Infocus Spring Summer 2017

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Infocus Varujan Boghosian | Monet | Art Center

SPRING/SUMMER 2017


D EAR FRIENDS infocus Currier Museum of Art Spring/Summer 2017 infocus@currier.org

Editorial staff Steve Konick: D irector of Public Relations and Marketing, infocus Editor Vanessa De Zorzi: Graphic Designer

Contributors Kurt Sundstrom: Curator Paul Staller: Director of Development Bruce McColl: Director of Art Education

CONTENTS Exhibitions 3|U pcoming exhibitions Now on View 4 | Varujan Boghosian 6 | Claude Monet A museum is more than a building displaying masterpieces of art. It is also a place where audiences come to meet, to encounter and learn together. Over the past few months, we have hosted a range of great events, from a citizenship ceremony welcoming new American families, to a cool dance party that helped us launch our contemporary exhibitions, including Deep Cuts: Contemporary Paper Cutting and Soo Sunny Park: BioLath (the latter on view until August 6). Members have played a major role in such events, most recently the Heart of the Arts, a gala evening which raised more than $130,000 for our education and community programs. The museum has reached out in significant ways to military veterans and their families, persons with Alzheimer’s disease and their caregivers, and underserved audiences throughout the region. Experiencing and making art makes a tremendous difference in all our lives. Next, we will focus our attention on our immediate neighborhood and try to effect positive change. On the evening of Saturday, July 22, you are all welcome to come to Twilight at the Currier – a free and fun celebration of the museum in the summer. Some impressive exhibitions will be on view.

Come join us, Alan Chong Director & CEO

All Access 8 | The benefits of bequests 9 | Staff favorite artworks Community Connections 10 | Art Center summer camp adventures 12 | Seen at the Currier Events 13 | Calendar

CONNECT WITH US


UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS | 03

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec Prints and Posters From the Museum of Modern Art SEPTEMBER 30, 2017 THROUGH JANUARY 7, 2018 After Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s art, no one saw Paris in the same way. The Currier’s exclusive New England presentation of more than 100 original posters, prints, and illustrated books by this groundbreaking artist explores the magic of Belle Époque Paris. Drawn from the Museum of Modern Art’s extensive collection of Toulouse-Lautrec’s work, this exhibition reveals the enduring beauty of the City of Light and the excitement of nightclubs such as the Moulin Rouge and its denizens, during the late 19th century. This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

Augustus Saint-Gaudens FEBRUARY 3, 2018 THROUGH APRIL 2018 In the late 19th century, two sculptors stood atop the world’s artistic stage: the Frenchman Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) and the American Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907). Saint-Gaudens drew artistic inspiration from Renaissance artists such as Michelangelo as well as classical Greek and Roman sculpture. He was, however, very much a man of his times. His Diana (1894) fused classical subject matter with the clean lines of a modern aesthetic. It sat atop New York’s Madison Square Garden where the monumental female nude was seen by some Victorian New Yorkers as scandalous, while its nighttime illumination by electric light was an engineering and artistic first. Though Saint-Gaudens started his career in New York City and later managed studios in Europe and New York City, he established his home and studio in Cornish, N.H. where several of his major works were conceived and developed. He was called upon to execute the most important American commemorative monuments of the era including the Shaw Memorial in Boston, The Standing Abraham Lincoln in Chicago, and the Sherman Monument in New York’s Central Park. Working in collaboration with the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site in Cornish, the largest repository of the artist’s work, the Currier’s exhibition will highlight several of the sculptor’s most important commissions. It will also include examples of his delicate and poignant portrait reliefs of family members and famous artist friends.

Image credits: Varujan Boghosian, Above and Below (detail), 2011, collage, Museum Purchase: The Henry Melville Fuller Acquisition Fund. Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Diana, image by Jeffrey Nintzel, courtesy of the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, Cornish, NH. Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Abraham Lincoln: The Man (Heroic bust), bronze, 1910, SAGA 939, Photo Courtesy of Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, Cornish, NH. Henri de Toulouse-Laturec, La Troupe de Mademoiselle Églantine (Mademoiselle Églantine’s Troupe), 1896, Lithograph, sheet, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, 1940, Photograph: Thomas Griesel.


