Infocus Fall 2017 The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec Elaine de Kooning in the Spotlight Frank Lloyd Wright's 150th Anniversary
DEAR READERS INFOCUS Currier Museum of Art Fall 2017 Infocus@Currier.org
EDITORIAL STAFF Ann Bible Educator and Lead Interpreter Samantha Cataldo Assistant Curator Vanessa De Zorzi Graphic Design and Social Media Specialist Bruce McColl Director of Art Education Tricia Soule Development Manager
M
ore than two thousand people came to our block party on July 22. The Currier Museum celebrated the summer with “Twilight at the Currier,” a free event with lots of activities both indoors and outside the building. First-timers and old friends took advantage of the beautiful afternoon and evening to tour the galleries and exhibitions, listen to live music, and enjoy food and drink. Face-painting, sidewalk art, mask-making, and a lion parade delighted families. The event would not have been the success it was without great staff team work and the generous support of our sponsors, People’s United Bank, AutoFair, and iHeartRadio. We promise to make it even better next year. The Currier Museum belongs to all the residents of New Hampshire, and we hope that events like this make everyone feel welcome. As part of this effort we are launching other special events this season: Free Lautrec Late Nights In conjunction with the special exhibition, The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec (Members’ opening on September 28), five free Thursday evenings will present music, movies, and tours. These special evenings begin on October 19 and run through December 14 (see Calendar). Moulin Rouge: La fête de la saison November 4 – A spectacular event celebrating the food, wine, and entertainment of Toulouse-Lautrec’s era, the evening will also support the museum’s community work. Please join us for a fun event. Side Door Music Series October 13 – The museum launches a new Indie music series in its beautiful auditorium. Established and up-and-coming singers/songwriters perform, with food and drink. Music and art make natural partners.
Lynn Thomson Manger of Family and Community Engagement
CONTENTS Exhibitions & Community
03 | Upcoming Exhibitions 04 | The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec 06 | A rchitecture for the 21st Century 08 | E laine de Kooning in the Spotlight 09 | S taff Favorite Artworks 10 | Currier Society 11 | C elebrating Art and Community 12 | Seen at the Currier Events
13 | Calendar
Members, thank you again for your support. See you here soon.
Sincerely, Alan Chong Director
CONNECT WITH US
UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS | 03
UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS THE SCULPTURE OF AUGUSTUS SAINT-GAUDENS OPENS FEBRUARY 10, 2018 Next winter the Currier will present the sculpture of Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848–1907) in the first major exhibition of his work to be held in New England in more than 30 years. Saint-Gaudens was the most important American sculptor of the late 19th and early 20th century, and his monuments have become an integral part of our country’s historic narrative. The exhibition will present many of his large-scale masterpieces including Abraham Lincoln: The Man, the Adams Memorial, and Diana. Saint-Gaudens transformed American sculpture by creating figures from recent history in heroic scale, with allegorical references, and in carefully designed settings. His monuments to heroes like Admiral Farragut and General Sherman defined America’s response to the Civil War. The Shaw Memorial took 14 years to complete and was the first public sculpture to depict heroic African-American soldiers of the Civil War. Saint-Gaudens’ Diana of 1893 was inspired by Greek and Roman sculpture and Renaissance art, but she became a beacon of modernity as the first sculpture to be illuminated by electric light as she balanced atop the tower on the newly erected Madison Square Garden in New York. Saint-Gaudens achieved unprecedented international acclaim by exhibiting regularly in Europe, for example, winning the grand prize at the Paris International Exposition of 1900. During the height of his career the artist directed busy studios in Paris, Rome, and New York. But Saint-Gaudens was also a New Hampshire artist for much of his life, maintaining a studio in Cornish. He was the founding artist of the Cornish Colony where he summered beginning in 1885, and lived there year-round from 1900 until his death in 1907. His home and studios are now managed by the National Park Service and this exhibition is a collaboration with the Augustus Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site.
