The
new Benaroya Wing opens at Tacoma Art Museum
By
Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Jan. 23, 2019
“Reconstruction of Pluto and Persephone” glass, steel and photographs, gift of Glen Stewart, photo by Richard Nicol, courtesy Tacoma Art Museum |
On
Saturday, Jan. 19, Tacoma Art Museum celebrated the opening of the
new Rebecca and Jack Benaroya Wing, with its 4,800 square feet of new gallery
space including the gorgeous vista gallery with its 46-foot-wide window
projecting six feet out from the building’s north face. On display in the new
wing donated by Rebecca and Jack Benaroya is a collection of selected works
from their collection of some 353 glass-art pieces, one of the largest such
collections in the world. The entire collection is earmarked to eventually go
to TAM.
With this
collection, TAM now has more than 900 works of glass art in its permanent
collection. The opening exhibition, Metaphor
into Form: The Rebecca and Jack Benaroya Collection, includes iconic works
by Dale Chihuly, Howard Ben Tré, Lino Tagliapietra,
William Morris, Dante Marioni and many other artists mostly associated with the
Pilchuck Glass School.
“Current,” a
30-foot long glass sculpture by Martin Blank,
is installed in the museum lobby. Blank is the artist who created the “Fluent
Steps” in the reflecting pool at the Museum of Glass. “Current” is a series of
rough aquamarine slabs of glass mounted on and behind metal strips and standing
wood beams. It represents the flowing waters of Puget Sound. It is monumental
and stunning due to the sparkling color of the glass, strong material contrasts
and sheer size.
The first piece
to greet viewers upon entry into the new Benaroya wing is Stanislav Libenský’s
“Green Eye of the Pyramid III,” a minimalist sculpture in cast, cut and polished
glass: a luminous, translucent and
mysterious pyramid that seems to bend magically as you look at it from
different points of view.
Morris’s blown
glass and metal animal sculptures that look for all the world like creatures
emergent from some prehistoric slime. These
creatures are displayed behind non-reflective glass in a display case that is interesting
in itself, being an integral part of the building built around a load-bearing
post.
Another display
that appears to be an integral part of the building is Charles LeDray’s dark
and foreboding “Jewelry Window” fabric, wood, glass and other materials set
between glass sheets 42 inches apart in a case that is built to look like a
window set into the wall. Any further description would spoil the effect of seeing
it in person.
A large part of the gallery — essentially a gallery within the larger
gallery ― is set aside for Debora Moore’s four almost-ceiling-high glass trees,
each tree representing one of the four seasons of the year. The technical
expertise required to make these trees, with
their limbs and details such as sprouting flowers and ice crystals and moss on
trunks and limbs, is astounding.
No ending date
has been set for this inaugural exhibition, but some of the works should be up
throughout 2019, and other works from the collection will be brought in.
Metaphor into
Form, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Tuesday-Sunday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, $15 adults, $13 students and
seniors, free for military and children 5 and younger, free Third Thursday from
5-8 p.m., Tacoma Art Museum, 1701 Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 253.272.4258,
www.tacomaartmuseum.org.
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