spring 2019
ART TALK
FROM THE
DIRECTOR
Take a minute and imagine an unfinished and ugly painting. Now imagine it being one of your favorite Impressionist works by one of the masters–Degas, Cassatt, Monet, or others. In the late 19th and early 20th century, artists experimented with this new style and the status-quo did not like what they saw, calling them ugly and unfinished. It was a rebellion in the world of art. En plein air painting was seen as revolutionary. Leaving the studio and painting the everyday in the outdoor air was new. This style devoted to color, light and vision was shocking, as it replaced what has been referred to as the “brown gravy” school of landscape–the often dark and heavily varnished works that were common at the time. American collectors and artists were among the first to recognize the beauty and strength in these new works. Impressionism came “across the pond” both in collections and by influence on generations of painters. The exhibition we are celebrating this spring, Across the Atlantic: American Impressionism though the French Lens, celebrates this triumph of art and the joining of cultures through painting. In our galleries, we also continue to celebrate our large, growing and changing collections and we highlight important new artists. Matt Wedel is an exciting and talented ceramic sculptor. His large-scale works and pedestal pieces are expressive with a big impact. Wedel’s work is presented in partnership with the LSU School of Art, and he will be here as a visiting artist this spring. As you tour the galleries, be on the lookout for new acquisitions labels on the wall. Works in a variety of media and styles are rotated throughout the galleries during the year. The recent changes in the Art in Louisiana entry gallery, the portrait gallery and the contemporary gallery are some of the places to be explored as you encounter new works and new contexts for continuing works in our galleries.
Artwork pictured above: Hunt Slonem (American, b. 1951), Hutch (detail), 2012, oil on canvas, Gift of Paul Yaworsky, LSUMOA 2013.10
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Art Talk Spring 2019
My thanks go out to all our members and annual contributors. It is you who continue to make these vital exhibitions and related education programs possible. All my very best to you for an exciting and fun year ahead!
Daniel E. Stetson Executive Director
EXHIBITIONS
Across the Atlantic Matt Wedel: On the Verge
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COLLECTION
Recent Acquisitions on View
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EDUCATION
MLK Day at Gardere
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CALENDAR
Events from March through May
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DEVELOPMENT
Director’s Circle Soirée New Members
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MUSEUM STORE
Margaret Stones
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The exhibition catalogue for Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects is now avaiable in the LSU MOA Store. The catalogue accompanies the nationally touring exhibition, which is currently on view at The Kennedy Museum of Art at Ohio University. www.lsumoa.org
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ACROSS THE ATLANTIC
AMERICAN IMPRESSIONISM THROUGH THE FRENCH LENS
On view March 8 through June 9, 2019 RECEPTION Thursday, March 7 6–8:30 p.m. Fifth floor Lecture from Reading Public Museum Curator Scott A. Schweigert at 6 p.m. MATERIAL EXPLORATION: FIGURE DRAWING WITH PASTELS Thursday, March 14 6–9 p.m. Practice figure drawing with a live model. Advance registration required at www.lsumoa.org $45 for public, $35 for members, $25 for students SEE CALENDAR FOR ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS
This extraordinary exhibition, drawn entirely from the collection of the Reading Public Museum, explores the path to Impressionism through the nineteenth century and the complex relationship between French Impressionism of the 1870s and 80s and the American interpretation of the style in the decades that followed. More than seventy-five paintings and works on paper help tell the story of the new style of painting that developed at the end of the nineteenth century—one that emphasized light and atmospheric conditions, rapid or loose brushstrokes and a focus on brightly colored scenes from everyday life. Two of the artists featured in the exhibition are Edgar Degas and Mary Cassatt, who exhibited in the official Impressionist exhibitions in Paris in the 1870s and 80s. Among the earliest American artists to embrace the style were John Singer Sargent, William Merritt Chase, John Henry Twachtman, Childe Hassam and Frank W. Benson. Additional American artists who embraced the style by the turn of the century include Daniel Garber, Edward Redfield, Robert Spencer, Arthur Watson Sparks, Robert Lewis Reid, William Paxton, Chauncey Ryder, Frederick John Mulhaupt and Guy Wiggins.