BEYOND WORDS: DAVID CARROLL, TOMIE DE PAOLA, AND BETH KROMMES - OPENS JULY 2018 This exhibition celebrates the work of three award-winning New Hampshire book illustrators: David Carroll, Tomie de Paola, and Beth Krommes. Original artwork from their most popular books will be shown alongside drawings illuminating their creative process. Together with the published books, these drawings offer unique insights into how these beloved publications were produced. The exhibition explores the development of each artist’s signature style, as well as their wider art-making practice.
ETHAN MURROW: HAULING - OPENS SEPTEMBER 2018 Ethan Murrow is known for his monumental, theatrical narrative drawings. The Currier has commissioned Murrow to transform over 100 feet of gallery walls into an ambitious installation of hand-drawn, panoramic murals. Hauling focuses on the history of Manchester and the people who have lived and worked here, with a particular emphasis on labor, manufacturing, and the area's natural resources. The exhibition will also include new largescale works on paper and an industrial kinetic sculpture. Cover image: Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (French, 1864–1901), Jane Avril, 1899, Lithograph, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, 1946. This page: Augustus SaintGaudens, Diana, image by Jeffrey Nintzel, courtesy of the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, Cornish, NH. End papers for Swirl by Swirl: Spirals in Nature (Joyce Sidman, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), 2011, watercolor on scratchboard transfer, courtesy of the artist. Ethan Murrow, Tenderfoot, 2017, graphite on paper, courtesy of the artist.
THE PARIS OF TOU
Prints and Posters from Th
H
enri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864–1901) is one of the most talented – and eccentric – artists of the 19th century. Hollywood movies like Moulin Rouge (from 1951 and 2001) popularized his dramatic life: raised an aristocratic, Lautrec suffered from accidents as a child which severely stunted his growth. He was attracted to the shadowy underworld of Paris – a realm of dancers, actors, prostitutes, alcohol, and drugs. But from this rough material, Lautrec fashioned dynamic and innovative images. His evocative posters, advertisements, and programs are among the most influential commercial images ever made, and set the stage for modern marketing imagery.
Local color Paris was an international center of culture during this period. The entertainment districts in Montmartre on the city’s outskirts were a breeding ground for progressive counter culture, and provided a bounty of subject matter for Lautrec. The artist sensitively portrayed individuals from all walks of life who mingled in cafés and dance halls, from upper-class spectators to performers and prostitutes.
Lautrec and celebrity
Lautrec's evocative posters, advertisements, and programs are among the most influential commercial images ever made.
Lautrec’s work was akin to social media before the digital age. His avant-garde designs were seen by a broad public as they appeared on posters plastered throughout Paris, illustrations for widely circulated journals and magazines, and fine art prints. A friend of famous performers, Lautrec also prefigured our celebrity-obsessed culture. He portrayed prominent singers, dancers, actors, and even circus performers – sometimes on stage in their recognizable personas, but also informally in behind-the-scenes portraits. This contrived intimacy (also widely circulated) has also been influential to twentieth-century artists.
Artwork Credits: All images by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (French, 1864–1901). La Clownesse au Moulin Rouge, 1897, Lithograph, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, 19 La Loge au mascaron doré, program for Le Missionnaire at the Théâtre Libre, 1894, Lithograph, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Johanna and Leslie J. Garfield Fund, Mary Ellen Oldenburg Fund, an
ULOUSE-LAUTREC
he Museum of Modern Art Lautrec was drawn to performers who, like himself, had crafted their own stardom through their appearance and signature talent. Among them: Aristide Bruant, with his arrogant persona and floppy black chapeau; Jane Avril, conspicuous for her red hair and over-the-top hats; or the clown Cha-U-Kao, who sported a top knot and low-cut blouses. Lautrec’s prints solidified their celebrity status, and simultaneously brought the artist his greatest fame.