The Curious Magic of

VARUJAN BOGHOSIAN June 10 to September 4


VA R U J A N B O G H O S I A N | 0 5

F

or more than six decades, Varujan Boghosian has constructed art that defies definition while mesmerizing the viewer's mind and imagination. His works are open expressions of universal human themes where no single interpretation has authority over another. They are funny, cerebral, beautiful, and spellbinding, like Rorschach ink blots in two or three dimensions. Sometimes humorous, sometimes dark, his work is always unpredictable and provocative. Boghosian, who taught at Dartmouth College for 40 years, has been a leading Surrealist and Dada artist since first exhibiting in New York in 1956 alongside Marisol Escobar, Joan Mitchell, Robert Rauschenberg, and Andy Warhol at the famed Stable Gallery. He is one of New Hampshire’s most internationally distinguished artists. Building upon the traditions of Surrealism and Dada championed by Salvador Dali and Marcel Duchamp, Boghosian's assemblages and collages playfully contemplate the boundaries between dream and reality. His art draws inspiration primarily from literature, other artists, and music. He is particularly entranced by enigmatic narratives, like the tragic mythical love story of Orpheus and Eurydice, the poems of Wallace Stevens, Emily Dickinson, and William Blake, and the prose of Franz Kafka and James Joyce. Boghosian's works are brilliant conflations of word and image that implore the viewer to engage with each object on a personal level.

Boghosian's assemblages and collages playfully contemplate the boundaries between dream and reality

A primary focus of this exhibition is a little-known body of work that Boghosian refers to as chachkies (tchotchkes). Each of these sculptures is brilliant in its simplicity and cleverness. They are most often made out of two seemingly disparate objects, but when brought together they create a new meaning. The fun is in trying to figure out the artist’s intent. Perhaps even more enjoyable are the serial works Boghosian refers to as “objects of my affliction.” Humor is never in short supply with the artist. Although these objects are personal, they express universal themes in whimsical terms. Boghosian’s intellectual depth and comic sense sing out in each of these constructions. The more you look at them, the more you are rewarded. Learn more.

— Kurt Sundstrom Sponsored by the Jack and Dorothy Byrne Foundation, Inc. All images: Varujan Boghosian. Clockwise from left: Untitled, 1978, watercolor, Museum purchase: Rosmond deKalb Fund and Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Georgopolous. June 16, 1980, collage, Museum purchase: The Henry Melville Fuller Acquisition Fund. Tempest, 2004, mixed media, given by the artist in memory of his good friends David and Rosamond Putnam. The Fall of Icarus, circa 1986, paper collage, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chenard.



MONET | 07

MO NET Pathways To Impressionism July 1 to November 13

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laude Monet’s The Bridge at Bougival (1869) is one of the most popular and most significant paintings in the Currier Museum’s collection. The painting is so renowned that it is requested regularly for exhibitions around the world. Recently, it has been at two museums in Texas and is currently a centerpiece at the exhibition Monet: The Early Years at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. When The Bridge at Bougival returns in June, it will be part of a small Monet exhibition entitled Pathways to Impressionism. The painting will join three other Monet masterpieces, each representing a milestone in the artist’s development, including works from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and a monumental canvas from the Kimbell Museum of Art in Fort Worth, Texas. The Kimbell Museum’s La Pointe de la Hève at Low Tide, launched Monet’s career when exhibited in the 1865 Paris Salon. At that time, the young painter was creating realistic pictures in his studio. That changed a few years later when he began painting outdoors.