IMAGE: Arthur Watson Sparks (American, 1870-1919), Quai St. Catherine, Martigue, c. 1910-1919, oil on board, Museum Purchase, Reading Public Museum, Reading, Pennsylvania
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Art Talk Spring 2019
INNOVATING PROGRAMS WITH ART BRIDGES
Across the Atlantic came with a special opportunity to convene with other museums hosting this exhibition to strategize about programming initiatives. Generous programming support through the Art Bridges Foundation will allow LSU MOA to innovate existing programs with a focus on access, engagement and sustained impact. ACCESS. LSU MOA will test new collaborations and locations by targeting BREC parks and bus stops to integrate art into everyday experiences and reach new audiences beyond Neighborhood Arts Project’s (NAP) regularly scheduled summer locations. ENGAGEMENT. LSU MOA offers gallery discussions and hands-on art making to k-5 students on an almost daily basis, but Art Bridges funding will allow LSU MOA also to focus on high school and elder-care groups and extend the experience to include an instructor back at their facility to lead a plein air painting session. In-gallery technology will foster deeper connections with artwork and among visitors. SUSTAINED IMPACT. Support will allow LSU MOA to build new collaborations with community organizations and university faculty and students that will grow future programs and audiences. Planned exhibition evaluations will help LSU MOA develop future programming models. In anticipation of the upcoming exhibition, LSU MOA welcomed 40 fine art faculty from the East Baton Rouge Parish School District for a professional development day on January 9th. Teachers toured the galleries considering how to incorporate artwork into lesson plans while also learning about works in Across the Atlantic. Teachers planned lessons collaboratively and participated in hands-on activities based on the upcoming exhibition. Several teachers booked extended tours for their high school classes, which will include plein air sessions back at their school, made possible by Art Bridges. K-12 lesson plans for incorporating Across the Atlantic: American Impressionism through the French Lens are available to download off the LSU Museum of Art’s Education page.
Across the Atlantic: American Impressionism through the French Lens is supported locally by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lamar III. Programming is generously supported by Art Bridges. Additional local exhibition support is from Taylor Porter, Virginia and John Noland, Lamar Advertising and Annual Exhibition Fund donors. Across the Atlantic: American Impressionism Through the French Lens is organized by the Reading Public Museum, Reading, PA. www.lsumoa.org
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MATT WEDEL ON THE VERGE
On view April 4 through September 29, 2019
On April 4, 2019, LSU Museum of Art presents Matt Wedel: On the Verge, an exhibition of ceramic sculpture by LSU School of Art Reilly Visiting Artist Matt Wedel. Wedel’s often remarkably large-scale ceramic works explore culture and nature and push materials and forms to the verge of collapse. Visually and conceptually, Wedel’s sculpture collapses boundaries between painting, sculpture and ceramics. His flower and landscape forms seem burdened by scale and color. The drooping forms suggest the pressure of culture encroaching on landscape to ultimately form a “poetic narration of collapse.” Matt Wedel: On the Verge is on view April 4, 2019 through September 29, 2019.
PUBLIC LECTURE Wednesday, April 3 5 p.m. LSU College of Art & Design
This exhibition is a collaboration between the LSU College of Art & Design, the LSU School of Art and LSU Museum of Art. Support is provided by The Winifred and Kevin P. Reilly Jr. Fund. Additional support is provided by the following Annual Exhibition Fund donors: The Imo N. Brown Memorial Fund in memory of Heidel Brown and Mary Ann Brown; Louisiana CAT; Charles Schwing; Alma Lee, H.N. and Cary Saurage Fund; Newton B. Thomas Family/Newtron Group; Mrs. Elizabeth M. Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Sanford A. Arst.
RECEPTION Thursday, April 4 6–8:30 p.m. Q&A with Matt Wedel Fifth floor THIRD THURSDAY Thursday, April 18 6–8:00 p.m. Fifth floor Gallery talk and hands-on collaborative clay activity
IMAGES: (above and page right details) all Matt Wedel, Flower Tree, 2018, porcelain, courtesy of Matt Wedel Studio. Image of Matt Wedel by Tessa Berg, courtesy of Matt Wedel Studio.