About the exhibition This exhibition is drawn from the holdings of the Museum of Modern Art, and because they are light-sensitive, have been very rarely seen, even in New York. Scenes of nightlife and celebrity are well represented in the exhibition. Lautrec was inspired by all that Paris had to offer and would frequent the many parks, race tracks, and dining
establishments in the city, sketching the people and animals he found there. He also created illustrations for advertisements and magazines. This exhibition, The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec, features over 120 examples of the artist's best-known work, celebrates the audacious art of Henri ToulouseLautrec, which continues to inspire artists and designers today. Join us for exciting Lautrec themed events this fall. On November 4 the Currier hosts Moulin Rouge: La fĂŞte de la saison, a special party featuring French fare, music, dancing, art and more. The Currier is also offering extended viewing hours during Free Lautrec Late Nights on select Thursday evenings throughout the exhibition. Check the calendar for more information and events. - Samantha Cataldo, Assistant Curator
This exhibition is organized by The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The exhibition is organized by Sarah Suzuki, Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints, The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
946. Aristide Bruant dans son cabaret, 1893, Lithograph, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Emilio Sanchez, 1961. nd Sharon P. Rockefeller Fund, 2008. Divan Japonais, 1893, Lithograph, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Fund, 1949.
Media Sponsor:
ARCHITECTURE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY E
ntering the Zimmerman House is a dramatic cave-like experience. Passing through a hallway with a low ceiling, you are transported to a light and soaring space with unexpected accents of glowing color. Frank Lloyd Wright was a master manipulator of space, and this theatrical progression helps you transition from the outside into a world of sensate awareness.
This does not mean that Wright turned his back on technology. While nature had a spark of godliness for Wright, he was an automobile enthusiast who also developed an early version of mass-produced homes. His vision of organic architecture sought to integrate structure, interior decoration, and site; but as historian Robert McCarter points out, Wright’s spiritual imagination accommodated modern life.
What is that amazing scent, visitors sometimes ask – all the cypress? The long, clean lines of the boards on the ceiling invite the eye to sweep across before doubling back to the delicate beauty of the wood grain. On a recent visit, I was drawn to the rough, mottled concrete of the block windows. The light was beaming from the decks above and the autumnal colors of the furnishings were warm in their earthiness.
Wright sometimes designed intensely sculptural experiences, and the ceiling in the Zimmermans’ bedroom is one example. At the same time, this small space – Wright’s so-called Usonian homes were intended to be affordable – includes an area they used for office work. “Not terribly romantic,” joked a visitor recently upon encountering the large adding machine.
Thinking about Wright in this anniversary year (he was born June 8, 1867), the press has rightly lauded his invention of an American architecture and foreshadowing of sustainable design. As the Zimmerman House illustrates, his work also is an invitation to slow down – a crucial reminder at this moment of constant communication and screenbased experience.
Like many today, Isadore and Lucille Zimmerman (a urologist and nurse/office manager) brought their work home. With full understanding of this condition, Wright created spaces that remind us of what it means to be human. - Ann Bible, Museum Educator and Lead Interpreter
Photo: David Bohl
08 | DE KOONING
ELAINE DE KOONING IN THE SPOTLIGHT
T
he Currier Museum has acquired a painting by the Abstract Expressionist artist Elaine de Kooning. This dynamic portrait is the first figural work from the New York School to enter the collection, where it joins works by other artists associated with the movement, including Joan Mitchell and Mark Rothko. A noted portraitist, Elaine de Kooning (1918–1989) captured friends and luminaries, including President John F. Kennedy, in an energetic style that featured bold colors and loose, thick brush strokes. An early work by the artist, the museum’s new painting depicts Michel Sonnabend (1900– 2001), a key player in the New York art scene from the 1950s to 1970s, and the husband of the influential art dealer Ileana Sonnabend. In her lifetime, Elaine de Kooning’s work was overshadowed by that of her husband, Willem de Kooning. In part this is because her later portraits have a more realistic and commercial feeling. However, in recent decades, it has been recognized that Elaine contributed significantly to the development of Abstract Expressionism. This slashed, broken figure from 1951 is closely comparable to Willem’s more famous paintings. Elaine de Kooning is now appreciated as a defining figure in Abstract Expressionism, with a creativity rivaling her colleagues. - Samantha Cataldo, Assistant Curator
Artwork credit: Elaine de Kooning, Michel Sonnabend, 1951, Oil on canvas, Museum Purchase: The Henry Melville Fuller Acquisition Fund, 2017. © Elaine de Kooning Trust. Photograph courtesy of Heather James Fine Art.
