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Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art

Category: May 2022

The Beach Museum of Art displays artwork in solidarity with displaced Ukrainians

In solidarity with Ukrainians displaced by Russia’s war with their country, the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art at Kansas State University is featuring artwork by an artist who himself was displaced as a young child.

Artwork entitled "Fishers of Men" by Fidencio-Fifield Perez on display at the Beach Museum of Art

Fishers of Men by artist Fidencio Fifield-Perez is a large circular form made of netting, bits of nautical maps and acrylic paint behind an overlay of Tyvek mesh. This striking work represented Fifield-Perez in the exhibition Fronteras/Frontiers at the Beach Museum in 2017 and, according to museum staff, caused some visitors to comment that it resembled a view of Earth from distant space.

Fishers of Men reminds us particularly of those who have braved perilous water crossings, often pursued like criminals and denied access to a safe haven,” Beach Museum director Linda Duke said. “The museum has once more put Fishers of Men on view. Its message of empathy and compassion crosses frontiers.”

Fifield-Perez was smuggled across the U.S.-Mexico border as a young child. He grew up with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, status. In his work as an artist, he has frequently evoked the misery of immigrants and refugees.

“The recent invasion of Ukraine has transformed millions of ordinary people into desperate refugees,” Duke said. “Whether by land or water, many of them are children and their journeys are dangerous.”

For the 2017 exhibition, Fifield-Perez requested that excerpts from the poem Home by British-Somali poet Warsan Shire be placed on labels for his artworks. The excerpt that accompanies Fishers of Men offers these lines:

no one leaves home unless
home is the mouth of a shark
….
you have to understand,
no one puts their children in a boat
unless the water is safer than the land


Visit the Beach Museum to see this work of art!

Image: Beach Museum of Art Exhibition Designer and Building Systems Lead Lindsay Smith installs the artwork Fishers of Men by Fidencio Fifield-Perez. Photo by Theresa Ketterer

“Self Portrait: Gordon Parks”

Join us for a live performance by Nate McClendon, saxophonist and Teaching Artist in Residence at the Beach Museum of Art.

"Self Portrait: Gordon Parks" performance by saxophonist and Beach Museum of Art Teaching Artist Nate McClendon

“Self Portrait: Gordon Parks”Sunday, May 1, 2022, 5 p.m.Blue Sage Barn at Prairiewood, 1484 Wildcat Creek Road, Manhattan, KS 66503Free and open to the public.

Most known for his photography, Gordon Parks was also a musician, author, and filmmaker. Born in Fort Scott, he is one of the most prominent and influential artists Kansas has produced. The works and philosophies of Parks will be presented in a live music format by Nate McClendon. “Self Portrait: Gordon Parks” is a traveling presentation of the current exhibition Gordon Parks: “Homeward to the Prairie I Come” at Kansas State University’s Beach Museum of Art.

Now open!

Prairie Views
Mary Holton Seaton Gallery East: April 5 – December 15, 2022

“I had always thought of the American prairie as an unexciting large chunk of empty space; an underdog landscape. At best, it has been taken for granted. The prairie is my theater, my stage, my drama.”

—Patricia DuBose Duncan

This exhibition gives voice to the prairie and provides opportunities for all ages to discover its form and beauty through the lens of Kansas artists. The exhibition complements the nearby outdoor Meadow as well as art displayed in other galleries, including Jim Richardson’s photographs of prairie root systems and Patricia Duncan’s Red Prairie and Bison painting.

Highlights include a delicate watercolor depicting the Kansas prairie, and Dancing on the Table, a collage by Lynn Benson that alludes to the vulnerability of the Ogallala aquifer, often described as the life of the prairie ecosystem. Also featured is Prairie Fire near Cottonwood Falls, Kansas, 1997 by photographer Larry Schwarm, author of the book On Fire (2003).

The exhibition will serve as the basis of the Picturing Kansas school tour, “Roots to Sky.” It is also tied to K-State’s Prairie Studies Initiative, a collaborative project involving K-State faculty, staff, students and community members. The initiative’s aim is to cultivate understanding of the natural ecosystems, history, culture, and livelihoods of the prairie, and to employ the arts to make these explorations meaningful to the public.

—Cassie Wefald, Beach Museum of Art education intern/co-curator

Gold Sponsors: Chuck and Sandy Bussing | Silver Sponsors: David and Judy Regehr | Bronze Sponsors: Mary Helm Pollack and Larry Pollack

Few days to catch the Gordon Parks and Doug Barrett gallery exhibitions.

Gallery photo at the Beach Museum of Art

Gordon Parks: “Homeward to the Prairie I Come”
September 7, 2021 – May 28, 2022

"Mrs. Jefferson" photograph by Gordon Parks, in the exhibition "Gordn Parks: Homeward to the Prairie I Come" at the Beach Museum of Art.

This exhibition features photographs donated by Gordon Parks to Kansas State University (K-State) in Manhattan, Kansas, in 1973. It was the first time that the artist personally curated a set of photographs to donate to a public institution, a kind of self-portrait directed towards the home crowd. The exhibition title includes the first line of a poem written by Parks in 1984, commissioned by and published in the Manhattan Mercury. K-State’s New Prairie Press will publish an accompanying open-access digital catalogue with new research on Parks and Kansas.
Image: Gordon Parks, Pool Hall (Fort Scott, Kansas), 1950, printed in 2017, gelatin silver print, gift of Gordon Parks and the Gordon Parks Foundation, 2017.445


Doug Barrett: Find Your Voice
September 7, 2021 – May 28, 2022

Black and white photograph entitled “Will the hate end?” by Doug Barrett from the collection of the Beach Museum of Art.
Jason holding a sign as he and his siblings and family march in Junction City KS in Heritage Park.

