Artifacts 2022

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FALL MEMBER2022MAGAZINE

ON THE COVER: Tiara, 1937. Cartier London. Gold, platinum, diamonds, citrines. Cartier Collection. Photo by: Daniel Salemi. PRESENTING SPONSOR MAJOR SPONSOR EXHIBITION SUPPO RT LISA AND CLAY COOLEY NANCY DEDMAN LAURA AND WALTER ELCOCK SUSAN AND BILL MONTGOMERY NANCY C. AND RICHARD R. ROGERS SOGAND SHOJA GAYLE STOFFEL LO C AL SUPPOR T M EDIA SUPPOR T CHRISTINA AND SAL JAFAR II DEEDIE ROSE BELA AND CHASE COOLEY CATHERINE AND WILL ROSE VAUGHN O. VENNERBERG II ADDITIONAL SUPPO RT Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity is co-organized by the Dallas Museum of Art and the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, in collaboration with the Musée du Louvre and with the support of Cartier. The Presenting Sponsor for this exhibition is PNC Bank. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

If you were unable to join the festivities, I hope you’ll make it to the Museum soon to see this incredible exhibition. It is a shining example of both the DMA’s and our exhibition partners’ strengths in curating, research, and design, and it serves as a powerful reminder of the aesthetic wonder and beauty that can come from cross-cultural

Warmly,

Dear Members,

Thisconnections.issueof

Agustín Arteaga The Eugene McDermott Director

Artifacts also highlights other major exhibitions, opening this fall, that are worthy of a celebration. Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism features works from the collection from the early 20th century to the present, some of which will be on view for the first time. This exhibition explores the idea of movement, whether real or implied, and invites viewers to engage with the works in both physical and perceptual ways.

We kicked off the summer with opening celebrations for Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity , and it was my immense pleasure to welcome the dazzling designs of the Maison Cartier to Dallas with so many of you, our wonderful DMA Members.

I am tremendously proud of the work that has gone into these exhibitions, as they show our commitment to inclusivity and diversity in the stories we present. Our bright future would not be possible without the support of members like you.

I hope you will take full advantage of all your membership has to offer and visit us at the Museum soon. Come and discover other cultures, learn about yourself, and meet new people.

Also opening this fall, Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances is the first museum retrospective and US exhibition devoted to the self-taught artist, who died before his work was widely recognized. His brief but prolific career will be explored through a comprehensive look at approximately 50 of his paintings. As the only museum that collected Wong’s work during his lifetime, we are thrilled to feature this incredible artist and explore a visual language that was uniquely his own.

Fall 2022 1

DIRECTOR’S LETTER

2 Fall 2022

INSIDE 04 Calendar Highlights 06 Now on View 10 SPECIAL FEATURE: Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity 16 Upcoming Exhibitions 18 School, Family, and Access Programming 20 Arts & Letters Live 22 Donor Recognition 26 Art Ball 28 On the Scene 32 New Acquisitions 36 DMA Team 44 In Memoriam: Bill Lamont Necklace, Cartier Paris, about 2000. Gold, diamonds. Cartier Collection. Photo by: Daniel Salemi. Fall 2022 3

Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month Friday, September 16, 5:00–11:00 p.m.

Late Night

Thursday, September 15, noon–5:00 p.m. Friday, September 16, 11:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m. Saturday, September 17, 11:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m

Monday, October 3, 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday, September 21, 7:30 p.m.

OCTOBER

DMA Member Preview Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism

Wednesday, September 14 Open to members at the Contributor level and above

Thursday, September 29, 7:30 p.m.

DMA Circle Member Viewing Hours

Arts & Letters Live Qian Julie Wang Beautiful Country

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Arts & Letters Live Lupe Mendez Poetry Workshop Friday, September 16, 7:30–9:00 p.m.

DMA Circle Exhibition Opening Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism

Arts & Letters Live Elizabeth Strout Lucy by the Sea

Arts & Letters Live Fredrik Backman The Winners

SEPTEMBER

Saturday, September 10, 9:00–11:00 a.m.

ArtsAccess Panel with KERA and The Dallas Morning News Saturday, September 17, 2:00 p.m.

In conversation with Lois Kim, Executive Director, Texas Book Festival

Open to members at the Contributor level and above and to Decorative Art & Design Initiative members

MEMBER FRIDAYMEMBERTODDLERFAMILYMUSEUMLATEARTSARTEXHIBITIONRECEPTIONSOPENINGSACCESSPANEL&LETTERSLIVENIGHTMURDERMYSTERYFESTIVALTUESDAYPREVIEWSFOCUS

CALENDAR HIGHLIGHTS

One of only three events in the United States Week of November 28, 7:30 p.m. Moody Performance Hall

Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances and Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism

An Artful Game of Clue

DMA Member Exhibition Opening

Dreams of Snow

Thursday, October 13, noon–5:00 p.m. Friday, October 14, 11:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m. Saturday, October 15, 11:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances

Saturday, October 8, 8:00–9:30 p.m.

In conversation with Jane McGarry Thursday, November 17, 7:30 p.m. Eisemann Center, Hill Performance Hall

The Writers: Portraits by Laura Wilson

Thursday, November 3, 7:30 p.m.

DMA Member Preview

Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances

Annual Rosenberg Celebration

DMA Circle Exhibition Opening

NOVEMBER

Thursday, October 13

DECEMBER

Wednesday, October 12 Open to members at the Associate level and above

Visual Thinking: The Hidden Gifts of People Who Think in Pictures, Patterns, and Abstractions

Arts & Letters Live Texas Bound With Oscar Seung, Regina Taylor, and Michael Urie Monday, November 7, 7:30 p.m.

Arts & Letters Live An Evening with Nigella Lawson Cook, Eat, Repeat: Ingredients, Recipes, and Stories

Arts & Letters Live Laura Wilson

Arts & Letters Live

BIG D READS Community Book Club

Arts & Letters Live

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Friday Focus on Matthew Wong Make & Take, Tour, Film Screening, DJ Friday, November 18, 5:00—9:00 p.m.

Family Saturday,FestivalNovember 5, 11:00 a.m.—5:00 p.m.

Temple Grandin

Museum Murder Mystery

Friday, October 14, 7:30 p.m.

Tuesday, December 6, 11:00 a.m.—2:00 p.m.

Toddler Tuesday

The Accommodation Tuesday, October 25, 7:30 p.m.

Tuesday, October 18, 7:30 p.m.

Arts & Letters Live Louise Penny A World of Curiosities

This installation of art from the DMA’s collection looks at the complex relationship between people and the natural world. Through groupings of works that span centuries and global cultures, Rooted shows how people shape and adapt to a changing environment, traverse the planet, and rely on the land for sustenance. The exhibition features more than 50 works, including paintings, sculpture, photographs, decorative arts, prints, and clothing, as well as interactive opportunities for visitors to create and respond. Rooted was developed by the DMA’s Education and Interpretation staff with input from community members, artists, and local organizations.