Claude Monet, The Bridge at Bougival (detail)

The Currier’s painting illustrates Monet’s earliest break with tradition and his initial experiments in depicting light, reflection, and shadow, characteristics that would define Impressionism. The Museum of Fine Art's Cap Martin (1884) renders the play of light across the Maritime Alps and the rocky foreground. Broken colors simplify forms without sacrificing veracity. The fourth picture of the group, Charing Cross Bridge (1900), is a departure from Monet’s fully mature Impressionist works. It beautifully evokes the mood of place without being visually faithful. Creativity is now playing a greater role conceptually. Natural and constructed formations are subservient to Monet’s interest in evoking the fluctuations of daylight and the movement of wind in London smog. Monet: Pathways to Impressionism presents key works from Monet's career.

The striking paintings in the exhibition allow for intense comparison and contemplation. Join us, beginning July 1.

— Kurt Sundstrom


08 | BEQUESTS

BEQUESTS Benefit The Public Forever

T

he Currier Museum of Art was built on bequests, large and small, and these gifts make the collection and our public programs possible. In 1915, Hannah and Moody Currier left their estate to New Hampshire. Frank Lloyd Wright’s marvelous Zimmerman House was similarly a gift and it was Henry Fuller’s bequest in 2001 that transformed the museum.

The Fuller Society honors those who include the Currier Museum in their wills. Bequests of all sizes help us present fascinating and varied exhibitions, educate school children, and spread the joy and meaning of art to everyone. When you join the Fuller Society, you will enjoy specialized tours, lifetime museum membership, invitations to the annual Fuller Society Dinner, and the shared community of those who value arts in New Hampshire. Your bequest can be applied in lots of different ways. For example: As was this artwork...

Hans Hofmann, Landscape, 1940.

This house by Frank Lloyd Wright was a bequest...

and our summer programs for teens...

The Currier Museum itself was a bequest to you.

Help us carry on this tradition for future generations


S TA F F A R T P I C K S | 0 9

ARTWORKS newFAVORITE manchester By Tricia Anderson Soule, Manager of Individual and Corporate Membership

as picked by currier staff

Melanie Porter, Development Assistant

Robert Indiana, Decade Autoportrait, 1963, 1971, oil on canvas What initially drew me to this piece was the stark contrast of color and line. Bold statement pieces have always been a favorite of mine, so of course this one pulled me in! There is commercial appeal, yet the composition is a prime example of pop art done right. It’s not there to give you a warm, cozy feeling, but to be pleasing to the eye. This does just that.

Mark Nelson, Director of Facilities and Security

Maxfield Parrish, Freeman Farm: Winter, 1935, oil on board Why the Maxfield Parrish painting? Well, a no-brainer: This one features buildings and grounds of New Hampshire, as do many of his pieces. You have to appreciate the skill he brings to his illustrations. Not only are they almost photographic, but he uses light extremely well to set the mood. You know that you’ve actually seen these places, or places just like them, and you wish you could capture those views forever in your mind, like he does on wood.

Lynn Thomson, Manager of Family and Community Engagement

John Singer Sargent, Grace Elvina, Marchioness Curzon of Kedleston, 1925, oil on canvas I enjoy looking at Grace Elvina, Marchioness Curzon of Kedleston, one of Sargent’s last completed pieces. The strength and confidence in her gaze always makes me pause as I walk up to the second floor galleries. It seems as if she is greeting guests and is about to tell them a story.

What's your favorite currier artwork? Email infocus@currier.org for a chance to be featured on social media.



ART CENTER | 11

More than a...

S U M MER C A MP it's an adventure!

L

ast summer, Flannery Black-Ingersoll (image top-left) learned one of the most exciting things a young adult can learn: how to be a leader and mentor. The Bates College sophomore was one of our 25 Earn and Learn interns who spent eight weeks supporting the Art Center. They worked with young campers, assisted in studio classrooms, and led tours in the museum’s galleries. They also managed afterlunch sugar rushes and the inevitable collapse after recess. Somehow, the interns always found ways to rally the campers in the late afternoon before parents arrived for pick-up. In all, these teen/college-aged volunteers helped us educate more than 450 kids during our summer sessions.

