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Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art

Tag: virtual exhibitions

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.

Current Gallery and Virtual Exhibitions

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.

Current Gallery and Virtual Exhibitions

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

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

Gallery photo of the exhibition "45 Paleolithic Handaxes from Transfigurations: Reanimating the Past | David Lebrun"

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.

Gallery photo at the Beach Museum of Art

Sunrise over Kansas: John Steuart Curry
Virtual exhibition launch: June 29, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24, 2021 – February 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Gallery photo of the exhibition "Sunrise over Kansas: John Steuart Curry"

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.

 

Neal Ambrose-Smith (Salish-Kootenai, Métis-Cree, Sho-Ban), From Upstream I Caught Fish, 2008, etching and transfer on paper, gift of Joe and Barb Zanatta, Zanatta Editions, 2009.136

Current Exhibitions

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

Gallery exhibition: September 21, 2021 – July 16, 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
Virtual exhibition launching soon.

Sunrise over Kansas: John Steuart Curry
Virtual exhibition launch: June 29, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24, 2021 – February 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

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.

New virtual exhibition!

The Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art is pleased to announce its new virtual exhibition, featuring a 3-D touring option. The virtual exhibition aims to complement the installation in the museum’s gallery: Gordon Parks: Homeward to the Prairie I Come.

Don’t miss the special features as created by museum technology lead Luke Dempsey. These include an interactive opening screen with significant images from the exhibition. Viewers may hover over an image to bring up related images from each thematic section. Small icons alongside the images allow access to the object’s label with additional details about the artwork. One may also access the special sections of text and poetry included throughout the exhibition.

The virtual version also allows online visitors to “roam” the galleries at will, stopping, turning, or “stepping” near for a closer look. The 3-D tour is made possible by The Alms Group, a Manhattan-based realty firm with a philanthropic mission to support education. An Alms Group cameraman used Matterport technology to video capture the actual gallery spaces.

Click here to view the virtual exhibition Gordon Parks: “Homeward to the Prairie I Come.”

Gordon Parks: “Homeward to the Prairie I Come” exhibition features photographs donated by 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. The gallery exhibition is open through May 28, 2022.

Click here for more information and related events.

Platinum Major Sponsors: Art Bridges, The Alms Group, Beach-Edwards Family Foundation, Friends of the Beach Museum of Art, Greater Manhattan Community Foundation’s Lincoln & Dorothy I. Deihl Community Grants Program, Weary Family Foundation
Gold Sponsors: Dan and Beth Bird and Steve and Debbie Saroff
Silver Sponsors: Annette and Steve Huff
Bronze Sponsors: Mary Cottom and Ann and Mark Knackendoffel

Image: Gordon Parks, Mrs. Jefferson, 1950, printed in 2017, gelatin silver print, gift of Gordon Parks and Gordon Parks Foundation, 2017.373

Gordon Parks images courtesy of and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation.

Current Exhibitions

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

Gallery exhibition: September 21, 2021 – July 16, 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
Virtual exhibition launching soon.

Sunrise over Kansas: John Steuart Curry
Virtual exhibition launch: June 29, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24, 2021 – February 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Publicity image for the exhibition "Two by Two: Animal Pairs" by the Beach Museum of Art.

Two by Two Animal Pairs
Virtual exhibition launch: March 30, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24 – December 18, 2021
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

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.2021 K-State Common Work of Art

Current Exhibitions

Detail of the mixed media on canvas entitled "Sunrise (Sunrise over Kansas)" by John Steuart Curry in the Beach Museum of Art's collection. Showing the bright sun rising over a Kansas landscape.

Sunrise over Kansas: John Steuart Curry
Virtual exhibition launch: June 29, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24, 2021 – February 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Two by Two Animal Pairs
Virtual exhibition launch: March 30, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24 – December 18, 2021
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

2021 K-State Common Work of Art

Top image: John Steuart Curry (1897 – 1946), Sunrise (Sunrise over Kansas) detail, 1935, mixed-media on canvas, Friends of the Beach Museum of Art purchase, 1996.18. Bottom image: screen capture (detail) of the virtual exhibition Two by Two: Animal Pairs Detail of the virtual exhibition "Two by Two: Animal Pairs" by the Beach Museum of Art. beach.k-state.edu/explore

Current Exhibitions

Detail of the mixed media on canvas entitled "Sunrise (Sunrise over Kansas)" by John Steuart Curry in the Beach Museum of Art's collection. Showing the bright sun rising over a Kansas landscape.

