Showing posts with label New Acquisitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Acquisitions. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

How did that end up in the museum, anyway?

Doug Kendall, Curator of Collections

“What’s New” is one of the recurring themes here on the Museum’s blog. We like to share the stories and images of our recent acquisitions. But how do artifacts and works of art find their way into the Museum’s collections? And why those things and not others?

The New York State Historical Association, which operates the Fenimore Art Museum, has existed for over 110 years and has been collecting for most of that time. As you can imagine, we’ve accumulated a lot of things over those years: almost 25,000 objects and over 100,000 photographs.

These days, the Museum continues to acquire artifacts, but the staff has to think hard before adding something new to the collections. We have limited acquisition funds, but even potential gifts have to be carefully scrutinized for relevance—after all, there are costs associated with cataloging, exhibiting and caring for each object in the Museum’s collection and both our resources and our space is finite.

That’s why the staff and Board of the Museum carefully developed a Collections Management Policy and review it every few years. One of the most important parts of the policy is the “Scope of Collections” section. Having a scope helps us recognize whether a potential gift makes sense as part of this museum’s collection or should perhaps be referred to another museum with a different mission. The Museum’s Collections Advisory Committee carefully considers every potential addition to the collection and makes a recommendation to the President and CEO of the organization, and the Vice President and Chief Curator, who have the authority to add items to the collection.


Residence and Office of James L. Smith, Mansfield, Cattaraugus Co NY
Graphite pencil on paper, framed
Artist Unidentified, ca. 1880
Gift of Scott and Gladys Macdonough, N0010.2010
Photograph: Richard Walker

Residence of Michael Van Alstine
Graphite pencil on paper
Fritz G. Vogt, 1890
The Farmers’ Museum, Museum Purchase, F0216.1944

Recently, a Connecticut couple offered to give the Museum a pencil sketch of a home in Cattaraugus County. This image falls within the Museum’s collecting interest in American folk art and it also provides evidence of upstate New York material culture, another of our collecting areas. Although we don’t know who sketched the James L. Smith residence and office, the style is reminiscent of the lithographs that appear in Victorian county atlases and histories, many of which can be found in our Research Library. In addition, the Smith sketch complements the drawings of itinerant Mohawk Valley artist Fritz G. Vogt in the collections of the Fenimore Art Museum and our sister institution, The Farmers’ Museum. So in this instance, the sketch of James Smith’s home and office is a welcome addition to the Museum’s collections for a variety of reasons.




Tuesday, September 14, 2010

New Acquisition: Yokuts Basket

By: Eva Fognell , Curator of the Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art

Let me introduce the latest object added to the Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art - a large, beautiful Yokuts basket.


It arrived just a short week ago and since then I have spent time researching the basket to find out more about it and its maker. The Yokuts were some of the leading basket makers of Central California. This great basket is tightly coiled and sewn with stitches of sedge root.


The motifs on the basket are stitched with black-dyed bracket fern root and redbud. The diamond-shaped designs are stylized rattlesnakes. It is 9 inches high and 21.5 inches in diameter so it has a demanding presence. It will be out in the gallery in the next few weeks so I hope you stop by and take a look at our latest acquisition.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Generous Donor

By: Eva Fognell, Curator of the Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of American Indian Art
Bird Effigy, Peter Jones, 2007. T0853

We just received 3 new objects to our NYSHA collection of American Indian art. John Wilkinson from Schoharie NY told me he decided to donate the objects after seeing our Bird Effigy sculpture by Onondaga artist Peter Jones in our West Gallery show “New Additions: New Perspectives”. What Mr. Wilkinson gave us is a smaller sculpture in the same series. This ceramic sculpture is titled Deer Dancer. In addition we received Warrior Dreamer another ceramic sculpture by Peter Jones and a bone carving titled Spirit of the Three Sisters by renowned Mohawk carver Stan Hill, Sr. (1921-2003). The artwork is from the late 1980s-1990s. It is so exciting to have more local artists in our collection. I hope to be able to display Bird Effigy and Deer Dancer next to each other in the Study Center along with the other Peter Jones pieces in our collection. The donation of the Spirit of the Three Sisters comes at an opportune time since our four small carved bone combs by Stan Hill Sr. are part of our traveling Thaw exhibition and will not be available to view here for a couple of years. Now we have an opportunity to show a carving by this important artist filling what would otherwise be a gap in our representation of Haudenosaune contemporary art.
Spirit of the Three Sisters by Stan Hill, Sr. 1999. N0009.2009(01)
Warrior Dreamer, Peter Jones, 1990. N0009.2009 (02)
Deer Dancer by Peter Jones, 1990 N0009.2009(03)
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