December 10, 2021 to November 13, 2022

Guadalupe Rosales: Drifting on a Memory

Guadalupe Rosales works to document Latinx experiences in the United States, and especially in her native Los Angeles, through her ever-growing repository of communally sourced archival materials, including photographs, memorabilia, and artifacts. She develops installations combining photography, ephemera, and sound that intersect with her archival practice. For Drifting on a Memory, Rosales collaborated with Dallas-based lowrider artist Lokey Calderon to create an immersive work that nods to lowrider culture and uses sound to replicate the aural experience of cruising in East LA.

Rooted

CATCH THESE EXCITING EXHIBITIONS ON VIEW AT THE MUSEUM THIS SEASON.

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ON VIEW EXHIBITIONS

December 26, 2021 to April 9, 2023

Islamic art was a formative inspiration for Louis Cartier and the Maison Cartier in the early 20th century. Cartier’s designers adapted shapes, techniques, and materials from India, the Middle East, and North Africa, synthesizing and transforming them into a unique, modern stylistic language that continues to inspire new creations.

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Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form

May 14, 2022 to September 18, 2022

February 6, 2022 to January 15, 2023

IMAGES: Guadalupe Rosales: Drifting on a Memory at the Dallas Museum of Art; Michael Bevilacqua, High-Speed Gardening , 2000. Acrylic on canvas. Dallas Museum of Art, purchased with funds provided by The Neuberger Berman Foundation, 2001.61.A-B. © Michael Bevilacqua; Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity at the Dallas Museum of Art; Octavio Medellín, Untitled (Woman Holding Deer) , about 1930–1936. Terracotta. San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of Harding Black in memory of Eleanor Onderdonk, 65.101.1.2; Octavio Medellín, Untitled (Man with a Sheaf of Wheat) , about 1930-1936. Terracotta. San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of Harding Black in memory of Eleanor Onderdonk, 65.101.1. © Estate of the artist; Tiara, Cartier Paris, special order, 1912. Platinum, rock crystal, diamonds. Cartier Collection.

Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form is the first-ever museum retrospective to explore this iconic Dallas artist’s nearly seven-decade career. Featuring approximately 80 works, the exhibition charts the evolution of Medellín’s artistic practice as he moved across various mediums, producing sculptures in wood, stone, clay, metal, and glass. The show also delves into his creation of public art across Texas and his legacy as a beloved art teacher in Dallas.

Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity

FEBRUARY 6, 2022 TO JANUARY 15, 2023

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EXHIBITION SPOTLIGHT

The Dallas Museum of Art is proud to present the first-ever museum retrospective for Octavio Medellín (1907–1999), an influential Mexican American artist and teacher whose work helped shape the Texas art scene for seven decades. Medellín was a noted sculptor who mastered a wide range of media, engaging with modernist trends in both his native Mexico and the United States. Beyond his artistic accomplishments, Medellín was a respected art teacher at various institutions in the Dallas area, as well as the founder of the Creative Arts Center of Dallas.

Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form features approximately 80 works, charting the evolution of Medellín’s artistic practice as he moved across various mediums, producing sculptures in wood, stone, clay, metal, and glass. A section of the show also explores Medellín’s creation of public art across Texas, but particularly in the Dallas area.

If you’d like to see some of these works yourself, you can grab a brochure at the Museum or visit medellin.dma.org for information on Medellín works across the Metroplex.

IMAGES: Octavio Medellín, Genoveva of Brabante, 1949. Direct carving in Honduras mahogany. Guadalupe Centers, Kansas City, MO, Gift of Frank Paxton, Jr.; Octavio Medellín, Untitled (Woman Holding a Deer), about 1930-1936. The University Art Collection at Meadows Museum, SMU, Dallas. UAC.1975.23; Octavio Medellín, The Struggle, 1938. Red sandstone. Lent by the Estate of the Artist. © Estate of the Artist.

“I believe that sincere art must be elemental and close to the earth— a symbol of the people.” —Octavio Medellín, 1942

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Cartier and Islamic Art is an exhibition about sources of inspiration and the evolution of designs that span centuries and continents. Paris at the dawn of the 20th century was a catalyst for creativity, especially for Louis Cartier (1875–1942) and the Maison he pivoted toward modernity.

As European powers expanded into the Middle East, India, and North Africa, Paris became the center of trade in Islamic art and architectural elements. This exhibition explores the formative influences of Islamic art on Louis Cartier as a collector and, more significantly, on Maison Cartier’s production of jewelry and precious objects from the early 20th century until today. Its narrative is enhanced by the elegant, minimalist galleries and digital media designed by Elizabeth Diller and her architectural firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro (NYC). Among the over 500 objects in the exhibition are drawings and photographs from Cartier Archives, and also many incredibly beautiful one-of-a-kind pieces of jewelry.

PRESENTING SPONSOR

MAY 14 TO SEPTEMBER 18, 2022

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SPECIAL FEATURE

Motif, pattern, color, and form reveal the inspirations, innovations, and aesthetic wonder present in the works of the Maison Cartier. IMAGE: Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity at the Dallas Museum of Art. Fall 2022 11

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Bib Necklace, 1947 Gold, platinum, diamonds, amethysts, Architecturalturquoiseelements, such as the mosaic tiles on ancient mosques, were also a source of design ideas for Cartier. From the 1910s onward, Iranian materials and colors inspired Cartier’s creations, particularly in the use of an unexpected mix of colors. Cartier created many bib necklaces in an array of designs that explore a range of color combinations. This bib necklace, made in 1947 for the Duchess of Windsor, is an excellent example that couples innovative techniques with exciting new color combinations. It is an excellent example of the multicolored jewelry designs made between 1933 and 1970, when Jean Toussaint served as Cartier’s Creative Director. Here, a brilliant combination of highly prized Iranian turquoise and amethyst comes together to form a marvelous piece. Surprisingly, the necklace is quite flexible, making it extremely comfortable for the wearer. In the exhibition, this necklace is displayed with a detailed animation showing its assembly based upon architectural foundations.

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IMAGE: Bib necklace, Cartier Paris, special order, 1947. Gold, platinum, diamonds, amethysts, turquoise. Cartier Collection. Photo by: Daniel Salemi.

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Today, Islamic art still inspires Cartier’s designers, and the Maison continues to explore innovative design arcs—an endless rotation of evolution and revolution— in their creations. Like the exhibitions of the early 20th century, Cartier and Islamic Art aspires to inspire.