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Art Talk Spring 2019
REILLY VISITING ARTIST RESIDENCY
TWO YEARS OF COLLABORATION Artist Julie Heffernan’s visit and 2017 exhibition When the Water Rises: Recent Paintings by Julie Heffernan laid the groundwork for the collaborative initiative that became the Reilly Visiting Artist Residency. In 2018, LSU Museum of Art and LSU School of Art committed to collaborating annually to extend the stay of one visiting artist selected by faculty and feature that artist’s work in LSU MOA galleries. The Reilly Residency kicked off with Carrie Mae Weems’s campus visits and The Usual Suspects exhibition. Both the Weems and Heffernan projects have resulted in nationally touring exhibitions and collaborative publications by LSU Museum of Art and the School of Art’s Graphic Design Student Office (GDSO). LSU School of Art Director Rod Parker summed up the value of this initiative: The partnership has been growing in reach and effectiveness for many years. The Reilly Residency represents a quantum leap in what we can accomplish together. We’ve been able to pool resources, plan ahead and bring exceptional artists of national stature for longer visits. This has resulted in deeper engagements with students on campus and with the community. Each year the School of Art Faculty nominate artists who will visit LSU and present a public lecture. An average of six artists are selected by the School of Art Development Committee, which consists of faculty as well as LSU MOA’s curator. One top-ranked artist who aligns with LSU MOA’s exhibition program is selected for the Reilly Visiting Artist Residency. In April, 2019 Reilly Visiting Artist Matt Wedel will visit LSU’s campus for a two-week residency. During this time he will work directly with ceramics students, offering lectures, critiques and demostrations while completing his own work in LSU’s studios. In addition to the School of Art lecture, LSU MOA visitors can meet Wedel during the opening reception, which will feature a Q&A with the artist, LSU Ceramics professor Andy Shaw and curator Courtney Taylor. Matt Wedel will lead a demonstration at LSU ceramics studios on April 11th for museum members and guests. LSU ceramics MFA student, Katherine Robbins, will lead a collaborative clay art activity at the April 18th Third Thursday.
www.lsumoa.org
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RECENT ACQUISITIONS
ART IN LOUISIANA
If you visited LSU MOA’s permanent collection exhibition, Art in Louisiana: Views into the Collection, today, you would find thirteen recent acquisitions integrated into four of the six Art in Louisiana galleries. In the introductory gallery you can find a recently acquired photograph by Carrie Mae Weems (1), a pen-and-ink drawing by Walter Inglis Anderson and a photograph by Jonathan Bachman of the 2016 demonstrations in Baton Rouge (2). Portraits by Selina Bres Gregory and George Dureau now hang in the Newcomb and Portrait galleries respectively. In the Modern & Contemporary gallery are many recent acquisitions, including four photographs by Robert von Sternberg (3), a sculpture by Martin Payton, two prints by Malaika Favorite (4) and an abstract painting by Ed Pramuk. These new works represent diverse growth in our collection across media, styles, periods and artistic perspectives. The Modern & Contemporary gallery was entirely re-installed at the close of 2018 and now features a painting by New Orleans artist Larry Nevil that has never been on view, favorites such as Hunt Slonem’s Hutch and Dawn Dedeaux’s Over Six Feet of Water, and works by LSU faculty Michaelene Walsh and Kelli Scott Kelley.
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Art Talk Spring 2019
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MLK DAY AT GARDERE NEIGHBORHOOD ARTS PROJECT For several years, LSU Museum of Art has worked with the Gardere Iniative for our Neighborhood Arts Project (NAP) throughout the year. One of the special moments we share with the community is the annual celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at the Initiative. This year we worked with LSU School of Art MFA and undergraduate students and students from Catholic High School to lead the art programming during NAP. Children and teens were able to learn and play with hand-building techniques in clay, relief printing on a press, participate in a sculpture challenge, beading and painting on a large scale. Big thanks to the volunteers from the Gardere Initiative, LSU School of Art and students from Catholic High for being a part of NAP. Neighborhood Arts Project is made possible with the support of the following community partners: Office of Mayor President Sharon Weston Broome, Louisiana CAT and the Arts Council of Greater Baton Rouge. Interested in volunteering or working with the Neighborhood Arts Project? Contact Grant Benoit, gbenoit1@lsu.edu, for more opportunities.
