Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Announces the Debut of Crafting America

News

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art announces the debut of Crafting America, which will be on view February 6 to May 31, 2021. Timed tickets are available here for $12, and admission is free for members, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) participants, veterans, and youth ages 18 and under. SNAP participants can call 479.657.2335 to enroll for free entry to temporary exhibitions.

Crafting America is the first exhibition at Crystal Bridges dedicated to the subject of modern and contemporary craft. With over 120 objects made from materials such as wood, glass, fiber, ceramics, metal, and more from 98 American artists, the exhibition tells a broad and inclusive story of craft in the United States from the 1940s to today.Crafting America was co-created by Jen Padgett, associate curator, Crystal Bridges, and Glenn Adamson, guest curator and scholar of craft, design history, and contemporary art. After it closes at Crystal Bridges, the exhibition will travel to the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University, June 29 through September 12, 2021.

“At Crystal Bridges, we strive to explore the unfolding story of American art, and this exhibition highlights the technical skill and beauty of making in the America,” said Rod Bigelow, executive director and chief diversity & inclusion officer. “We know Crafting America will surprise and delight audiences with the creativity and innovation, and we’re excited to build on our everyday connections with craft through the exhibition, programs, and engagements.”

The exhibition is organized into four parts: Introduction/What is Craft, Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. Through these sections, the exhibition explores the concept of craft and how closely craft is intertwined with the American experience; how artists shape the objects of daily life; the history and innovation that led to expressive forms of craft; and how the process of making celebrates the quality and materiality of craft.

“There are many different ways to look at craft, but for our purposes, craft is skilled making on a human scale,” said Padgett. “This exhibition allows us to tell a more expansive story about American art because craft has long been an accessible art form for women, people of color, immigrants, Indigenous peoples, veterans, and other marginalized communities. This exhibition highlights a range of mediums and explores how artists have engaged with and reinvented traditional ways of making.”

Ceramics: While Toshiko Takaezu was a multidisciplinary artist, her best-known works are enclosed ceramic forms, ranging in scale from the size of a hand to over six feet tall. A grouping of eleven ceramic sculptures by Takaezu are featured in the Contemporary Art Gallery near works by abstract painters including Joan Mitchell and Helen Frankenthaler.

Fiber: Sheila Hicks pushes the boundaries of scale and form to explore the gestural possibilities of fiber. For Mandan Shrine (2016), Hicks wrapped bundles of linen with bright, multicolored thread at rhythmic intervals, creating a sculptural ebb and flow between the tightly bound sections and the loose, organic linen lengths.

Glass: Artist Andy Paiko cre­ates reliquaries from glass, sometimes left empty, sometimes filled with handmade “specimens” evoking those of a historic curiosity cabinet, as seen in Reliquary Group (2020).

Metal: Artist Hoss Haley began tinkering with metalsmithing at a young age in his father’s tool shed on the family farm in Kansas. Haley’s coil sculptures reveal the capabilities of steel, as the joined metal of his works such asArchitectural Coil Maquette (2011) create a ribboning effect.

Wood: Wendell Castle’s Chest of Drawers (1962) is an unconventional cabi­net with twisting tendrils crawling up it, which cleverly serve both as legs and drawer pulls. It is an early example of the artist’s break from the standard woodworking formats to explore free space.

“Crafting America explores the diversity of craft, which has too often been marginalized,” said Adamson. “The exhibition asserts that skilled making or craft can embody our unique traditions, identities, and values, and is critical to understanding the complexities of the American experience.”

In addition, the museum offers engagements to provide access to more art experiences:

·       Share Your Craft StoryShare Your Craft Story, a new project developed by Crystal Bridges for this exhibition, collects stories about personal connections to craft objects. Anyone can submit their story by visiting the Crystal Bridges website here. A selection of these stories is shown in the exhibition gallery.

·       Family Guide – The exhibition is accompanied by a family guide that visitors are welcome to pick up at the exhibition entrance. The guide explores each section through discussion questions, close-looking prompts, and writing/drawing activities.

·       Introduction Video – Two monitors placed at the exhibition’s entrance highlight a selection of artists featured in Crafting America talking about or making their work.

·       Catalog – Crafting America is accompanied by a full-color catalog, published by the University of Arkansas Press and available for purchase in the Museum Store.

·       Virtual Exhibition – Crafting America will also be accompanied by a virtual exhibition experience, allowing viewers to explore the exhibition from their computer or personal devices. A similar virtual experience was released in 2020 to accompany the State of the Art 2020 exhibition. The virtual exhibition is scheduled to launch in Spring 2021.

Opening Week and Programming:

The opening week of Crafting America includes a digital opening exhibition lecture and member preview. Crystal Bridges will also be offering a new, virtual program series called Crafternoons, held weekly for the duration of the exhibition. In this series, hosted by local craft artists, visitors are encouraged to bring their own creative projects and connect virtually with friends. Hosts will share stories and tips as they discuss their current projects and the role that craft plays in their friendship and community. Exhibition programs include:

·       Member Preview » Crafting America, Friday, February 5, 11 am to 9 pm

·       Digital Opening Exhibition Lecture » Friday, February 5, 7:30 to 8:30 pm

·       Spotlight Talk » Artist Joyce Scott, Thursday, February 11, 7 to 8:30 pm

·       Virtual Art by the Glass » Handmade and Digital Textiles, Friday, February 19, 6:30 to 7:30 pm

·       Spotlight Talk » Artists Josh Faught and Diedrick Brackens, Friday, February 19, 7:30 to 8:30 pm

·       Crafternoon » every other Tuesday, 1 to 2 pm from February 23- May 4

·       Spotlight Talk » Artist Ben Venom, Thursday, February 25, 7 to 8 pm

For a complete list of current exhibitions, visit here. For news updates, follow Crystal Bridges on the Blog,Facebook, Instagram or Twitter.