The program exposes them to new ideas, and through the museum, they see art and art education in a very different way

The Currier Museum's Earn and Learn program is essential on many levels. It provides teens valuable experiences that may positively affect their future choices, giving them first-hand experience working with professional teachers and artists, opportunities to assist in lesson preparation and the delivery of academic content. There is also the extraordinary bonding experience that comes from working with peers. Linn Krikorian, Art Center manager, believes in these programs deeply. She was an Art Center student in the 1970s when Bob Eshoo, then Art Center director, gave her the responsibility of assisting with classroom duties. “Earn and Learn provides art-loving teens an opportunity to be in an environment that they’re comfortable in — where they can grow,” said Linn. “It immerses them in an art-making setting, exposes them to new ideas, and through the museum, they see art and art education in a very different way than they generally experience through school.” Today the Currier Museum aims to be a core resource in our community. Our summer art camps are always creative and well-designed, but thanks to stronger community outreach, combined with more ambitious fundraising, our campers are a more diverse group that includes talented students from Inti Academy, The Boys and Girls Club of Manchester, and children from military families — all of whom attend our camps. Thank you to the Bean Foundation for supporting the Currier Earn and Learn program in summer 2017.

— Bruce McColl


1 2 | S E E N AT T H E C U R R I E R

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SEEN AT THE CURRIER

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1&2 | Mixing and mingling at our Contemporary at the Currier celebration. 3 | INTI Soccer Academy students interact with our digital artwork 1984x1984 4 | Artist Fred H C Liang with his work in Deep Cuts. 5 | BioLath artist Soo Sunny Park leads a community art project. 6 | Artist Elizabeth Alexander talks to Currier Museum docents about her studio practice. 7 | Currier Board President Harry Shepler and Mayor Ted Gatsas at the Currier Museum of Art’s Heart of the Arts gala, supporting art education in our community. 8 | The Heart of the Arts Committee toasts to a successful evening. 9 | Guests gather for the Heart of the Arts auction to benefit art outreach.

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Photos by Alana Johanson and Vanessa De Zorzi

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CALENDAR

CALE N DAR | 13

May through August 2017

Varujan Boghosian, Titan's Goblet, 1978, reworked 2008, mixed media, gift of the artist in celebration of David F. Putnam.


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MAY SUNDAY

MONDAY

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TUESDAY

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Art Center Spring Term Begins

WEDNESDAY

3 MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY

THURSDAY

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FRIDAY

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SATURDAY

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Currier After Hours Hippo de Mayo Taco Challenge

Asian Brush Painting Master Class with Bruce Iverson 10 am to 4 pm

6 to 9 pm ($2 tacos available starting at 4 pm)

Day to Play in Clay Fairy Houses 1 to 3 pm Both at Art Center

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Alzheimer's Café 2 to 4 pm

13 Free NH Saturday 10 am to noon Creative Studio: Wire 10 am to 1 pm Library Book Sale 10 am to noon

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Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm

Silk Screen Workshop 1 to 4 pm

Focus Tour Women in Art 2 pm

Acrylics Workshop Inspired by Nature 1 to 4 pm

Zimmerman House Garden Tour 3:15 to 4:45 pm

Picnic in the Park Collage Workshop 1 to 3 pm All at Art Center

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Focus Tour Deep Cuts and BioLath 11:30 am

Storytime in the Gallery: I Am a Story 11:30 am

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MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 P.M.

Last Day: Deep Cuts

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Free NH Second Saturdays in 2017 are sponsored by the Botnick Family Foundation and E&R Laundry & Dry Cleaners.


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JUNE SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

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The Curious Magic of Varujan Boghosian Members-Only Preview 11 am to 5 pm

Free NH Saturday 10 am to noon

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Currier After Hours Light and Reflection 6 to 9 pm

Contact Melanie at 603.669.6144, x152 to confirm your benefits, to upgrade to Sponsor level, or with any questions about membership.