ABOVE: LSU painting MFA candidate Claire Kane paints the face of a NAP participant at Gardere
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2019
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SPRING CALENDAR MARCH
01 STORIES IN ART Third floor, 10:30 a.m. Chasing Degas; Free for children ages 0–6 with parent/caregiver 03 FREE FIRST SUNDAY Fifth floor, 1–5 p.m. Free admission and family activities 07 ACROSS THE ATLANTIC: AMERICAN IMPRESSIONISM THROUGH THE FRENCH LENS RECEPTION Fifth floor, 6–8 p.m. Lecture with Reading Public Museum curator Scott A. Schweigert at 6 p.m. $10 for general public, free for members 09 YOGA IN THE GALLERIES Fifth floor, 10:30 a.m. Practice yoga in an artful atmosphere. Bring your own mat. $5/person 12 ART & ALZHEIMER’S ART TOUR Fifth floor, 11 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Led by Laura Larsen and presented in partnership with Alzheimer’s Services of the Capital Area for individuals with memory impairment and their caregivers. Free to attend; advance registration is required by calling Kristi Mellion at 225-334-7494. 14 MATERIAL EXPLORATION: FIGURE DRAWING WITH PASTELS Third floor, 6–9 p.m. Practice figure drawing with a live model. $45 for general public, $35 for members, $25 for students 16 NAP AT BREC SAIA PARK 855 N. Donmoor Ave., 12–2 p.m. Free art making for all ages 20 NAP AT BREC GUS YOUNG PARK 4200 Gus Young Ave., 5:30–7:30 p.m. Free art making for all ages 21 LECTURE Third Floor, 5 p.m. Christian Loeben, Ph.D. Curator at Museum August Kestner, Hanover, Germany on collections 10
Art Talk Spring 2019
21 THIRD THURSDAY Fifth floor, 6–8 p.m. Impressionism and gender talk with button making; pastries and a wine tasting. $10 for general public, $5 for members, free for Contemporaries
APRIL
04 MATT WEDEL: ON THE VERGE RECEPTION Fifth floor, 6–8 p.m. Gallery Talk with the artist at 6:30 p.m. $10 for general public, free for members and students/faculty with ID 05 STORIES IN ART Third floor, 10:30 a.m. Carmela Full of Wishes; Free for children ages 0–6 with parent/caregiver 06–07 NAP AT EBB & FLOW FESTIVAL Downtown Baton Rouge, 12–6 p.m. Free art making for all ages 07 FREE FIRST SUNDAY Fifth floor, 1–5 p.m. Free admission and family activities including curator tour and BR Symphony Orchestra in Across the Atlantic galleries 07 FAMILY FUN DAY Fifth floor, 2–4 p.m. Mary Cassatt-inspired making in Pennington Family Foundation Education Gallery 11 ARTIST DEMO WITH MATT WEDEL LSU Studio Arts Building, 6:30–8:00 p.m. Matt Wedel will demonstrate clay techniques; advance registration required 13 YOGA IN THE GALLERIES Fifth floor, 10:30 a.m. Practice yoga in an artful atmosphere. Bring your own mat. $5/person 16 NAP AT BREC MILLS AVENUE PARK 424 Woodpecker St., 4–5:30 p.m. Free art making for all ages 18 NAP AT BREC GUS YOUNG PARK 4200 Gus Young Ave., 5:30–7:30 p.m. Free art making for all ages 18 THIRD THURSDAY Fifth floor, 6–8 p.m. Gallery talk and opportunity to make a collaborative clay work $10 for general public, $5 for members, free for Contemporaries
23 NAP AT BREC HARTLEY/VEY PARK 1702 Gardere Ln., 8 a.m.–12 p.m. Free art making for all ages 27 NAP AT BREC CADILLAC STREET PARK 6117 Cadillac St., 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Free art making for all ages
MAY
11 YOGA IN THE GALLERIES Fifth floor, 10:30 a.m. Practice yoga in an artful atmosphere. Bring your own mat. $5/person 11 MATERIAL EXPLORATION: PLEIN AIR PAINTING Shaw Center, 1–3 p.m. Learn the basics of plein air painting using downtown Baton Rouge as a subject $45 for general public, $35 for members, $25 for students
03 STORIES IN ART Fifth floor, 10:30 a.m. Mary Cassatt; Free for children ages 0–6 with parent/caregiver 18 THIRD THURSDAY Third and Fifth floors, 6–8 p.m. 05 FREE FIRST SUNDAY French language tour of Across the AtlanFifth floor, 1–5 p.m. tic, followed by a cooking demonstration Free admission and family activities from Beausoleil Restaurant & Bar $10 for general public, $5 for members, 05 MOTHER’S DAY TRUNK SHOW free for Contemporaries First floor, 1–5 p.m. FREE FRIDAY NIGHTS Shop with local artists Free admission Fridays 5–8 p.m. 05 DISCUSSION: OPTICS/COLOR Fifth floor, 2 p.m. LSU MOA will feature “Dinner & Museum” Discover the scientific side of color and on the 2nd Friday of each month beginning paint with a lecture by LSU Professor John with Capital City Grill on March 8th. Bring Pojmann, Ph.D. your museum sticker and receive 10% off dinner. Perfect for a group or date night! 05 FAMILY FUN DAY Fifth floor, 2–4 p.m. Learn about creating paint in the Pennington Family Family Foundation Education Gallery
UPCOMING AT GLASSELL GALLERY
Francis Pavy: Visions of Louisiana Book Launch Reception: Thursday, March 28, 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Shaw Center Fourth Floor Sculpture Park Christopher Scott Brumfield: My Neighborhood in Blue Reception: Saturday, April 13, 6-8 p.m.