FAV O R I T E A R T W O R K S | 0 9
new manchester STAFF FAVORITE By Tricia Anderson Soule, Manager of Individual and Corporate Membership
ARTWORKS
Barbara Jaus, Executive Assistant and Board Liaison Pablo Picasso, Woman Seated in a Chair, 1941, oil on canvas
"Picasso’s Woman Seated in a Chair, 1941, was painted during World War II when Picasso was living in Paris, and the painting seems to reflect the violence taking place in Europe at that time, as well as the turmoil in his personal life. I like the two-dimensional quality of the painting, the curved lines of the chair compared to the straight lines of the woman, and the intense color palette. This painting is not easy to love, but it’s always been one of my favorites."
Joel VanPatten, Guest Services Representative
Edward Hopper, The Bootleggers, 1925, oil on canvas "I enjoy this work by Hopper greeting me each morning atop the stairs as I pass by on my way into the museum. While there is the action of the boat and the movement of the waves and a created narrative, the piece continues to repeat the underlying themes of isolation by Hopper. There is one man on the shore, one house, etc. and while there are three men in the boat none of them are engaged with each other whatsoever seemingly adding to the severity of the task at hand in delivering their cargo to this limited audience."
Corinne Breton, Special Events Manager
Marisol Escobar, The Family, 1963, mixed-media "I love Marisol. When I visited the Currier for the first time after graduating from SCAD, I was floored that the Currier had such a robust collection of contemporary and female artists. I was hooked on the Currier from that point forward. The Family is timeless. Anyone can look at this piece and make connections to their own lives. The work presents a narrative but is completely open to personal interpretation. I’ve seen kids in the gallery create elaborate stories about The Family where they imagine the lives of these people. This piece is the epitome of what the Currier has to offer: inspiration for all ages.”
10 | CURRIER SOCIETY
CURRIER SOCIETY HAPPENINGS
A
rt enthusiasts are the cornerstone of the Currier Museum of Art. Individuals who believe in the importance of fine arts make it possible for us to bring extraordinary art and exhibitions to the Granite State.
The Currier Society is made up of the Museum’s most loyal and generous friends. Sharing in special opportunities to engage with the museum’s collection, visiting scholars, artists, and curatorial staff are among the many benefits of getting involved. Currier Society donors also serve as ambassadors for the museum. The Currier Society contributes directly to funding the day to funding operations of the museum, ensuring that the Currier continues to be the beacon for a vital arts and cultural scene into the future. We hope that you will join the Currier Society and work with us to introduce more people to the museum. For further details, please contact Tricia Soule at 603.669.6144 x149 or tsoule@currier.org.
Upcoming events Currier Society Behind-the-Scenes | Friday, September 15
This is a wonderful opportunity for those interested in learning more about the museum to join Director Alan Chong and the curators for a behind-the-scenes tour of the museum's latest acquisitions. RSVP by September 8. Limited space available.
Currier Society Visiting Scholar Reception | Thursday, October 26
Currier Society members are invited to a private lecture with George Shackelford. A noted Impressionism scholar, Shackelford is Deputy Director of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, and a respected scholar of French art of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He has lectured at museums and universities worldwide. RSVP by October 19.
Annual Currier Society Dinner | Friday, June 22
Each year Currier Society donors gather for a special dinner with Currier Museum of Art leadership and trustees in recognition of their commitment to the museum. The evening includes a guest speaker, exceptional art, music, conversation, food, and libations. RSVP by June 1.