Sunrise over Kansas: John Steuart Curry
Virtual exhibition launch: June 29, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24, 2021 – February 28, 2022
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Two by Two Animal Pairs
Virtual exhibition launch: March 30, 2021
Gallery exhibition: August 24 – December 18, 2021
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Image: John Steuart Curry (1897 – 1946), Sunrise (Sunrise over Kansas) detail, 1935, mixed-media on canvas, Friends of the Beach Museum of Art purchase, 1996.18

Enjoy our newest virtual exhibitions!

Two by Two: Animal Pairs
Click here or on the image below to view the virtual exhibition.

Virtual exhibition launch: March 30, 2021
Gallery exhibition: June 15 – December 18, 2021

Image for Beach Museum of Art's new virtual exhibition "Two by Two: Animal Pairs." View at beach.k-state.edu/explore

The American Library Association Summer Reading theme for 2021 is “Tales and Tails,” with a focus on animal stories. This exhibition will offer the viewers some surprising pairings of artworks by regional and international artists.

Animals have long been the subject of myths, legends and histories. Noah loads his ark with creatures, “two by two,” before the great Biblical flood. Aurochs and Wooly Mammoths in the caves of Lascaux hint
at the beliefs of early peoples. Animalistic deities populate an ancient world from the Egyptian god Horus with the head of a falcon to the Greek god Zeus who visits earth as a swan. In Native American legends animals personify spirits such as the turtle who represents mother earth. Artworks in the exhibition picture such storied animals as well as farm animals,
pets and circus performers. All of the works provide a chance to learn more about world cultures, literature, and science.

Two by Two: Animal Pairs will be the inspiration for summer ARTSmart classes and spring and fall 2021 school programming.

Gold Sponsors: Dan and Beth Bird | Bronze Sponsors: Mary Cottom and Jo Lyle


Waylande Gregory: Art Deco Ceramics and the Atomic Impulse.
Click here or on the image below to view the virtual exhibition.

Waylande Gregory (1905-1971), a native of Baxter Springs, Kansas, was one of the most innovative and prolific Art Deco ceramic sculptors of the early 20th century. His groundbreaking techniques enabled him to create monumental ceramic sculptures that had not previously been possible, including his Fountain of the Atom for the 1939 New York World’s Fair—a tribute to atomic energy that earned the attention of Albert Einstein. Gregory also developed revolutionary glazing and processing methods and was an important figure in the studio glass movement.

 

Current Exhibitions

Detail of the virtual exhibition "Two by Two: Animal Pairs" by the Beach Museum of Art. beach.k-state.edu/explore

Two by Two Animal Pairs
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

INSIDE OUT
Features artworks from the Beach Museum of Art’s collection displayed in colorfully lighted windows. 

Waylande Gregory: Art Deco Ceramics and the Atomic Impulse
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Inspirations: Art for Storytelling
View the exhibition online through Thinking about Pictures (TAP) and record your observations and insights.

Voices of the West
Click here to view the exhibition online.

Charles Lindsay: FIELD STATION 4
Click here to take a video tour of FIELD STATION 4 with Charles Lindsay.

2020 K-State Common Work of Art
Click here to watch the virtual celebration of 2020 Common Work of Art and K-State First Book.

Open Virtually Now! Two by Two: Animal Pairs

For animal lovers of all ages! 

Click here or on the image below to view
Two by Two: Animal Pairs

Virtual exhibition launch: March 30, 2021
Gallery exhibition: June 15 – December 18, 2021

Image for Beach Museum of Art's new virtual exhibition "Two by Two: Animal Pairs." View at beach.k-state.edu/explore

The American Library Association Summer Reading theme for 2021 is “Tales and Tails,” with a focus on animal stories. This exhibition will offer the viewers some surprising pairings of artworks by regional and international artists.

Animals have long been the subject of myths, legends and histories. Noah loads his ark with creatures, “two by two,” before the great Biblical flood. Aurochs and Wooly Mammoths in the caves of Lascaux hint
at the beliefs of early peoples. Animalistic deities populate an ancient world from the Egyptian god Horus with the head of a falcon to the Greek god Zeus who visits earth as a swan. In Native American legends animals personify spirits such as the turtle who represents mother earth. Artworks in the exhibition picture such storied animals as well as farm animals,
pets and circus performers. All of the works provide a chance to learn more about world cultures, literature, and science.

Two by Two: Animal Pairs will be the inspiration for summer ARTSmart classes and spring and fall 2021 school programming.