Twilight Tours at the Zimmerman House 5 and 6:30 pm

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MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY

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Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm

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SATURDAY

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Going somewhere this summer? Currier members at the $200 Sponsor level and above receive free admission to more than 800 museums. Not a Sponsor level member? Upgrade now!

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FRIDAY

Creative Studio: Found Mythical Creatures 10 am to 1 pm Boghosian Tour A Closer Look 11:30 am

Alzheimer's Café 2 to 4 pm

ARTalk Varujan Boghosian 2 pm (See pg. 19) Zimmerman House Tour Celebrating 150 years of FLW 3:15 to 4:45 pm

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Currier Art Center Camp Road Trip! 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

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Landscaping a Usonian: The Zimmerman House Garden Tour 3:15 to 4:45 pm

Storytime in the Gallery: Alphabet City 11:30 am Currier Art Center Camp The Wild, Wild West 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 P.M.

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JULY SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

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Did you know that we’re celebrating Frank Lloyd Wright’s 150th birthday with special tours throughout the summer? Schedule your visit today. #FLW150

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Monet: Pathways to Impressionism opens

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Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm

Currier Art Center Camp Treasure Island 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

Zimmerman House Focus Tour Frank Lloyd Wright as Composer 3:15 to 4:45 pm

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Focus Tour Monet: Pathways to Impressionism 11:30 am

Currier Art Center Camp Mythical Creatures 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

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Zimmerman House Tour Celebrating 150 years of FLW 3:15 to 4:45 pm

Storytime in the Gallery: Phillipe in Monet's Garden 11:30 am

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Currier Art Center Camp Transformers 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

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Currier After Hours The Art of Beer 6 to 9 pm

MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY

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SATURDAY

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8 Free NH Saturday 10 am to noon Creative Studio: Assemblage 10 am to 1 pm

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Alzheimer's Café 2 to 4 pm

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Twilight at the Currier 5 to 9 pm

MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 P.M.

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CALE N DAR | 17

AUGUST SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

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WEDNESDAY

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Last Day: BioLath

Currier Art Center Camp SteAmpunk Art 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

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Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm

Currier Art Center Camp Space Invaders 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

Boghosian Tour 11:30 am Zimmerman House Focus Tour Frank Lloyd Wright as Composer 3:15 to 4:45 pm

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28 Storytime in the Gallery: Art Supplies 11:30 am

SATURDAY

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Twilight Tours at the Zimmerman House 5 and 6:30 pm

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Alzheimer's Café 2 to 4 pm

Free NH Saturday 10 am to noon Creative Studio: Pun Making 10 am to 1 pm

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Currier Art Center Camp Penguins and Polar Bears 9 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday

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FRIDAY

Currier After Hours Common Objects Reimagined 6 to 9 pm

MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY

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THURSDAY

MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 P.M.

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Focus Tour Monet: Pathways to Impressionism 11:30 am Landscaping a Usonian: The Zimmerman House Garden Tour 3:15 to 4:45 pm


C A L E N D A R F E AT U R E D E V E N T S | 1 9

FEATURED EVENTS

Currier After Hours Hippo de Mayo Taco Challenge Thursday, May 4, 6 to 9 pm The Currier’s Winter Garden Café will be competing in the seventh annual Hippo de Mayo Taco Challenge. This Cinco de Mayo celebration features more than 30 different tacos, each sold for $2 at restaurants throughout Manchester. Enjoy a live mariachi band, speciality cocktail, collection highlight tours and an art-making activity. Our entry – Joe's Jamaican – features jerk chicken with a spicy honey-tamarind glaze and mango salsa. A cash bar and full menu will be available at the Winter Garden Café. This month only: FREE general admission from 4 to 9 pm.

Twilight at the Currier Saturday, July 22, 5 to 9 pm This is the can't-miss summer party. Join us for an evening of art activities, performances, food trucks, and much more. Bring the whole family. There will be FREE general admission for all ages.