MFA THESIS EXHIBITIONS
Carlie Salomons MFA Thesis A Cup of Breast Milk and a Warm Chair April 2–13, 2019 Reception: Saturday, April 13, 6-8 p.m. Heather Molecke MFA Thesis March 12–23, 2019 Reception: Friday, March 15, 6-8 p.m. Chao Ding MFA Thesis April 23–May 1, 2019 Reception: Saturday, April 27, 6-8 p.m. Alex Arceneaux MFA May 3–Saturday, May 11, 2019 Reception: Thursday, May 9, 6-8 p.m. The Alfred C. Glassell Jr. Exhibition Gallery is located on the first floor of the Shaw Center for the Arts. Call 225-389-7180 for information.
DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE SOIRÉE
AT THE UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE
The Director’s Circle Soirée held January 24, 2019 was a resounding success. Jan and Sandford Arst, Beth and Butler Fuller, Susannah and Neil Johannsen and Jacki and Brian Schneider hosted the Soirée. The event celebrated the generous and passionate philanthropy of the LSU MOA Director’s Circle. Members of the LSU MOA Advisory Board and Friends of the LSU MOA, LSU College of Art & Design Dean’s Circle and LSU School of Art attended. We would like to thank everyone for their support of our mission. LSU MOA Advisory Board Chair Mr. Brian Schneider gave a short but vital talk on the importance of being a passionate member and giving of your time, talent and treasure. Our Executive Director, Daniel E. Stetson, related two poignant stories of the impact of the museum’s programs and how the work of the museum changes lives. The Soirée featured our Adopt-a-Work Conservation Program. A total of $5,000 was raised for Judith Cooper, Flamingo Cowboy, adopted by Brian and Jacki Schneider; Alberta Kinsey, Antique Shop, adopted by Beth and Butler Fuller & Becky and Warren Gottsegen; Jose’ Clemente Orozco, Caroline Durieux, adopted by Linda and Bob Bowsher; 10 small Hogarth prints, adopted by Councilman Matt Watson; and 10 small Durieux prints, adopted by Lisa Doyle-Avant and Michael Avant. Nancy and Cary Dougherty and Susannah and Neil Johannsen also pledged gifts for the program. The Friends of the LSU Museum of Art provided the gorgeous flowers by Lance Hayes and music by the LSU Student Jazz Combo. Margo E. Bouanchaud, Inc. catered the event. We thank the LSU President’s office for allowing us to use the University Residence for this event.
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Art Talk Spring 2019
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THANK YOU TO OUR NEW MEMBERS FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
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DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE SILVER Elizabeth Thomas Dr. John Thomas SUSTAINER Marsha and Thomas Wade HOUSEHOLD Debra and Steve Kelly DUAL Damien Boisvert Uyuho Eduok
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FRIEND Sue Avery Tara Ellis Sara Lemon John Pojman Susan Smith Cay Wittenberg Paul Zimmering EDUCATOR Lisa Herbert Tana Vaccarell STUDENT Josie Stokes
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Pictured: 1. Nancy and Cary Dougherty, Sandy and Jan Arst, Brian and Jacki Schneider, Butler and Beth Fuller, Daniel and Catherin Stetson, Neil and Susannah Johannsen; image courtesy of Pam Bordelon, The Advocate; Photos 2–7 courtesy of inRegister Magazine 2. Courtney Taylor, Rob Carpenter, Joyce Jackson 3. Nancy and Cary Dougherty 4. Frederic and Susan Billings, Catherine and Daniel Stetson 5. Beth and Butler Fuller, Jacki and Brian Schneider 6. Kay Martin, Warren and Becky Gottsegen, Clarke Gernon 7. Butler Fuller, Susannah and Neil Johannsen www.lsumoa.org
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FLORA OF LOUISIANA
CELEBRATING THE WORK OF MARGARET STONES Above: Margaret Stones’ Celestial Lily, Southern Crabapple and Alligator Bonnet. Each print is professionally framed and matted for $280 each.