Necklace, about 2000 (as seen on page 2) Gold, diamonds

This contemporarydazzling necklace exemplifies the cyclical nature of the way inspiration and creativity continue to this day to flow at Cartier; sometimes ideas evolve and other times there are transcendent shifts. In this new millennium, aesthetic elements of ancient Islamic art continue to fuel new ideas and design possibilities at Cartier. In pursuit of modern innovation and contemporary trends, they turned to their own archives and original source materials to mine artistic elements from the past to create bold and modern designs. This brilliantly striking diamond and gold necklace, which is a complex web of interlocking hexagons, exemplifies how Cartier’s contemporary design motifs remain based firmly on geometry. The amazing necklace is one of the few pieces in the exhibition to reference how it is intended to be worn. While the necklace is displayed flat, Liz Diller’s design team at DS+R created an original animated three-dimensional case that expands to also demonstrate how it would appear when worn on the body.

IMAGE: Flask, about 1025, rock crystal, The Keir Collection of Islamic Art on loan to the Dallas Museum of Art, K.1.2014.102. Photo by: Daniel Salemi.

Tiara, 1937 (as seen on the cover) Gold, platinum, diamonds, Onecitrinesof the principal themes of the exhibition is how a lexicon of forms and motifs found in Islamic art inspired Cartier’s designs. These sources included ancient Islamic manuscripts, textiles, and, most significantly, the geometric architectural elements found in monumental buildings throughout the Middle East, India, and North Africa. Jewelry, such as this lovely tiara, was adorned with colored precious stones such as diamonds and citrines cut into faceted hexagons, squares, and rectangles, and then arranged in a grid-like pattern akin to the decorative brick and tilework found in medieval Persian buildings. Tiaras were an immensely popular accessory in the 1930s. The central medallion of this tiara is detachable, allowing the owner to wear it separately as a brooch, pointing downward. In 1937 alone, Cartier London produced at least 27 tiaras, most of which were probably worn at the coronation of England’s King George VI.

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spotlights, 24 wall mounts, color filter

IMAGES: 24 foil, wood control Museum Art, TWO TWO canvas, Collection; Once Society (ARS), New York ; Jacob Jordaens, The Serenade, about 1640. canvas, 70 1/2x 3 1/2 Phoebus Foundation, Antwerp; Jans Massijs, Riddle: The world feeds many fools, about 1530. Oil on panel, 20 1/4 x 24 3/8 x 1 1/2 in. Antwerp.

Matthew Wong,

LOOKING FORWARD

for AIDS and Art Fund, 2009.1.A-AA. Photo: Chad Redmon; Matthew Wong, The Realm of Appearances, 2018. Oil on

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GET READY FOR FALL! EXCITING NEW EXHIBITIONS OPENING SOON.

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Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism September 18, 2022 to July 16, 2023

Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism showcases the work of artists from three historical eras who explored the power of kineticism in art. Their works utilize optical effects or mechanical or manipulable parts to engage the viewer physically or perceptually. This exhibition, drawn from the DMA’s collection, demonstrates how artists working today have been influenced by the long legacy of dynamic abstraction, from the utopian works of art and design by avant-garde artists in Russia, Europe, and the Americas, to the European “Op” artists and Brazilian Neoconcretists working in the 1960s to create work that engulfs visitors in their surroundings and empowers them to participate in its co-creation.

Olafur Eliasson, The outside of inside, 2008.

Upon a Time in the West, 2018. Gouache on paper. © 2022 Matthew Wong Foundation / Artists Rights

Oil on

16 Fall 2022

Featuring a dazzling array of historic Flemish masterworks from the 15th to the 17th century, Saints, Sinners, Lovers, and Fools highlights the innovative ways that medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque artists depicted their rapidly changing world through style and storytelling. Crossing three centuries, this artistic journey includes sculptures and decorative art objects, along with paintings by Hans Memling, Jan Gossaert, Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck, Jacob Jordaens, and Jans Massys, among others. The exhibition will introduce visitors to the rich history of Flemish art and invite them to consider their own place within a world in flux.

Saints, Sinners, Lovers, and Fools: 300 Years of Flemish Masterworks is co-organized by the Denver Art Museum and The Phoebus Foundation, Antwerp (Belgium).

Saints, Sinners, Lovers, and Fools: 300 Years of Flemish Masterworks

February 19, 2023 to June 25 , 2023

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Hailed as one of the most talented painters of his generation, Matthew Wong achieved resounding critical acclaim for his spectacular landscape paintings during his short career, spanning just over six years, between 2013 until his death at the age of 35 in 2019. The Dallas Museum of Art, the only museum that collected Wong’s work during his lifetime, presents the first US museum exhibition of works by this visionary painter. Featuring approximately 50 paintings, the exhibition offers the first formal account of how Wong adeptly synthesized many modern inspirations—from the Fauvists to Qing period ink painters—to create a visual language uniquely his own.

October 16, 2022 to February 19, 2023

Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances

Go van Gogh®

After a few not-so-normal years, we’re excited to welcome school groups back to the DMA! Guided tours of the Museum’s collection are a great way to explore the galleries, examine works of art up-close, and engage in playful learning. Using a mix of sketching, discussion, role playing, sensory exploration, and gallery games, Education staff and volunteer docents will help your students see the Museum in a whole new way. Book a tour by visiting dma.org/schoolprograms.

With the DMA as your classroom, you can take an imaginary trip around the world, explore materials from A to Z, and “meet” new and familiar artists. Every year, DMA School Programs serve thousands of pre-K–12th grade students and teachers both at the Museum and in the classroom with a range of programs that support classroom curriculum and give students the opportunity to see the real thing.

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School Is COOL at the DMA!

No bus, no field trip? No problem! Go van Gogh is the DMA’s signature outreach school program, bringing artful conversations and hands-on projects free of charge to pre-K–6th grade classrooms on any DISD campus, as well as to private and public schools within Dallas city limits. Request a visit for your child’s classroom at dma.org/ schoolprograms.

ACCELERATE YOUR JOURNEY SCHOOL PROGRAMMING

Take a DMA-zing Tour

Museum Murder Mystery

The DMA’s popular Museum Murder Mystery moves to the fall! Have you ever wanted to play a live game of Clue? This is your chance to put your detective hat on and solve the mystery. Suspects will come to life and answer your questions to help you find out who did it, where, and with what. DMA Members get presale access to purchase discounted tickets.

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month and the work of Texas artist Octavio Medellín with an evening of music, artist demonstrations, curator talks, a poetry workshop led by Texas Poet Laureate Lupe Mendez, tours of the exhibition Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form , a Texas art scavenger hunt, and more.

Make & Take

Once a month on a selected Friday, 5:30–8:30 p.m. Join us for a casual art-making series for adults once a month. Highlighting a work of art in our collection or a special exhibition on view, this program will give you the time, tools, and freedom to explore your creativity and gain confidence in your creative abilities. No previous experience is necessary, and all materials are provided. Upcoming programs will include a focus on mud cloth from the Bamana people of Mali, kinetic art, and the connections between art and poetry inspired by the work of Matthew Wong.