ART AND COMMUNITY | 11
CELEBRATING ART AND COMMUNITY At the Currier Museum we believe arts and culture strengthen communities by encouraging creative thinking, artistic expression, and building connections between groups of people and places. Highlighting a year’s worth of robust community-centered creativity, the Currier Museum of Art is opening its doors to recognize our many educational partners who make our programming possible. Everyone is welcome! This year the Currier worked with many social service and educational organizations to provide underserved populations with meaningful opportunities to engage with art. The financial support of foundations and businesses provide public school children an opportunity to visit the Currier Museum of Art for the first time. Year-round programs with Easterseals NH bring people with dementia and their caregivers together for weekly art programs, and offer adults with developmental disabilities from the PLUS Company have an opportunity to pursue their artistic endeavors each week. These are a few among many of the ways that the Currier makes art accessible for all. This fall the Currier Community Partner’s Gallery is highlighting artworks created in programs with Broken Ground Elementary School of Concord, Bring It!, Inti Academy, Manchester Community Health Center, Easterseals NH, and the children of New Hampshire’s military families.
Celebrating Gary Samson, NH Artist Laureate On Thursday, September 7 our Currier After Hours: Community Celebration event will be free and open to the public from 5 to 9 pm and will feature a wonderful mix of art, music, and NH State Council on the Arts’ award ceremony honoring New Hampshire Artist Laureate Gary Samson (whose sensitive portrait Petra is featured.) Join us that night as we thank our community outreach partners and supporters.
Side Door Music Series Launch Join us for the launch of our new Side Door Music Series, which brings talented musicians from across the globe to the Currier Museum of Art. The series will kick off on Friday, October 13 with Heather Maloney, a Massachusetts-based singer-songwriter named Artist to Watch by Spin Magazine, who will intrigue you with her unique sound. Special entrance and check-in for the show via the side door on Beech Street. A cash snack and cocktail bar will be available adjacent to the auditorium. Visit Currier.org/event/sidedoor for ticketing and details. Come to make music and memories with us. - Bruce McColl, Director of Art Education Gary Samson, Petra, Durham, New Hampshire (detail), 1995, Giclée print, Museum Purchase: The Henry Melville Fuller Acquisition Fund, 2004.14.
1 2 | S E E N AT T H E C U R R I E R
1
3
2
SEEN AT THE CURRIER
4
1, 2, & 3 | Guests make art, enjoy food trucks, and play games at our Twilight at the Currier: Summer Block Party. 4 | Dimensions in Dance perform at the Summer Block Party. 5 | Teacher and student put the final touches on a masterpiece at the Currier Art Center 6 & 7 | Currier Art Center students work on colorful collages. 8 | Musician Josh Logan of "The Voice" performs at the Currier. 9 | Carl Soderberg from Able Ebenezer Brewery at Currier After Hours: The Art of Beer. 10 | Mixing and mingling in the Winter Garden CafĂŠ.
5
8
6
9
7
10
CALE N DAR | 13
CALENDAR Museum Programs and Events
September through December 2017
STAY CONNECTED Add events to your digital calendar. Follow event link and hit +Google Calendar or +Ical Export to save a program reminder. Artwork credit: Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (French, 1864–1901), La Troupe de Mademoiselle Églantine, 1896, Lithograph, The Museum of Modern Art, New York,Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, 1940.
1 4 | F E AT U R E D C A L E N D A R E V E N T S
FEATURED EVENTS
Free Lautrec Late Nights October 19 and 26, November 9 and 16, and December 14 from 5 to 9 pm Special late night hours on selected Thursday evenings give even more chances to view the exhibition. Enjoy tours, plays, poetry, and more. A cash bar and food for purchase will be available in the Winter Garden Café. Films will be shown on the evenings of October 19, November 9 and December 14 at 6:30 pm and will present some of the most popular cinematic portrayals of Toulouse-Lautrec and his beloved Moulin Rouge. General admission free, $5 special exhibition fee to view The Paris of ToulouseLautrec: Prints and Posters from the Museum of Modern Art.