Gold Sponsors: Dan and Beth Bird | Bronze Sponsors: Mary Cottom and Jo Lyle


Click here to view all virtual exhibitions by the Beach Museum of Art.

Opening Virtually Soon! “Two by Two: Animal Pairs”

For animal lovers of all ages! 

Two by Two: Animal Pairs
Virtual exhibition launch: March 30, 2021
Gallery exhibition: June 15 – December 18, 2021

The American Library Association Summer Reading theme for 2021 is “Tales and Tails,” with a focus on animal stories. This exhibition will offer the viewers some surprising pairings of artworks by regional and international artists.

Animals have long been the subject of myths, legends and histories. Noah loads his ark with creatures, “two by two,” before the great Biblical flood. Aurochs and Wooly Mammoths in the caves of Lascaux hint
at the beliefs of early peoples. Animalistic deities populate an ancient world from the Egyptian god Horus with the head of a falcon to the Greek god Zeus who visits earth as a swan. In Native American legends animals personify spirits such as the turtle who represents mother earth. Artworks in the exhibition picture such storied animals as well as farm animals,
pets and circus performers. All of the works provide a chance to learn more about world cultures, literature, and science.

Two by Two: Animal Pairs will be the inspiration for summer ARTSmart classes and spring and fall 2021 school programming.

Gold Sponsors: Dan and Beth Bird | Bronze Sponsors: Mary Cottom and Jo Lyle

John Frederick Helm Jr.'s "Mallard," from 1939, is an aquatint with drypoint on paper. The work is part of the museum's new virtual exhibition "Two by Two: Animal Pairs.""Duck effigy bowl" by Rose Chino Garcia is early 20th-century earthenware with pigment and a part of the new Beach Museum of Art virtual exhibition, "Two by Two: Animal Pairs."

 

 

 

 

John Frederick Helm, Jr., Mallard, ca. 1939, aquatint with drypoint
on paper, gift of Mary Brownell Helm, 1985.115

 

 

 

Rose Chino Garcia, Duck effigy bowl, early 20th century, earthenware
with pigment, gift of Mel and Mary Cottom, 2012.186

 

Have you seen the recently launched virtual exhibition?

Click here for information on the exhibition.

Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Waylande Gregory (1905-1971), a native of Baxter Springs, Kansas, was one of the most innovative and prolific Art Deco ceramic sculptors of the early 20th century. His groundbreaking techniques enabled him to create monumental ceramic sculptures that had not previously been possible, including his Fountain of the Atom for the 1939 New York World’s Fair—a tribute to atomic energy that earned the attention of Albert Einstein. Gregory also developed revolutionary glazing and processing methods and was an important figure in the studio glass movement.

Silver Sponsors: Donald J. Mrozek and R. Scott Dorman | Bronze Sponsors: Tom Folk and Frank Brady and Chuck and Sandy Bussing

Current Virtual Exhibitions

Waylande Gregory: Art Deco Ceramics and the Atomic Impulse
Click here to view the virtual exhibition.

Inspirations: Art for Storytelling
View the exhibition online through Thinking about Pictures (TAP) and record your observations and insights.

Voices of the West
Click here to view the exhibition online.

Charles Lindsay: FIELD STATION 4
Click here to take a video tour of FIELD STATION 4 with Charles Lindsay.

2020 K-State Common Work of Art
Click here to watch the virtual celebration of 2020 Common Work of Art and K-State First Book.

Image: China Marks, Monkey Boy and the Magic Beans (detail), 2007, machine embroidery and appliqué on various fabrics, lace, thread, fusible adhesive, and Beva, 2007 Friends of the Beach Museum of Art annual acquisition, 2007.50

Visit the Beach Museum of Art exterior and virtually!

Though the museum is closed until further notice in line with K-State’s COVID-19 policy, we invite you to enjoy art and stay connected through a variety of ways:

Inside Out features artworks from the museum’s collection displayed in lighted windows. Take this outdoor walking tour around the museum building and don’t miss the signs about the art on display. The views are especially stunning at twilight. If you snap a photo of Inside Out, please post it on social media and tag the museum — BeachMuseumofArt on Facebook, BeachMuseum on Twitter and beachmuseum on Instagram.

Watch a video on Inside Out at https://youtu.be/uLYAeWwuzXU

The Beach Museum of Art continues to offer a variety of online resources that are free for all. Enjoy online exhibitions, museum’s YouTube channel featuring videos of art, artists and special programs; collection search tool, educational resources, museum’s social media and more! Visit https://beach.k-state.edu/explore/interactive-tools/

Thank you for your continued interest and support of your art museum.