ARTalk The Curious Magic of Varujan Boghosian Sunday, June 11, 2 pm He has been called a surrealist, a punster, a hoarder of found objects, and more. Varujan Boghosian’s works of art span multiple artistic styles and challenge you to look at common objects in new ways by presenting them in unique contexts, often through the lens of mythology. Explore his work and then hear from the artist himself and Curator Kurt Sundstrom in this special ARTalk.

Zimmerman House Focus Tours Celebrating 150 Years of Frank Lloyd Wright Sunday, June 11, 3:30 pm and Sunday, July 23, 3:15 pm Frank Lloyd Wright was born 150 years ago on June 8, 2017. Come celebrate his life and unique style with a tour of the Zimmerman House focusing on Wright’s career and how the Zimmerman House fits into design history.


1 8 | C A L E N D A R T O U R I N F O R M AT I O N

TOUR INFORMATION

MUSEUM TOURS

ZIMMERMAN HOUSE

Programs are free with Museum admission unless otherwise indicated. Sound amplification headsets are available for most programs. To purchase tickets for select programs and events, visit our online calendar.

The Zimmerman House is the only home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright that is open to the public in New England. This 90-minute tour offers visitors information about Wright’s architectural style, the commission and design of the house, and details about the Zimmermans, who lived in the house for 36 years. Assistive listening systems are available for all public and private tours.

Discover the Currier’s Collection: Take a Guided Tour! Assistive listening systems are available for most public and private tours. Museum Highlights Tours are offered daily at 1 pm and feature highlights of the collection and an introduction to special exhibitions. Public tours are free with Museum admission.

Zimmerman House Public Tours are offered Thursday through Monday at 11:15 am, 1:15 pm, and 3:15 pm. All tours begin at the Museum. Advance registration is strongly recommended. For more information about Zimmerman House tour schedules, tickets and offerings, visit CURRIER.ORG or call 603.669.6144, x108.

Take a Mobile Tour

Members $10; Non-Members: Adult $25, Senior $24, Student $16, Children 7 to 17 $10.

Explore highlights from the Currier’s collection at currier.toursphere.com or borrow an audio guide from Guest Services.

Private tours of the Zimmerman House for 2 to 12 people can be scheduled on Wednesdays. Please call 603.669.6144, x113 for more details and to schedule.

HOURS AND ADMISSION We are open Sunday, Monday, Wednesday through Friday: 11 am to 5 pm, and Saturday: 10 am to 5 pm. Free general admission the second Saturday of each month for N.H. residents: 10 am to noon. The Museum is closed Tuesdays. Extended hours available during Currier After Hours events. Adults $15, Seniors $13, Student (w/valid ID), $10 (18+), Youth (13-17) $5, Children (12 and younger) are always free.


20 | ART CENTER

CURRIER ART CENTER Year-round classes for all ages and abilities

Get Creative with Us The Currier Art Center offers exciting and inspiring spring and summer art classes, camps and workshops. Explore a variety of media with us, including drawing, painting, silk screening, photography, pottery, and more.

Spring Classes and Workshops – May 1 to June 5 Daytime, after-school, evening, and Saturday art classes for all ages. Five weekly classes designed to fit your interests, skill-level, and schedule.

Summer Vacation Camps – June 19 to August 21, Ages 5 to 12 Our week-long art camps offer a creative, fun, and educational experience while school is out of session. Each week, students enjoy a variety of art-making projects, snacks, lunch, recess, and a special tour of the museum.

Summer Intensives – July 10 to August 25 Middle Schoolers and Adults 11+ Week-long focused art classes geared to help build your portfolio and expand your artistic skills.

Art in the Evening – July 10 to August 21 Teens and Adults 15+ Beginners and advanced artists can join us Monday evenings for pottery and acrylic classes.

180 Pearl Street, Manchester, NH 03104 | 603.518.4922 ArtCenter@Currier.org | Currier.org/art-center/programs


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