Moulin Rogue at the Currier: La fête de la saison November 4 from 7 to 11 pm Spectacular! A night at the Moulin Rouge! Ladies, don your feathers and corsets. Gents, slip into those fancy duds and top hats. Dress up to celebrate the Montmartre nightlife that Toulouse-Lautrec made famous with an evening of aerial dancers, music, dancing, French fare, and a cash bar. Proceeds from the event support the work of the Currier Museum of Art. Visit Currier.org/MoulinRouge to order tickets. Tickets $75 in advance and $100 at the door. Special member pricing $60 until September 23rd.
Noon Year’s Eve 2017 at the Currier December 31 from 10 am to 3 pm
Northern New England’s biggest family-friendly New Year’s Eve event gets better every year. Ring in 2018 a few hours early at the Currier Museum of Art’s annual Noon Year’s Eve party! Wrap up a day of celebrations with bubble-wrap fireworks and a huge balloon drop. Enjoy fun art-making activities, face painting, and live entertainment. Enjoy all sorts of kid-friendly food and more. Dress in your party best and celebrate the New Year at the Currier. The museum will be open exclusively for this ticketed event. Tickets coming soon.
CURRIER ART CENTER | 15
CURRIER ART CENTER September 18 to December 2
Find Your Passion! Art-Making Open House Saturday, September 9 from 10 am to 1 pm
You are invited to join us for a family day of art-making. Pick up a brush, a pencil, or some clay, and sample free art classes. Meet our staff and learn about all the Art Center’s offerings, then head over to the museum for Free NH Saturday and more art-making. All ages and levels are welcome! Learn more.
Educator Workshop •
Lautrec and the Cult of Celebrity - Printmaking and Exhibition Visit October 6
Adult Master Classes • •
editations in Ink: Bamboo & Dragonfly: Asian Brush Painting with Bruce Iverson September 30 M Passionate Color in the Landscape with Pastelist Robert Carsten November 11
Teen and Adult Workshops • • • • • • • •
Pinhole Camera Workshop (ages 10+) September 23 Drawing, Drawing, Drawing Series (multiple dates) Inspired by Landscape Painting Series (multiple dates) Clay Workshops (Slipcasting 10/7 & 10/21; Luminaries, 10/21; and Wheel Thrown Cups, 11/11) Glass, Glass, Glass October 14 or December 2 Cold Wax Encaustic November 4 Day with Monet Painting November 4 Monet and Glass November 4
Parent and Child Workshops • • •
Day to Play in Clay: Animal Bowls September 30 Day to Play in Clay: Pumpkins October 14 Day to Play in Clay: Holiday Ornaments November 18
180 Pearl Street, Manchester, NH 03104 | 603.518.4922 ArtCenter@Currier.org | Currier.org/art-center/programs
16 | CALE N DAR
SEPTEMBER SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
4
5
6
11
12
Second Sunday Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm
1
2
7
8
9
Currier After Hours: Celebrating Community 5 to 9 pm Free
MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY
10
SATURDAY
MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 PM
For full program decriptions and ticketing information follow event links to Currier.org/calendar.
