Published in the Weekly Volcano, Nov. 21, 2014
Everybody
knows not to look a gift horse in the mouth. Tacoma Art Museum certainly does. In
this case, the gift horse is a bucking bronco, or lots of them — the 295 works
of Western Art from the Haub Family Collection donated to TAM, plus more than
$15 to build a new wing to house them.
The new
wing designed by Olson Kundig Architects and built by Sellen Construction is
fabulous, the art collection not so much so. It is valuable and pertinent to
the history of the region (probably more so to the Southwest and the Western
plains than to the Pacific Northwest, but let’s not look that bucking bronco in
the mouth), and there are some famous works of art by famous artists. But it is
mostly stereotypical and offers a romanticized look at cowboys and Indians
glorifying America’s imperialistic western expansion.
Typical of
the sculpture that greets visitors as they enter the new Haub Family Wing is
Charles M. Russell’s “A Bronc Twister,” a bronze statue of a cowboy riding a
bucking bronc — the most iconic of all Western images.
Albert
Bierstadt’s “Departure of an Indian War Party” is a somber, dark and dignified
look at a small group of Indians on horseback depicting “noble savages” in a
romanticized and atmospheric landscape.
Many of
the artists never even traveled to the West. Rosa Bonheur’s Western scenes were
based on a Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show seen in Paris and Henry Merwin
Shrady’s bronze buffalo comes from studies made at the Bronx Zoo.
But let it
be known that there are also works by Native American artists and by great
modern artists such as Georgia O’Keeffe. One of the nicest paintings in the
show is O’Keeffe’s “Piñons With Cedar,” a lovely landscape of a ghost-like dead
tree with a young green tree behind it framed by a mountain in the distance.
There are
also pop art paintings by Bill Schenck, who worked with Andy Warhol and later
turned to Western art. His “Snakes in the Grass” lampoons stereotypical Western
art. Done in a paint-by-numbers style, it depicts two cowboys on bucking
broncos on either side of large cacti.
The new
wing and the outdoors sculptures by Julie
Speidel by the entrance from the parking lot and Marie Watt on the Pacific Avenue side of the building
provide for a much more welcoming entrance to the lobby area. But the new
construction emphasizes the new wing and relegates the original galleries to a
far-away area down a long hallway that felt pretty empty on the day I went
there for the opening press tour. I trust that more art will be placed in that
hallway or that something — anything — will be done to draw people to the older
north galleries, because it is the art in those galleries that always has been and
I hope will continue to be what makes Tacoma Art Museum a regional treasure.
Art of the American West: The Haub Family
Collection, Wednesdays–Sundays 10 am–5 pm, Third Thursdays 10
am–8 pm, adults
$10, student/military/senior (65+) $8, family $25 (2 adults and up to 4
children under 18). children 5 and under free, Third Thursdays free from 5-8
pm. Members always free, 1701 Pacific Ave., Tacoma, 253.272.4258.
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