Barrett is a photographer and videographer based in Manhattan, Kansas. His work demonstrates how Gordon Parks continues to inspire contemporary artists. Barrett’s projects include interviewing, photographing, and telling the stories of homeless veterans, creating a collective portrait of the Yuma Street community of Manhattan, Kansas, and documenting the Black Lives Matter movement in Kansas.
Image: Doug Barrett, Will the hate end? from the series George Floyd Protest, 2020, digital print, 32 x 22 in., 2020.20

Artist’s Voice Deep Dive Clubs exhibition

Join us in celebrating the work of young artists from Eisenhower Middle School, Manhattan Boys and Girls Club and Ogden 5th grade. Inspired by the Gordon Parks and Doug Barrett exhibitions.

Exhibition: April 28-30, 2022
UMB Theater, Beach Museum of Art
701 Beach Lane, Manhattan KS 66506.

Reception for artists, family and friends
Saturday, April 30, 2022
2:30 – 3:30 p.m.

Funding provided by USD 383 K-Link Community Grant and The Manhattan Fund of the Caroline Peine Charitable Foundation, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee.

Image: Beach Museum of Art Associate Curator of Education Kathrine Schlageck conducts a gallery program with students.

ART BYTES on the Museum’s Social Media

Enjoy short videos about art in the Beach Museum of Art’s collection.
Each video will feature information about an artwork in the collection, the artist who made it, and the techniques used. Art Bytes release on first Wednesdays! Check the museum’s social media channels:

Facebook: BeachMuseumofArt 
Instagram: beachmuseum
Twitter: @BeachMuseum

Past Art Bytes videos can be found on the museum’s YouTube channel at beach.k-state.edu/videos.

Art Bytes video screenshot

Screen capture of Art Byte video on Haying by Bernard Joseph Steffen, presented in Spanish by Andrea Fernanda Ramírez Tello.

Support Your Art Museum: Become A Friend!

If you haven’t joined us already, please become a Friend of the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art!

Your membership helps further the mission of the museum through exhibitions, virtual and in-person programs, educational offerings, art acquisitions, and more. Join the museum during the 2021-2022 season in celebrating its 25th anniversary by becoming a Friend. Your gift will ensure that thought-provoking art experiences continue to be free and accessible to all.

Become a Friend today or renew your membership! Visit beach.k-state.edu/support

View exclusive benefits of your FRIENDship here.

Thank you for your support of the museum!

A family enjoying art in the Beach Museum of Art gallery

 

Current Gallery and Virtual Exhibitions

Prairie Views
Gallery exhibition: April 5 – December 15, 2022

"Prairie Views" gallery exhibition, April 5 - December 15, 2022

Salt Air
Gallery exhibition: March 15 – October 1, 2022
Virtual exhibition launch: June 1, 2022

Gordon Parks: “Homeward to the Prairie I Come”
Gallery exhibition: September 7, 2021 – May 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Doug Barrett: Find Your Voice
Gallery exhibition: September 7, 2021 – May 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

45 Paleolithic Handaxes from
Transfigurations: Reanimating the Past | David Lebrun

Gallery exhibition: September 21, 2021 – July 16, 2022

2021 K-State Common Work of Art

Print entitled "From Upstream I Caught Fish" by artist Neal Ambrose-Smith in the Beach Museum of Art's collection. Showing a fox jumping in air looking down.

Classes and Workshops

The Museum hosts a variety of classes and workshops throughout the year for all ages!

ARTSmart Classes: Each class includes looking activities and an art project. Classes are held on the first Wednesday and Thursday of the month at 10:30 a.m. (ages 2-5) and 4:30 p.m. (all ages).

  • Next class: May 4 & 5: Watercolor Magic

Family workshop: Young artists find inspiration from work in the Beach Museum of Art.Homeschool Tuesdays meet on the first Tuesday of the month and allows Homeschool families to investigate the current special exhibitions with curriculum integration. Tours are appropriate for those in Kindergarten on up and include an art project.

  • Next class: May 3, 1-2:30: Mexican Art for Cinco de Mayo (Allebrijes project)

Cost for classes is $3 per child, Military Family/Blue Star discount $1.50, and reservations are required. Payment can be made with cash or check. Call (785)532-7718 or email klwalk@ksu.edu for reservations. Children must be accompanied by an adult. If you need to cancel your reservation please let us know so we can call those on the waiting list.

Special price for Military Families: In conjunction with the Blue Star Museum program, the Beach Museum of Art offers Military Family half price on all workshops and classes!


The Beach Museum of Art follows Kansas State University Covid-19 guidelines for all programs. Current guidelines require masks in all public buildings. For more information visit k-state.edu/covid-19.


Virtual Resource for Families and Teachers
Beach Buddies Facebook Group: Cool art, great books, fun activities, and more! Join now at www.facebook.com/groups/bmabuddies
Posts include: Virtual ARTSmart Classes, BMA Book Buddies: Illustrated Artist Biographies and Voices: Artists Who Inspire.

 

Stay Connected!

Visit us online at beach.k-state.edu

Send email to beachart@k-state.edu

Join the museum’s e-news list to stay up to date on everything at the museum.

Check out The Beach Blog for behind-the-scenes information, event info, and guest posts.

Like us on Facebook | Follow us on Twitter | Follow us on Instagram

Subscribe to the museum’s YouTube channel at beach.k-state.edu/videos to watch videos of special programs and events.

Join the Beach Buddies Facebook Group to enjoy cool art, fun activities and resources for children, families and educators.

Image: Elizabeth Layton, Untitled (business business business, you gotta have art)1991, Kansas State University, Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art, 1998.222