3
FRIDAY
13
Creative Studio and Art Center Open House 10 am to 1pm Free NH Second Saturday 10 am to noon
14
15
16
21
22
23
Alzheimer's Café 2 to 3:30 pm
Screening of The Vietnam War, Ken Burns Documentary 2 to 4 pm
17
18
19
20
Art Center Fall Term Begins
Welcome Manchester 3 to 5 pm Free
Focus Tour Monet: Pathways to Impressionism 11:30 am Pinhole Camera Workshop 1 to 4 pm Art Center
24
25 Storytime in the Gallery: Playing From the Heart 11:30 am
26
27
28
29
30
The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec: Members-Only Preview 5:30 to 8:30 pm
The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec: Members-Only Preview Day 11 am to 5 pm, special tours at 11:30 am and 2 pm
Focus Tour: The Paris of ToulouseLautrec 11:30 am Masterclass with Bruce Iverson 10 am to 4 pm Art Center
CALE N DAR | 17
OCTOBER SUNDAY
1
MONDAY
2
TUESDAY
3 MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY
8
9
10
Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm
15
16
22
23
Focus Tour: The Paris of ToulouseLautrec 11:30 am
Storytime in the Gallery: Lion in Paris 11:30 am
17
24
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
4
5
6
7
Educator Walkthrough: The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec 4 to 5 pm
Currier After Hours: Oktoberfest 6 to 9 pm
Educator Workshop: Henri de ToulouseLautrec and the Cult of Celebrity 9 am to 4 pm
Inspired by Landscape: Watercolor Painting 1 to 4 pm Art Center
11
12
13
14
Alzheimer's Café 2 to 3:30 pm
A Walk Out of the Woods: HOPE for NH Recovery Fundraiser 5:30 to 9 pm
Side Door Music Series: Heather Maloney 6 to 10 pm
Creative Studio: Hat Creations 10 am to 1 pm
19
20
21
18
25
Twilight Tours of the Zimmerman House 5 and 6:30 pm
Free NH Second Saturday 10 am to noon
Free Lautrec Late Night 5 to 9 pm
Clay Luminaries 9 am to noon Art Center
Film Series: Moulin Rouge (1952) 6:30 pm
Inspired by Landscape: Oil Painting 1 to 4 pm Art Center
26 Free Lautrec Late Night 5 to 9 pm
A Building For All Senses: Zimmerman House Tour 3:15 to 4:45 pm
29
THURSDAY
27
28 Focus Tour: The Paris of ToulouseLautrec in French 11:30 am Animal Portraits in Oil Pastel 1 to 4 pm Art Center
30
31 MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 PM
18 | CALE N DAR
NOVEMBER SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
1 MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY
5
6
7
THURSDAY
2
FRIDAY
3
SATURDAY
4
Currier After Hours: Holiday Extravaganza 6 to 9 pm
Moulin Rouge at the Currier: La Fête de la Saison 7 to 11 pm
Twilight Tours of the Zimmerman House 5 and 6:30 pm
Cold Wax Encaustic 10 am to 4 pm Art Center
8
9
Alzheimer's Café 2 to 3:30 pm
Free Lautrec Late Night 5 to 9 pm
10
11 Creative Studio: Monet's Lily Pads 10 am to 1 pm
Film Series: French CanCan 6:30 pm
Free NH Second Saturday 10 am to noon Master Class with Robert Carsten 10 am to 4 pm Museum
12
13
14
15
Second Sunday Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm
16
17
Monet Focus Tour 11:30 am
18 Day to Play in Clay: Holiday Ornaments 1 to 3 pm Art Center
Free Lautrec Late Night: Keep Calm and Get Your Art On 5 to 9 pm
ARTiculate Play Reading: My Name is Asher Lev 2 pm
19
20
21
22
23 MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 PM
26
27
Focus Tour: The Paris of ToulouseLautrec 11:30 am
Storytime in the Gallery: The Circus Ship 11:30 am
28
29
30
24
25 A Building For All Senses: Zimmerman House Tour 3:15 to 4:45 pm
CALE N DAR | 19
DECEMBER SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
1
4
5
Glass,Glass,Glass 9 am to 1pm Art Center
6
7
8
Currier After Hours: Parisian Soiree 6 to 9 pm
10
11
12
Second Sunday Jazz Brunch 10 am to 2 pm
13
14
Alzheimer's Café 2 to 3:30 pm
Free Lautrec Late Night: Draft and Draw 5 to 9 pm
Focus Tour: The Paris of ToulouseLautrec 11:30 am
17
31 Noon Year's Eve 10 am to 3 pm *Open exclusively for ticket holders
9 Creative Studio Poster Design 10 am to 1 pm Caroling in the Galleries Noon to 1:30 pm
15
16
22
23
29
30
Film Series: Moulin Rouge (2001) 6:30 pm
18
19
20
Focus Tour: Winter Wonderlands in the Currier Collection 2 pm
24
2 Focus Tour: The Paris of ToulouseLautrec in French 11:30 am
MUSEUM CLOSED EVERY TUESDAY
3
SATURDAY
21 MUSEUM TOURS OFFERED DAILY AT 1 PM
25 MUSEUM CLOSED
26
27
28