ADULT PROGRAMMING

Pop of Art

Saturday, October 8, 8:00–9:30 p.m.

Once a month on a selected Friday, January–June, 5:00–9:00 p.m.

IMAGE: Octavio Medellín. Courtesy of Bywaters Special Collections, Hamon Arts Library, Southern Methodist University. Photographer: Jay Simmons.

Connect with like minds, view art in new contexts, and immerse yourself in customized experiences as you engage with our collection through themed tours, art making, performances, short talks, scavenger hunts, and more that all connect to your favorite popular movies, music, and television shows.

Friday, September 16, 5:00–11:00 p.m.

Late Night: Hispanic Heritage Month

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Ignite your curiosity and hear award winners and icons in the fields of literature, memoir, mystery, science, and food, featuring:

Lupe AlbionJerryJimTempleFredrikElizabethMendezStroutQianJulieWangBackmanGrandinLauraWilsonSchutzeHawkinsJosiahOscarSeungReginaTaylorMichaelUrieNigellaLawsonLouisePenny 31ST SEASON LITERARY & PERFORMING ARTS SeptemberSERIESto November 2022 ACCELERATE YOUR JOURNEY 20 Fall 2022

Thursday, November 17, 7:30 p.m. Nigella Lawson Eisemann Center, Hill Performance Hall

An incandescent memoir, Beautiful Country by Qian Julie Wang is an essential American story about an undocumented family fracturing under the weight of invisibility, and a girl living in the shadows who never stops seeking the light. Beautiful Country was named one of the best books of the year by the New York Times, NPR , Publishers Weekly, and more.

of November 28—date to be announced soon!

Friday, October 14, 7:30 p.m. Temple Grandin Horchow Auditorium

Visual Thinking: The Hidden Gifts of People Who Think in Pictures, Patterns, and Abstractions by Temple Grandin uses cutting-edge research to take us inside the world of visual thinking, reframing the conversation on neurodiversity and showing how different types of thinkers are essential for our collective well-being.Tuesday,

Laura Wilson Horchow Auditorium

Louise Penny, beloved author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Chief Inspector Gamache series, joins Arts & Letters Live for one of only three US events. Penny is the coauthor with Hillary Rodham Clinton of the bestselling thriller State of Terror

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Qian Julie Wang Horchow Auditorium

October 18, 7:30 p.m.

Spend an evening with Nigella Lawson as she shares the rhythms and rituals of her kitchen in celebration of her latest book, Cook, Eat, Repeat, a delicious and delightful combination of recipes intertwined with narrative essays about food, all written in Lawson’s engaging and insightful prose.Week

PHOTO CREDITS: Fredrik Backman by Linnéa Jonasson Bernholm; Qian Julie Wang by Brendan Wixted; Laura Wilson by Kelsey Foster; Temple Grandin by Kelly Buster; Elizabeth Strout by Leonardo Cendamo; Nigella Lawson by Matt Holyoak; Louise Penny by Mikael Theimer.

Thursday, September 29, 7:30 p.m.

Louise Penny Moody Performance Hall

SEASON HIGHLIGHTS

Renowned photographer Laura Wilson presents dynamic portraits of internationally acclaimed writers, including Margaret Atwood, Haruki Murakami, Louise Erdrich, and more. Inviting and poignant, The Writers: Portraits reflects on writing and photography’s shared concerns with invention, transformation, memory, and preservation.

Lydia and Bill Addy Nancy and Clint Carlson

Mr. and Mrs. William Tarver Solomon, Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. Terry A. MacRae Susan and Bill Montgomery Karen and Richard Pollock Carolyn and Karl Rathjen Marcia and Jonathan Sobel

Barbara Thomas Lemmon Cristina Lynch

Ann and Lee Hobson Norma K. Hunt

DMA CIRCLE AND COUNCIL

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The following donors have supported the Museum with an annual gift greater than PRESIDENT'S$50,000.

DONOR

COUNCIL

Laura and Walter Elcock Fanchon and Howard Hallam Nasiba and Thomas A. Hartland-Mackie Timothy C. Headington Lyda H. MargueriteHillSteed

Brian Bolke and Faisal Halum Diane and Hal Brierley Melanie and Tim Byrne

Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. Durham

GIVING COUNCILS

COUNCIL

Jennifer and John Eagle Margot B. Perot Allen and Kelli Questrom Cindy and Howard Rachofsky Deedie DIRECTOR'SRose

Jean and Jim Barrow

RECOGNITION

The following donors have supported the Museum with an annual gift greater than $5,000.

John Dayton

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy L. Halbreich Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth M. Hamlett

DMA CIRCLE MEMBERS

BENEFACTOR

Tim Hanley

Gene and Jerry Jones Aasem and Marcia Khalil Mary Noel Lamont

Hoffman and Thomas Woodward Lentz

Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Nancy C. Rogers and Richard R. Rogers Catherine and Will Rose Peggy and Carl Sewell Nancy VaughnShuttO.Vennerberg II

Your gifts to the Dallas Museum of Art enable the Museum to be a space of wonder and discovery where art comes alive. We are deeply grateful for your support and want to thank all our members and donors, especially the following members of the DMA Council and DMA Circle.

James A. Griffin

Jennifer Burr Altabef Agustín Arteaga and Carlos Gonzalez-Jaime Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Routman Capera Ryan Marcy and Stephen Sands Gowri and Alex Nilak Sharma Sogand Shoja

Beth and Eddie Ackerman Sylvia E. Almeida

Garry SharonWeberandMichael Young

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stanley Moussa II Abbé L. Patton

Kate Juett

Kathy Bishop

Nancy Perot and Rod Cain Jones Sarah and Ross Perot, Jr. Chris and Joe Popolo Arthur M. Primas

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lavie Suzanne and Patrick McGee

John Levy

Mrs. Franklin S. Bartholow Lucy and Thomas Burns Kay and Elliot Cattarulla Shelly and Michael Dee Rusty and Bill Duvall Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Ford Mr. and Mrs. Donald S. Freeman, Jr. Robert Hallam, Jr. Jack CarolLaneand

COLLECTOR

LEADER

Sheryl Adkins-Green and Geoff Green Vibeke and Niels Anderskouv Patsy GenieBelland Jim Bentley

Brenda Berry

Mr. and Mrs. Henri Bromberg III Kimberly Camuel Bryan and James Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Maryman Bumpas Cynthia and Alfred Calabrese

Sarah Girard

Linda Marcus Helen and Brendan McGuire Guillermo and Adriana Perales Bonnie Pitman Alana and Adrian Sada Joanna and T. Peter Townsend Max and Martha Wells Donna M. Wilhelm FELLOW