LSU MUSEUM STORE HOURS Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m.–8 p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Sunday, 1–5 p.m. 225-389-7210
The LSU Museum store honors the legacy of respected botanical artist Margaret Stones. Stones, who recently passed in December 2018, served as the principal illustrator for Curtis’s Botanical Magazine of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, for twenty-five years. Her extensive career garnered numerous awards and honors worldwide and set a new standard for botanical illustration. In conjunction with the American bicentennial celebration in 1976, LSU commissioned Stones to create six watercolor renderings of Louisiana flora. The work was so well received that it resulted in requests to produce a larger collection of the state’s native plants, which are currently maintained in the LSU Libraries’ E. A. McIlhenny Natural History Collection. Today, the LSU Museum Store has three limited-edition prints by Stones along with a recently produced folio edition from LSU Press, Native Flora of Louisiana, featuring the complete collection of her Louisiana illustrations on archival, acid-free paper.
Mark your calendars for the LSU Museum Store’s annual
Mother’s Day Trunk Show Sunday, May 5, 1–5 p.m. Shop with local artists Find one-of-a-kind gifts for Mom Support LSU MOA with your purchase
STAFF
Daniel E. Stetson, Executive Director Becky Abadie, Business Manager Grant Benoit, Educator Renee’ Bourgeois, Coordinator, Events & Marketing of Facility Rentals LeAnn Dusang, Museum Store Manager & Membership Coordinator Nedra Hains, Director of Development & External Affairs Jordan Hess, Preparator Fran Huber, Assistant Director for Collections Management Courtney Taylor, Curator & Director of Public Programs
FRIENDS OF LSU MUSEUM OF ART President: Susannah Johannsen Vice President: Clarke J. Gernon, Jr. Secretary/Treasurer: Robert Bowsher Michael Avant Brad M. Bourgoyne Burton Perkins Emile Rolfs Ann Wilkinson Ex-Officio: Daniel E. Stetson
ADVISORY BOARD
Chair: Brian Schneider Vice Chair: Steven Heymsfield Secretary/Treasurer: John Everett Immediate Past Chair: George Clark Sanford A. “Sandy” Arst Margaret Benjamin Daniel Bozard Jerry Ceppos Nancy Dougherty Jerry Fischer Beth Fuller Becky Gottsegen LouAnne Greenwald Joyce Jackson Ben Jeffers Mary T. Joseph Kay Martin Carlie Salomons L. Cary Saurage II Alkis Tsolakis Ex-Officio: Susannah Johannsen Ex-Officio: Daniel E. Stetson Honorary: Nadine Carter Russell Emerita: Sue Turner
BOOK YOUR EVENT AND PAY IN FULL BY JUNE 30, 2019 TO GET 15% OFF YOUR RENTAL!
Contact Events & Marketing of Facility Rentals Coordinator Renee’ Bourgeois at 225-389-7206 or renee@lsu.edu for more information. www.lsumoa.org
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COVER IMAGE: (detai) Arthur Watson Sparks (American, 1870-1919), Quai St. Catherine, Martigue, c. 1910-1919, oil on board, Museum Purchase, Reading Public Museum, Reading, Pennsylvania
The LSU Museum of Art is supported by a grant from the Louisiana State Arts Council through the Louisiana Division of the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts as administered by the Arts Council of Greater Baton Rouge.
HOURS Tuesday through Saturday: 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Thursday and Friday open until 8 p.m. Sunday: 1–5 p.m. Closed Mondays and major holidays
Free Friday Nights 5–8 p.m.
100 Lafayette Street, Fifth Floor Baton Rouge LA 70801