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FAMILY PROGRAMS
Imagination Station
Saturdays 1 – 2 pm
Instructors: Julie Healy and Aggie Wszolkowski
Member adults free, nonmember adults $12, children $6
Our popular drop-in weekend program returns every Saturday. This
• March 20 – Generations (Elizabeth Catlett)
• March 27 – Lets Dance (William Merrit Chase – A Tambourine Player)
• April 3 – Identity – Lorna Simpson
• April 10 – Pop Art (Robert Rauschenberg & Andy Warhol )
• April 17 – Warm Breeze (Edward Hopper –Coast Guard Station)
• April 24 – Out at Sea (James McNeal Whistler – The Sea Antonio Jacobsen – City of Berlin)
• May 1 – Memories and Heritage (Whitfield Lovell – Trap & Melvin Edwards – Mamelodi)
• May 8 – Laughter (Steve Wheeler (1912-1992) Laughing Boy)
• May 15 – Faces Faces (William Ellisworth Artis – Bust of Miss Colemas Richard Barthe – Blackberry Woman Auguste Savoge –Gamis)
• May 22 – Textiles (Lamar Baker - Textile Tangle and Fabric)
• May 29 – Cancelled - Memorial Day Weekend
• June 5 – Hudson River School (Asher B. Durand – Early Morning at Cold Spring)
• June 12 – In Your Face - Portraits of Children
• June 19 – Ah Architecture
• June 26 – Summertime (Childe Hassam (1859-1935), Summer at Cape Cod)
Homeschool Day, 12 – 2 pm (Ages 4 – 13)
$6 per child. Adults $12.
(FREE for ADULT members)
Please RSVP to bbalsimelli@montclairartmuseum.org or (973)746-5555 ext. 267.
The Montclair Art Museum invites you and other Homeschooling families for a fun and educational afternoon. These two-hour programs will include a gallery tour and studio art project led by a Museum educator.
- March 18 — Drawing Into Sculpture
- April 21 - Illustrating a Narrative with Mixed Media
- May 20 - Native American Symbols and Patterns
- June 16 - Georgia O'Keeffe Large Scale Nature Drawing
MAM PARK BENCH
Second Wednesday of the month, 9:30 am – 11:30 am
Free with Museum admission
STORYTELLING IS NOW AVAILABLE IN BOTH SPANISH AND ENGLISH
Parents with young children will enjoy MAM Park Bench, a program that introduces children to the Museum and provides them with an artistic social outing. Get acquainted with other parents and young children, work on fun art projects, and experience a guided tour of the Museum. Storytelling in the galleries is provided courtesy of the Children’s Services Department of the Montclair Public Library. Local native Spanish educator Nieves Cespedes will conduct storytelling in Spanish.
- April 14 — Totem Poles
- May 12 — Color!
- June 9 — The Ocean
Scholastics Art & Writing Competition
Northern NJ Regional Gold Key Exhibition
February 11 – March 10
The Montclair Art Museum has been selected as the Northern New Jersey Regional Affiliate for the Alliance for Young Writers and Artists Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, a national program that recognizes outstanding visual art and writing created by teenagers. Approximately 30,000 artists and writers in grades 7–12 from across the United States receive recognition annually on the regional level. This exhibition features artworks that received top honors by our jury and will then be considered for national awards later in the spring.
Building Montclair in LEGOTM
Sunday, March 7, 2 – 4 p.m.
$30 per family (advance registration required)
FREE Family Day
Sunday, March 28, 1 – 5 p.m.
FREE
This Museum-wide Family Day celebrates the nature of African American art and culture through dance themes and choreography. Montclair State University’s Dance Department, both faculty and students, will be performing works by various African American choreographers throughout the day. The Leir Hall performances will spotlight important works of African American choreography, including the work of Pearl Primus (1919–1994). Primus herself is a Rosenwald Fund recipient, dancer, choreographer, and anthropologist. A Force for Change: African American Art and the Julius Rosenwald Fund exhibition will provide the perfect inspiration for a full day of Museum exploration, including gallery activities and fun art projects for the entire family to enjoy.
Free Family Days are made possible, in part, by The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey.
WBGO and NJPAC KIDS JAZZ Concert
Saturday, April 17, 12:30 p.m.
FREE
ADULT PROGRAMS
Advance ticket sales available through the Museum Store or by calling (973) 746–5555, ext. 237.
Visual Thinking Strategies:
Tuesday, March 2 & Wednesday, March 3
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Registration Fee: $245 / $195 for public school teachers
Educators will learn Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) a learner-centered, research-based facilitation technique that uses student discussions of visual art as a catalyst for cognitive growth. With its innovative teaching method, VTS is used in schools and museums across the country and abroad. Benefits for students include enjoyable discussion-based lessons that encourage self-expression and develop confidence. The curriculum jumpstarts and ingrains the development of critical thinking, problem solving, and a range of language skills. Workshop will be held at the Montclair Art Museum.
“VTS is one of the most powerful models for really engaging young people, changing our perceptions about who can learn and who cannot, and also building a foundation where teachers work in a very real sense.”
Dr. Carol Johnson Superintendent Boston Public Schools
To register, please visit www.vtshome.org/pages/events For more information, please contact Leslie Hendrickson at 718-302-0232 or lhendrickson@vue.org
Peter Ascoli
Lecture and Book Signing
Thursday, March 25, 7pm
$10 members, $15 nonmembers
Peter Ascoli, author of Julius Rosenwald;The Man Who Built Sears, Roebuck and Advanced the Cause of Black Education in the American South, offers insights into his fascinating biography of one of America’s most influential philanthropists. Peter Ascoli is on the faculty of the Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies in Chicago. He taught at Utah State University and later served as director of development for Chicago Opera Theatre and Steppenwolf Theatre Company. He is the grandson of Julius Rosenwald. Copies of the book by Peter Ascoli will be available in the Museum Store. Advance purchase can be made by calling (973) 746-5555, ext.237.