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Mr. and Mrs. Edward Owen Boshell, Jr. Mary McDermott Cook Nancy Dedman Pam and Jeffrey S. Ellerman Arlene Ford and Chris P. Reynolds

Mr. and Mrs. J. Luther King, Jr. Cece and Ford Lacy

John A. Henry III

DONOR RECOGNITION

Lisa Marie and Joseph Moriarty Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Mullen Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nearburg Mr. and Mrs. John K. Pearcy Missy and Tim Peck Lucilo Peña and Lee Cobb

Jo and Andre Staffelbach Mr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Steinhart

Kay R. Franks

Gail and Jim Davitt Peggy ChristopherBradburyBarbaraDearDelabanoDyerIIIElliott

Joe Hardt and Marie Park Linda and Mitch Hart Adrea D. Heebe

Mr. and Mrs. William M. Lamont III Mr. and Mrs. George Terry Lee, Jr. Tim Litinas and Kathleen Litinas

Pat and Charles McEvoy

David S. Huntley and Tracey M. JoleenNash-HuntleyandMitch Julis

Anne and Harris Clark Bonnie E. Cobb

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Heins Philip C. Henderson

Wendy and Jeremy Strick Mr. and Mrs. Russell Sublette Emily and Stephen Summers

and Cecilia V. Velasquez Elliott

Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. England Gail O. Ewing Amy CindyFaulconerandCharlie Feld

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Coleman Martin S. Cox and Sherry Tucker Cox Hannah Cutshall

Mr. and Mrs. John D. McStay Dr. and Mrs. Venu Menon Joyce and Harvey Mitchell

Greg Swalwell and Terry Connor Rosalie Taubman

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Alan Smith and Scott J. Canfield

Susan and Bob Kaminski

Ella Wall Prichard Mr. and Mrs. David M. Pridham Katherine and Eric Reeves Lisa and John Rocchio Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Rozelle Mary Jane and Frank Ryburn Sarah A. Samaan George ManjushaSchnerkShankaradas and James Friedmann

Lisa and Peter Kraus Jun Il and Jae Sun Kwun Paula Lambert

Amy and Lee Fikes

Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gibbs Kathleen and Robert Gibson Ilene AlisonGreeneandOwen Hannay

Lloyd Lumpkins Emily Maduro and Joseph J. Wielebinski Charlene Marsh

SharonStoffelandMichael Young

Mrs. Charlie Adamski Caulkins J. Patrick Collins Bela and Chase Cooley Claire JenniferDewarandJohn Eagle

Mary and Mike Terry Haley and Jackson Thomas

Mr. and Mrs. Felix Thaddeus Arroyo Lisa Brooke and Selwyn Bingham Nancy and Clint Carlson

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Seay

The following members of the Contemporary Art Initiative support the DMA’s contemporary art exhibitions and programming with an annual gift of $15,000 or more.

Aaron B. Zeman and Dane A. Ruccio

Mr. and Mrs. John S. Lemak Cynthia and Forrest Miller Tricia Miller

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Deedie Rose

Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Shufeldt Gayle

Listings as of July 31, 2022

Pam and Jeffrey S. Ellerman Dr. and Mrs. Brian Gogel Craig and Kathryn Hall Nasiba and Thomas A. Hartland-Mackie Alejandro Laplana

Patricia Villareal and Tom S. Leatherbury Shelby Wagner and Niven Morgan Logan MarnieWallerandKern Wildenthal

CONTEMPORARY ART INITIATIVE

Jessica and Dirk Nowitzki Janelle and Alden Pinnell Allen and Kelli Questrom Cindy and Howard Rachofsky Nancy C. Rogers and Richard R. Rogers Catherine and Will Rose

Mr. and Mrs. Greg A. Venker

Cathryn Withrow

ACKNOWLEDGMENT WE ARE DEEPLY GRATEFUL FOR ALL OUR DONORS AND SPONSORS FOR THEIR GENEROUS SUPPORT OF ART BALL LX . VanSPONSORSCleef&Arpels Dinner Sponsor Peggy and Carl AutomotiveSewell/SewellCompanies Valet Sponsor Nancy C. Rogers and Richard R. Rogers Decor Sponsor Randall Van Wolfswinkel Entertainment Sponsor Luxury Stores at Amazon Cocktail Sponsor Christie’s Welcome Dinner Sponsor Saks Welcome Dinner Sponsor PNC Bank Lounge Sponsor Sidley Austin LLP Security Sponsor IN-KINDSWOON,SPONSORSMissyRSVPDroesePRTheStudioKástraEliónVodkaChampagneLallier HALL Wines and HALL Arts Hotel Maestro Dobel Tequila Party! JacksonDallasDurham Events Patron Magazine PaperCity Magazine DJ Lucy DIRECTORWrubelLeighAnneand Dave Clark The Eugene McDermott Foundation The Hartland & Mackie Family Foundation Susan and Bill Montgomery Adriana and Guillermo Perales CHAIRMANMollandCharlie Anderson Gonzalo Bueno and Michael McCray Diane and Stuart Bumpas Alana and Adrian Sada Gayle PHILANTHROPISTStoffelBalenciagaChristianDiorCoutureKelliandGeraldFordRobertHallam,Jr.HeadingtonCompaniesAnnandLeeHobsonJenniferandTomKarolKaseyandToddLemkin 26 Fall 2022

CartierJennifer

THANK YOU TO THE INCREDIBLY TALENTED BRIAN BOLKE, WHOSE CREATIVE VISION MADE THE EVENING A TREMENDOUS SUCCESS. Tracee Nichols Jessica and Dirk Nowitzki Katherine and Eric Reeves Nancy Cain Marcus Robertson and Sanford Robertson Catherine and Will Rose Deedie Rose Elisa and Stephen Summers Christen and Derek BENEFACTORWilsonAT&T,Inc. Jacquelin and William Atkinson Zoe Bonnette Cindy and LindsayChanelBrown Collins Permian Bela and Chase Cooley John Dayton Jennifer and John Eagle Laura and Walter Elcock Sabrina and Field Harrison Marguerite Hoffman and Tom Lentz Susan and Robert Kaminski Daffan and Doug Nettle Cindy and Howard Rachofsky Marsha and Mike Scimo Gowri and Alex Sharma Amanda and Charlie Shufeldt Jo and Andre Staffelbach Vaughn O. Vennerberg II

PATRONSamiAbboud and Ross Blackstone Sheryl Adkins-Green and Geoff Green Wesley Bailey and Ryan DeLaune Alana and Ronald Brame Carpenters Workshop Gallery and James Chandler Dolce & Gabbana Pam and Jeffrey S. Ellerman First Horizon Bank Arlene Ford and Chris P. Reynolds Sarah Ryan Greene and Charles V. Greene Fern SophiaJohnsonandWillis Johnson JPMorgan Chase Juliette and Mark Moussa Wendy and Bill Payne SOCO Gallery Anne and Steve Stodghill Vogue Tayler Walter and Alejandro Laplana

