to<br />

the home <strong>of</strong> the Studio Glass Movement. Enjoy The Tacoma <strong>Art</strong> <strong>Museum</strong><br />

and The <strong>Museum</strong> <strong>of</strong> Glass, as well as exclusive tours <strong>of</strong> artists’ studios.<br />

Special visits to private collections round out this trip to the eclectic<br />

“Emerald City.”<br />

Sandra Tavss, Rachel Cottrell, and Carol Anne<br />

Kent (left to right) enjoy a white wine welcome<br />

from Blue Hill at Stone Barns during a<br />

Masterpiece Society trip to New York's historic<br />

Hudson River Valley.<br />

EGYPTIAN ODYSSEY • April 12–23, 2010<br />

Along the Nile<br />

River’s fertile plains<br />

the earliest <strong>of</strong><br />

civilizations gave<br />

rise to one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

most intriguing<br />

cultures—the<br />

ancient Egyptians.<br />

This classic journey<br />

delves into the<br />

mysterious realm <strong>of</strong> the pharaohs to discover their colossal<br />

monuments, elaborate tombs, and captivating lives. Gain<br />

insight into the magnificent temples at Karnak and Luxor,<br />

the extraordinary Valley <strong>of</strong> the Kings, Abu Simbel, and the<br />

Great Pyramids. Explore cities full <strong>of</strong> architectural gems and<br />

important museum collections, and learn about life along<br />

the Nile as you cruise aboard a luxury riverboat.<br />

Cost: $5,895 per person, double occupancy ~<br />

includes airfare from Norfolk<br />

Masterpiece Society Members Angie and Gene<br />

Loving, Susan Goode, and Cabell Birdsong (left to<br />

right) relax after dinner.<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Trustee Linda Kaufman (center)<br />

shares a scenic moment with Anette Johnson<br />

(left) and Linda Taylor (right) during their<br />

Masterpiece Society excursion to Jackson<br />

Hole, Wyoming.<br />

For more information about the <strong>Art</strong> Travel Program or the Masterpiece Society,<br />

please contact Deborrah Grulke at (757) 333-6318 or dgrulke@chrysler.org.<br />

21


245 West Olney Road<br />

Norfolk, Virginia 23510-1509<br />

www.chrysler.org<br />

NON PROFIT ORG.<br />

U.S. POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

NORFOLK, VA<br />

PERMIT #3369<br />

TO LIVE<br />

FOREVER<br />

AT THE<br />

MUSEUM<br />

SHOP<br />

TO LIVE FOREVER MUSEUM SHOP BONUSES<br />

Friday, October 9 – Sunday, October 11<br />

Spend $50 or more in The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop and receive a free<br />

To Live Forever mug (a $10 value). Spend $100 or more and take<br />

home an ancient Egypt-themed umbrella (a $20 value) as our<br />

thank you (while supplies last).<br />

PERSONALIZED CARTOUCHE PENDANTS<br />

Throughout To Live Forever<br />

Dress like a goddess with your own Egyptian cartouche pendant<br />

and necklace crafted by artisans in Cairo. Place your order in The<br />

<strong>Museum</strong> Shop and 3–5 weeks later your individualized jewelry will<br />

arrive at your home. Name cartouches are available in sterling silver<br />

or 18k gold.<br />

YOUR NAME IN HIEROGLYPHS<br />

Throughout To Live Forever<br />

Discover your Egyptian identity. Insert a dollar bill into the obelisk outside The <strong>Museum</strong> Shop, enter up<br />

to 12 letters on the touch screen, and the 8 ½” x 11” printout will feature a cartouche <strong>of</strong> your name in<br />

hieroglyphs. The reverse side includes a history <strong>of</strong> cartouches and a key to the hieroglyphic alphabet.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!