From the Collection: 2020-May-6

From The Collection: Outdoor Edition

We invite you to hop in the car and go for a drive by DuMA. When you get here, pull over and check out our two outdoor sculptures located off 7th Street.

(Left) Dubuque artist John Anderson-Bricker’s sculpture, Hairball, takes inspiration from the distinctive regurgitations of a beloved family cat. Created from heavy industrial materials and covered in a delicate mosaic, Anderson-Bricker’s oversized “hairballs” are suspended in an articulated steel frame. Using scale to great effect, he playfully transforms them into a monument akin to a towering cat toy only the most fearless feline would take on. Artists often turn to industrial materials to convey their understanding of the natural world. Conversely, natural imagery can be used by artists to understand the industrial and technological elements of our culture. In Hairball, Anderson-Bricker’s ruminations take a lighthearted approach as he explores the artistic connections between the natural and the industrial world.

John Anderson-Bricker, Hairball, 2007, mosaic, concrete, and painted steel 138x42x42.

(Right) Tom Gibbs, Obelisk Number 3. The shape of the obelisk has a long history originating in Ancient Egypt where it was used in funerary and religious ceremonies. This stately form has been widely adopted, from the Washington Monument to countless cemetery headstones, for the gravitas it imparts. In this work, Dubuque native, artist Tom Gibbs uses the obelisk to represent the erosion of time and the imprint of history – a vanitas painting in steel. Obelisk #3’s exposed midsection, heavy gashes, and distressed surface reveal the deterioration process. The industrial steel that it is made from and the machine-made patterns in the exposed areas connect this ancient monument to the modern day. This work also connects the museum to its history. From the 1970s to 1999 the museum was housed in Dubuque’s Old Jail, one of the few Egyptian Revival style buildings in existence.

Tom Gibbs, Obelisk, Number 3, 1977, mild steel, 72x33x33.

Let’s Talk About Art: 2020-Apr-29

Let’s Talk About Art – Salvador Dali’s The Twelve Signs of the Zodiac -Aquarius

Please Note: Let’s Talk About Art videos will now be be posted every other week on Wednesdays

Image Credit: Salvador Dali, The Twelve Signs of the Zodiac-Aquarius, 1967, colored lithograph on Arches paper, 25 1/4 x 18 5/8 inches, Collection of the Dubuque Museum of Art, 2006.3.9.

Facebook Crosspost: 2020-Apr-22

Happy 50th Earth Day Friends!

“Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together … all things connect.”

Chief Seattle
Edward Sheriff Curtis, Tonovige
Edward Sheriff Curtis, Tonovige – Havasupai, 1907, photogravure on Dutch Van Gelder paper, 22 3/16 x 18 1/4 inches, Collection of the Dubuque Museum of Art. Gift of Dubuque Cultural Preservation Committee, an Iowa general partnership, consisting of Dr. Darryl K. Mozena, Jeffrey P. Mozena, Mark Falb, Timothy J. Conlon, and Dr. Randy Lengeling.

Facebook Crosspost: 2020-Apr-19

Join us this week as we celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Earth Day! Each day this week will bring you stories and images where nature and art meet.

“Nature is painting for us, day after day, pictures of infinite beauty.”

John Ruskin
Cynthia Nelms-Byrne, Quiet Places, ca. 2009, acrylic on canvas, 20 x 24 x 1 1/2 inches (framed), Collection of the Dubuque Museum of Art. Gift of Ed Deckert, in memory of Tom Gifford.

Let’s Talk About Art: 2020-Apr-15

Check out our NEW DuMA video series, Let’s Talk About Art – The Dubuque Museum of Art Collection narrated by Exhibitions and Collections Fellow, Sara Cullers. In the first episode, we will take an in depth look at Tim Olson’s “Arrowhead Motel Triptych”.

Let’s Talk About Art is a DuMA video series that offers additional insight into the museum’s collection.

Tim Olson, “Arrowhead Motel Triptych”, 2017, oil on panel, in carved oak frame, Collection of the Dubuque Museum of Art, 2017.4.

Facebook Crosspost: 2020-Apr-12

“Out of Difficulties Grow Miracles”

Jean De La Breyere

Pairing artwork by iconic artists with music to provide you with a moment of respite and distraction.

Look: Marcia Wegman, Route X40, 2014, pastel on paper, 20 x 20 inches, Collection of the Dubuque Museum of Art. 2015 DUMA Biennial Purchase Award.
Listen: George Frederic Handel : “Let The Bright Seraphim”, with Aksel Rykkvin (Soprano) and Mark Bennett (Trumpet)

From the Collection: 2020-Apr-8

From the Collection: Frank Licciardi

Francesco “Frank” Licciardi was a well-known and beloved artist and entrepreneur in the Dubuque area from the mid-1950s to the early 1980s. He was best-known for his figure paintings, especially his portraits. If you knew Frank when he lived here, then you or a family member may be one of the many people who had their portrait painted by him. If you have a memory about Frank Licciardi that you’d like to share, please add it in the comments.

Francesco Licciardi, Mother with Child, n.d., oil and charcoal on Masonite, 48 x 36 inches, Collection of the Dubuque Museum of Art. Gift of C. Robert Justmann & Family.

Art of Week 2019-Sep-29

Edward Sheriff Curtis (America, 1868-1952) Fishing Platform on Trinity River-Hupa, plate 465 Copper-plate photogravure on Dutch Van Gelder paper Gift of the Dubuque Cultural Preservation Committee, an Iowa general partnership consisting of Dr. Darryl K. Mozena, Jeffrey P. Mozena, Mark Falb, Timothy J. Conlon, and Dr. Randall Lengeling, 2009.465