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT Lucy and Thomas Burns Molly Byrne Noa JoyceDowlGossFanchonand Howard Hallam Carol and John Levy Emily and Stephen Summers

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ON THE CARTIERSCENE AND ISLAMIC ART: IN SEARCH OF MODERNITY MEMBER OPENING 28 Fall 2022

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ON THE OCTAVIOSCENE MEDELLÍN: SPIRIT AND FORM MEMBER OPENING 30 Fall 2022

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SPIRIT LODGE: FROM SPIRO MEMBER OPENING

MISSISSIPPIAN ART

DESIGN DECORATIVEAND

Devastator Brooch depicts the global consequences of the COVID-19 virus. Contrary to the work’s name, Fuchi has a more optimistic outlook about the pandemic. Here, he endeavors to express the numerous times humans have faced and overcome crises. He once stated, “Every time we overcome the crisis and continued to prosper. Isn’t it a proof that we human beings can always overcome such obstacles?”

Devastator Brooch , 2021. Arata Fuchi. Silver, gold, copper, shibuichi, and palladium. Dallas Museum of Art, TwoxTwo Wearable Art Fund, 2022.25. © Arata Fuchi.

LATIN AMERICAN ART

This is the DMA’s first painting by Leonora Carrington, a pivotal Surrealist artist who settled in Mexico City at the outbreak of World War II. In the 1950s, Carrington began to explore themes of magic and mysticism in her paintings. In Under the Compass Rose, the artist shows three figures—two of whom were acquaintances of hers—gathered around an alchemical furnace, reimagined by the artist as a living creature.

Fuchi’scommunities.

Erykah Badu Vessel exemplifies Lugo’s ceramic works inspired by a fusion of politics, hip-hop, and graffiti art. The work bears a portrait of Dallas singersongwriter Erykah Badu on one side, and on the other a hiphop skeleton wearing a snapback baseball cap and a ring with the word “hustle”; both images reference hip-hop and Black culture. Lugo is known for ceramic works intended to spark conversations within

ACQUISITIONS

Erykah Badu Vessel , 2021. Roberto Lugo. Glazed ceramic. Dallas Museum of Art, Discretionary Decorative Arts Fund, 2022.24. © Roberto Lugo.

ART 32 Fall 2022

Under the Compass Rose , April 1955. Leonora Carrington. Oil on canvas. Dallas Museum of Art, The Eugene and Margaret McDermott Art Fund, Inc., 2022.22.MCD. © 2022 Leonora Carrington / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

NEW

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Quarles is at the forefront of artists today who undertake an ambiguous approach to figuration and conception of space as a way to explore the radical potential of the present moment. Her works are simultaneously beautiful and jarring, as her semi-abstract figures meld into one another and in and out of the back- and foreground. This points, in part, to the power of the “in between” to celebrate the fluidity of identity and experience.

POSTWAR AND CONTEMPORARY ART

Another Day Over, 2022. Christina Quarles. Acrylic on canvas. Dallas Museum of Art, The Rachofsky Collection Acquisition Fund, 2022.38. © Christina Quarles.

For three decades, Kim has combined longstanding elements and materials of East Asian ink painting with the compositional language of modern gestural and geometric abstraction. In Sculpture, she carefully arranges uniform paper patterns made of Korean hanji, or mulberry paper, to explore the transitory space between two-dimensional painting and volume-filling sculpture. Sculpture is an exciting addition to the DMA’s unique strength in Korean postwar Tansaekhwa monochrome painting and offers new perspectives in this male-dominated art movement.

Sculpture, 2019. Minjung Kim. Mixed media on mulberry Hanji paper. Dallas Museum of Art, TWO x TWO for AIDS and Art Fund, 2022.31. © Minjung Kim.

POSTWAR AND CONTEMPORARY ART

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This painting of a woman with a parrot reflects a popular trope in 19th-century Orientalist art. Playing upon Western stereotypes and erotic fantasy, it features a naked concubine idling within the confines of a harem. At first glance, there doesn’t appear to be much of a narrative. Our focus is directed to the appreciation of the figure’s sensuous curves and the artist’s skillful handling of light as it falls across feathers, skin, and fabric; nevertheless, the pairing of woman and bird has built-in meaning—both are presented as “exotic” objects treasured for their beauty and kept as prisoners in their respective cages.

EUROPEAN ART

NEW ACQUISITIONS

A Bravo Figure , about 1605. Bartolomeo Manfredi. Oil on canvas. Dallas Museum of Art, Marguerite and Robert Hoffman Fund and gift of James Sight, 2022.26.

It is very exciting to add this rare painting by Bartolomeo Manfredi, one of Caravaggio’s closest followers, to the DMA’s historic European collection. In this portrayal of a mercenary soldier, Manfredi deploys realism, dramatic lighting, and a shallow, stage-like setting to give the figure a startlingly lifelike presence. The bravo turns to address us, one hand clutching a paper scroll and the other resting on the pommel of his sword. Will this encounter end well?

Woman in a Harem Courtyard , 1875. Luis Ricardo Falero. Oil on canvas. Dallas Museum of Art, gift of Dr. Cecilia Valdes and Kenneth H. White, 2022.32.3.

EUROPEAN ART

Abstraction was created in early 1917 in Bermuda, where Hartley had geographically and emotionally distanced himself from the critical pressures of New York following the negative reception of his expressionistic paintings created in Germany during 1914–1915. Bermuda marked a transitional period for Hartley in which he explored geometric abstraction—specifically Synthetic Cubism—in a series of works based on nautical themes. Here, he depicts the Elsa, a Danish ship that was in harbor for repairs. Abstraction beautifully addresses a need in the Museum’s collection for works documenting the influence of European avant-garde movements on American artists during the 1910s.

Abstraction , 1917. Marsden Hartley. Oil on board laid on board. Dallas Museum of Art, The Eugene and Margaret McDermott Art Fund, Inc., 2022.20.MCD.

This cotton kente cloth is composed of 24 strips that were sewn together to make a man’s toga-like garment. The cloth was woven by an unknown male master among the Ewe peoples in Ghana. A versatile weaver, he has mastered the complex geometric designs on kentes made by his rivals, the Asante royal weavers. He altered the Asante designs by incorporating figurative motifs (in this case human hands), a hallmark of Ewe weaving.

Men’s Prestige Kente Cloth, 1900-1930s. Ewe peoples. Volta, Ghana. Cotton. Dallas Museum of Art, Textile Purchase Fund, 2022.34.7.

AFRICAN ART

ART Fall 2022 35

UNITED ANDCANADIANSTATES

Currently obsessed with: Stranger Things. I bingewatched it through COVID. I love that it goes back to the 80s and it’s so nostalgic!

