Museum Minute WTJU 91.1 FM, The Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Museum & The Fralin Museum of A
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- Society & Culture
Is radio a visual medium? Henry Skerritt, Margo Smith and Matthew McLendon say "Yes!" Every week these Charlottesville-based curators take us on a quick audio tour of one of the works in their museum. Henry Skerritt is the Curator of the Indigenous Arts of Australia at the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Museum and Margo Smith is the Director. Matthew McLendon is the Director and Chief Curator at the Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia.
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Black Figure Column Krater
This krater is highly decorated with both designs and figural groupings in the Black Figure technique. It is a complicated process, but put simply, the main decorative elements and figures are painted with a slip that turns black in the firing process. On one side, a wedding scene is painted with bride and groom in a four-horse chariot, accompanied by two women attendants and a musician playing a lyre. One of the attendants holds a torch. The other side has a battle scene, two warriors fight over the body of a fallen third. Again, two female attendants look on.
Greek Artist (6th century BCE)
Black Figure Column Krater, ca. 510-500 BCE
Earthenware
14 x 15 ½ x 13 inches
Museum purchase with funds from the Volunteer Board Endowment Fund and the Curriculum Support Fund, 1988.6 -
My Country by Emily Kame Kngwarreye
Emily Kame Kngwarreye was one of the first celebrated female Aboriginal Australian Desert Painters. Entering the national art market well into her seventies, Kngwarreye paved the way for female Aboriginal artists to express women's specific cultural relationship to the Dreaming and their ancestral lands. In My County, Kngwarreye uses a vibrantly colored dotting technique, popularized in Papunya. While only she knows the true stories and secrets that lay hidden within the canvas, all viewers can appreciate My Country for its immensely beautiful and imposing presence.
Emily Kame Kngwarreye
Indigenous Australian, b. 1910
My Country, 1994
Acrylic on canvas, 150.5 x 485 x 4cm (h x w x d)
Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia, Gift of John W. Kluge, 1997
Episode produced by Sydney Pulliam. -
Nullius in Verba III by Steaphan Paton
Standing at six feet tall, the sculpture “Nullius in Verba III” is intentionally the same height and weight as its sculptor, Steaphan Paton. The metal, diamond-shaped shield, mounted on a long pole, confronts the viewer. The shield’s surface is scratched, evoking the centuries of violence and dispossession faced by Paton’s ancestors. Among closer inspection, however, the sculpture is made from modern materials, asserting that this violence against Indigenous Australians is not an historic anecdote but a contemporary issue.
Steaphan Paton
Gunai and Monaro-Ngarigo language groups, Indigenous Australian, b. 1985
Nullius in Verba III, 2019
Etched steel, acrylic paint, nanotech clear sealant
Episode produced by Addie Patrick. -
Portrait of Miss Rhoda Cranston by John Singleton Copley
Miss Rhoda Cranston looks out of her portrait and slightly to her left. Painted by John Singleton Copley around 1756, we see the artist relying on current English traditions of portraiture to establish the status of his subject. Copley studied contemporary portraits in England and Europe available to him in Boston through prints and is learning from them trends in both placement and background as well as the necessity of outfitting his sitters in the latest fashions.
John Singleton Copley
American, 1738-1815
Portrait of Miss Rhoda Cranston, 1756-58
Oil on canvas, 50 x 40 inches
Gift of Mrs. Alan Cunningham
1978.27 -
Awely by Emily Kame Kngwarreye
In deep reds, pinks, and yellows, Emily Kame Kngwarreye's "Awely" is an embodiment of her connection with her Country. Kngwarreye began painting late in her life, when she was already an elder in her community, Utopia, in Australia’s Northern Territory. The artwork’s title refers to women’s ceremonial knowledge of song, dance, medicine, and designs painted on the body. As Kngwarreye applied heavy blotches of paint to her canvases, she would sing ceremonial songs, replicating the act of painting on skin. In this way, “Awely” is both a painting of Kngwarreye’s homeplace and a conversation with it.
Emily Kame Kngwarreye
Anmatyerr language group, Indigenous Australian, c. 1910-1996
Awely, 1992
Acrylic on canvas
Gift of John W. Kluge, 1997
Episode produced by Addie Patrick. -
Hell Hole by John Sloan
John Sloan
American, 1871-1951
Hell Hole, 1917
Etching and aquatint, 10/10
9 7/16 x 12 3/8 inches
Museum Purchase, 1977.5
© Estate of John Sloan/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Hell Hole is a 1917 etching by the American Artist, John Sloan. We see the cramped, claustrophobic interior of bustling bar. We know this is the Golden Swan, frequently referred to by its regulars as the Hell Hole, hence the title of the print.
Located at West 4th and 6th Avenue in New York City’s Greenwich Village, the Golden Swan was frequented by both working class patrons and the artists for whom the area became known in the 20th century.