Please arrive early. The galleries will have extended hours from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Peter Ascoli Lecture and Book Signing tickets include admission to the current exhibition A Force for Change: African American Art and the Julius Rosenwald Fund.
MAM AND THE ADULT SCHOOL OF MONTCLAIR
A Force for Change: African American Art and the Julius Rosenwald Fund
Exhibition Tour, Buffet Luncheon, and Discussion
Wednesday, March 31, 11 a.m.
Registration through the Adult School of Montclair
Call (973) 746-6636 to register
$25 MAM Members, $30 nonmembers
Enjoy a docent-guided tour as you explore the work of important African American artists, made possible by support from the Julius Rosenwald Fund (1917–1948). Explore African American heritage through the works of various artists, such as Jacob Lawrence, Aaron Douglas, and Elizabeth Catlett. After your tour engage in discussion with fellow art enthusiasts over lunch. Delight your palette with the taste of fine Southern and Caribbean cuisine provided by local Montclair establishment, Sweet Potato & Pecan Restaurant.
Sponsored by the Adult School of Montclair and MAM in partnership with Chef Ricardo Belnavis of Sweet Potato & Pecan Restaurant, 103 Forest Street, Montclair.
The David C. Driskell Center
Elizabeth Catlett Lecture
Thursday, April 15
Depart MAM 9 a.m.
Return 10 p.m.
$100 Members, $115 nonmembers
Join us for a special day trip to the David C. Driskell Center at the University of Maryland in College Park that will culminate with a unique opportunity to hear artist Elizabeth Catlett (born April 15, 1915) in dialogue with Professor Driskell. Don’t miss the chance to celebrate Catlett’s 95th birthday with her. Elizabeth Catlett’s bold and powerful prints are featured in our current exhibition A Force for Change: African American Artists and the Julius Rosenwald Fund. The Driskell Center is committed to collecting, documenting, and presenting African American art as well as replenishing and expanding the field. Transportation, group lunch, guided tour of the Driskell Center, and reception and lecture are all included. Light dinner at rest stop on return trip not included. For additional information and registration form, visit the Museum website or e-mail tours@montclairartmuseum.org.
MSU/MAM Art Talks
Lorna Simpson
Thursday, April 22, 7 p.m.
FREE
Lorna Simpson first became well-known in the mid-1980s for her large-scale photograph-and-text works that confront and challenge narrow, conventional views of gender, identity, culture, history, and memory. With the African-American woman as a visual point of departure, Simpson uses the figure to examine the ways in which gender and culture shape the interactions, relationships, and experiences of our lives in contemporary multiracial America.
This series is a collaboration between the Master of Fine Arts degree program of Montclair State University and the Montclair Art Museum. This African American Cultural Committee program is made possible by a grant from the Bank of America Charitable Foundation. Refreshments generously provided by Harlem Brewing Co.
MAM and the South Orange–Maplewood Adult School
A Force for Change:
Thursday, May 6, 7 p.m.
Registration through the South Orange–Maplewood Adult School.
Call (973) 378-7620 to register
$15 MAM Members, $20 nonmembers
Sponsored by the South Orange–Maplewood Adult School and MAM.
Pictures 2010 Concert
5th Annual New Jersey Student
Saturday, May 8, 1 p.m. Pre-Concert Talk
1:30 p.m. Concert
$10 Members and students, $15 nonmembers
This program is produced by the New Jersey Arts Collective.
Hampton University/Howard University Trip
Saturday and Sunday
May 22 and 23
$250 per person, $200 w/roommate
Join us for a weekend of African American Art at the collections of two of our country's most prominent historically black colleges. Buses will depart the Montclair Art Museum on Saturday to travel to the Hampton University Museum. Founded in 1868, it is the oldest African American museum in the United States. The collections feature over 9,000 objects. Within its fine arts collection is the largest existing collection of works in any museum by the artists John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Richmond Barthe, and Samella Lewis. After an overnight stay in Hampton, VA, we will depart for a brief visit to the Howard University Museum. From its first acquisition of a painting by Henry O. Tanner, to its most recent donation of a lithograph by Elizabeth Catlett, the African American Collection at Howard is one of the most comprehensive representations of black artists in existence. This jam-packed weekend includes all food, travel, and accommodations.
CLOSER LOOK
First Friday of the Month, 2 p.m.
Come learn more about featured artwork at MAM. These informal 20-minute gallery talks offer visitors an in-depth examination of one work of art on view in the galleries. Education staff and docents lead the discussions.
Friday, February 5
Kara Walker
Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005, Alabama Loyalists Greeting the Federal Gun-Boats
Friday, March 5
Sandy Skoglund
A Breeze at Work, 1987
Friday, April 2
Gordon Parks (1912-2006)
American Gothic, Washington, DC, 1942
Friday, May 7
Childe Hassam (1859-1935)
Summer at Cos Cob, 1902
Friday, June 4
Aaron Douglas (1898-1979)
Harriet Tubman, 1931
SATURDAY TOURS
1 p.m. FREE with Museum Admission
These 45 minute-long docent led tours take place once a month on Saturday. The topics and themes change, so you can experience something new at the Museum every month.
Saturday, March 13
MAM Celebrates National Women’s History Month, explore Women Artists in our collection, paintings to pottery.
Saturday, April 17
A Force for Change African American Art and the Julius Rosenwald Fund.
Saturday, May 22
Wondrous nature, view artwork inspired by nature.
Saturday, June 12
Photography at MAM.
Saturday tours are made possible with support from the Bloomingdale’s Fund of the Federated Department Stores Foundation.