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing:

It sounds conceited but, shopping, ha-ha. I also find myself creating any kind of art, or thrifting fabric to sew 18th–19th-century ball gowns for Renaissance festivals.

My favorite aspect of my job:

My favorite aspect of my job: Working with everyone. You learn something from everybody—they do a lot of different things besides their work here.

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HANNAH INSTITUTIONALDALEGIVING COORDINATOR

My role at the Museum, at a glance: I assist Alison, the DMA Store director, and manage the store, staff, schedules, supplies, financial responsibilities, and occasional buying. I do a lot behind the scenes.

My role at the Museum, at a glance:

I am constantly learning, talking to people, and discovering new things about organizations.

I’m usually at home playing music. I play a lot of different instruments, like brass, guitar, bass, and keyboard.

MARTA GONZALEZ ASSISTANT STORE MANAGER

BEHIND THE SCENES SPOTLIGHT

LUKE BUILDINGPETERSONASSISTANT

I help maintain day-to-day operations on maintenance. My main job is to help regulate the climate inside the Museum. We try to keep it at 70 degrees.

I’m also a Anthropologist,Forensicso I'll be at digs or the medical examiner’s office analyzing bones.

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing:

My role at the Museum, at a glance:

Currently obsessed with: Books! I like to read as an escape from reality; it’s an excuse to think about other places. The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury is a favorite of mine.

I like being indirectly a part of the conservation process by controlling the climate that houses the artworks. It makes me feel like I’m doing important work.

Currently obsessed with: I’ve been really into making simple pasta dishes as a late-night snack. I’m kind of a night owl.

My favorite aspect of my job:

On the Development Team, I help facilitate grants in Corporate Giving and Corporate Partnerships.

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing:

My favorite aspect of my job: I really enjoy doing title treatments for shows. I start with the artist’s name, finding a cool font it’s going to look fun in, and then tweak that together with my boss and the curators.

RACHAEL HUSZAR EXHIBITION DESIGNER

My favorite aspect of my job: I like that my job is so different on a day-to-day basis. I get to be creative in different ways, and I enjoy the variety.

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: You can find me gardening and doing things with my dog.

Currently obsessed with: I like to learn new skills, so right now I’m teaching myself woodworking. It’s kind of going okay, ha-ha, but it’s also a challenge.

My role at the Museum, at a glance: I welcome people and try to make their visit pleasant. I also protect the art and help facilitate the rules and policies of the Museum.

Currently obsessed with: I started a garden over the summer, and I know very little. I’m just throwing seeds into the dirt and seeing what happens.

JC DIRECTORBIGORNIAOFCOMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

Currently obsessed with: I’m a spiritual person. I believe there’s a Creator and there are things going on in the world that people shouldn’t be ignoring. I think people get caught up in not seeing the bigger picture.

My favorite aspect of my job: I love art, so I like being around the art itself and the experience. I’m a very creative person, so I like to get ideas!

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: When I’m at home, I spend a lot of time studying in Chinese.

My role at the Museum, at a glance: I’m on the Exhibitions and Interpretation team and I work with graphics to decide what each show is going to look and feel like.

GREG GOURLEY GALLERY ATTENDANT

My role at the Museum, at a glance: My job is figuring out how we engage with different communities in Dallas.

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: I would say trying out new skills. That’s a big one for me, teaching myself new things. I spend a lot of time on YouTube.

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When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: Oh, I cook! I cook traditional meals.

My role at the Museum, at a glance:

I am responsible for all electrical components in the galleries, whether it be lamps, interactives, iPads, videos, neons, or artworks.

Currently obsessed with: I have a 9-month-old baby, so I’m currently obsessed with my first-born son, Luka.

My role at the Museum, at a glance:

LANCE LANDER SENIOR MANAGER OF GALLERY TECHNOLOGY

It’s impossible to pinpoint my favorite aspect of the job. I love all of it. I love being at the intersection of art and technology and so much more.

Currently obsessed with: I do handwork and was part of the Staff Show one time. I made special writing with a needle and called it “Welcome.”

My favorite aspect of my job:

My basic job and very important part of my work is opening, closing, and inspecting galleries. The first thing I do in my day is check the artwork and area, and see that everything is in good condition and in its place.

My son plays a lot of basketball, so I’m always at a basketball game. It’s either practice or a game.

I love working with living artists. I think that is the coolest thing about contemporary art. We get to ask all the questions that probably a lot of curators would love to ask artists who have since passed on.

BEZA HAILE GALLERY ATTENDANT

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When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing:

BEHIND THE SCENES SPOTLIGHT

Getting to meet and see different people. They’re nice and respectful and they all know me and call me by my name.

Currently obsessed with: It depends on what installation I’m working on, so right now it’s Movement

My role at the Museum, at a glance:

There are seven artworks I’m installing.

KATHERINE BRODBECK HOFFMAN FAMILY SENIOR CURATOR OF CONTEMPORARY ART

I am the senior curator of contemporary art. We are responsible for exhibitions of living artists and maintaining the collection of post-1945 art from around the world.

I love to do yoga—it’s probably my favorite hobby!

My favorite aspect of my job:

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing:

My favorite aspect of my job:

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: Running. I ran my first marathon in May. I did a lot of early mornings and a few half marathons to train for it.

PETER SKOW SPANISH LANGUAGE EDITOR & TRANSLATOR

My favorite aspect of my job: It’s my colleagues. It’s the quality of the people I work with, their work ethic, and the team working together.

My role at the Museum, at a glance: I translate anything that the Museum needs in Spanish. This usually means exhibition and permanent collection text, but I also do Cafe menus, parking garage signage, and any other application needs.

My role at the Museum, at a glance: For the collection and exhibitions, I handle shipping, storage, and overseeing installations, logistics, and documentation of artworks.

My favorite aspect of my job: It’s when I get to a phrase and think, “I don’t know how I’m going to say that,” and I have to dig to figure it out.

TRICIA EARL REGISTRAR FOR LOANS

Currently obsessed with: My daughter is about to start high school, so I’ve been getting her ready for that. We’ve been shopping for a new wardrobe and bought some fun things.

My role at the Museum, at a glance: I’m responsible for all outgoing and incoming loans for the collection. I’m also the alternate coordinator for TSA.

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: Cooking. I love to cook; it’s my stress reliever! I find it relaxing. But I cannot bake—I am not a baker, ha-ha.

CLAUDIA M.SANCHEZ ASSOCIATE REGISTRAR FOR EXHIBITIONS

My favorite aspect of my job: The feeling you get when you’re under pressure and focusing on a deadline. I love the anticipation and excitement of seeing something come to life.

When I am not working at the DMA, you will find me doing: I’m an avid snail mailer. I’ve invested a small fortune in my paper collection. I’m constantly writing.

Currently obsessed with: I’m kind of a bookworm. I just read TheThree-Body Problem by Liu Cixin, which is a sci-fi mystery book.

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Currently obsessed with: I’ve never had a green thumb or tried to, but now I’m obsessed with plants. I spend a lot of time nurturing, loving, and talking to them.

, Director of Collections Management

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Veronica Myers, Curatorial Assistant for Contemporary Art

Curatorial NicoleMyers

Agustin Arteaga, The Eugene McDermott Director  Tamara Wootton Forsyth, The Marcus-Rose Family Deputy Director  Sara Hillis Ousby, Director of Strategic Initiatives  Kathy Everitt, Manager of Board Relations

Christine Burger, Research Assistant  Roslyn Walker, Senior Curator of the Arts of Africa, the Americas, and the Pacific and The Margaret McDermott Curator of African Art  Katherine Brodbeck, Hoffman Family Senior Curator of Contemporary Art

, Interim Chief Curator and The Barbara Thomas Lemmon Senior Curator of European Art  Meg Roppolo, Curatorial Assistant for European and Islamic Art

CRAFTING THE JOURNEY THE DMA STAFF

Sarah Schleuning, The Margot B. Perot Senior Curator of Decorative Arts and Design  Martha MacLeod, Senior Curatorial Administrator, and Curatorial Assistant for African Art, Decorative Arts and Design, and Works on Paper  Sue Canterbury, The Pauline Gill Sullivan Curator of American Art  Mark Castro, The Jorge Baldor Curator of Latin American Art  Michelle Rich, The Ellen and Harry S. Parker III Assistant Curator of Indigenous American Arts

Shannon Sweeney, Associate Registrar for Collections  Jean Rowe, Collections Assistant  Justin Penov, Preparator Team Lead  Russell Sublette, Senior Preparator, Head Mount Maker  Doug Velek, Senior Preparator, Framer  Mary Nicolett, Senior Preparator, IPM Coordinator  Sean Cairns, Preparator, Collections & Exhibitions  Erick Baker, Preparator, Mount Maker  Brian Peterman, Lighting Preparator  Karen Fulton, Preparator  David Hill, Preparator  Martha Lopez, Gallery Maintenance Specialist  Elia Maturino, Gallery Maintenance Assistant  Conservation FranBaas

, Chief Development Officer  Violet Correa, Development Coordinator  Susan McIntyre, Senior Director of Major Gifts  Caroline Irvin, Major Gifts Officer  Jessica Kyle, Annual Programs Coordinator  Isabel Gray, Director of Special Events  Lisa Winkley, Manager of Special Events  Ingrid Van Haastrecht, Senior Director of Development Operations and Institutional Giving  Hannah Dale, Institutional Giving Coordinator  Yemi Dubale, Manager of Development Information Services  Yared Dibab, Development Information Services Assistant Manager  Belem Perez De La Fuente, Gift Processing Associate  Patrick Pelz, Senior Manager of Donor Operations & Analytics

, Interim Chief Conservator  Laura Hartman, Paintings Conservator

CynthiaDevelopment Calabrese

Director’s Office

Collections IsabelStauffer

Laurie McGill, Administrative Assistant to the Director of Collections Management  Carol Griffin, Senior Registrar for Acquisitions & Deaccessions  Tricia Earl, Registrar for Loans  Claudia Sanchez, Associate Registrar for Exhibitions  Julie Herrick, Associate Registrar for Loans & Exhibitions  Katie Province, Associate Registrar for Collections & Exhibitions

Vivian Li, The Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art

Sabrina Lovett, Director of Exhibitions and Interpretation

Amandine Bandelier, Exhibitions Coordinator  Eric Zeidler, Publications Manager  Queta Moore Watson, Senior Editor  Peter Skow, Spanish Language Editor and Translator  Emily Schiller, Senior Manager of Interpretation  Emily Wiskera, Interpretation Specialist

Education StaceyLizotte

Carolyn Hartley, Administrative Coordinator for Arts & Letters Live  Sara Greenberg, Manager of Adult Programs  Cristina Echezarreta, Manager of Adult Programs  Bora Leiby, Education Coordinator

Luis Gomez, Security Control Room Relief Supervisor  Tina McQueen, Security Control Room Officer  Jaime Rojas, Security Control Room Officer  Narvas Scates, Security Control Room Officer  Marylyn Burnett, Security Control Room Officer  Andrew McAda, Security Control Room Officer  Claudia Brewer, Security Control Room Officer  Inocente Martinez, Security Control Room Officer  Cynthia Rowe, Security Control Room Officer  Tiara Scott, Security Control Room Officer

Melissa Brito, Manager of Access Programs & Resources  Michelle Reyes, C3 Gallery Manager  Alondra Gamino, C3 Gallery Coordinator  Michelle Witcher, Senior Manager for Arts & Letters Live  Jennifer Krogsdale, Program Manager for Arts & Letters Live

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Jesse Romero, Operations Maintainer

Facility Operations & Security

Denise Gonzalez, Senior Manager of Family & Early Learning Programs  Adriana Martinez-Mendoza, Manager of Teen Programs  Emily Hogrefe-Ribeiro, Manager of School Programs  Bekah Kubosumi, Manager of School Outreach Programs  Juliet Castro, Family & School Programs Coordinator  JC Bigornia, Director of Community Engagement  Paulina Dosal-Terminel, Manager of Community Programs

Exhibitions & Interpretation

Luz Maria Rico Cortes, Operations Maintainer  Shalamar Jackson, Security Manager

Ken Bennett, Director of Facility Operations & Security  John Claire, Building Manager  Luke Peterson, Building Assistant  Josh Harstrom, Carpentry Manager  Darrell Dubose, Painter  Jesus Rivera, Painter  Tara Eaden, Operations Manager  Alesia Harrison, Supply, Shipping, and Receiving  Alfreda Mitchell, Supply, Shipping, and Receiving  Latasha Burns, Operations Supervisor  Gloria Ramirez, Operations Supervisor  John Young, Operations Supervisor  Maria Moreno, Operations Maintainer  Nellie Frayre, Operations Maintainer

, The Allen and Kelli Questrom Center for Creative Connections Education Director  Leah Hanson, Director of Family, Youth, & School Programs

Jeremiah Roblez, Security Control Room Supervisor  Sylvia Chaney, Security Control Room Supervisor  Benjamin Morales, Security Control Room Relief Supervisor

Keiaira Cox, Operations Maintainer  Lena Wright, Operations Maintainer

Kate Aoki, Head of Exhibition Design  Lance Lander, Senior Manager of Gallery Technology  Rachael Huszar, Exhibition Designer  Amanda Dietz Brooks, Exhibitions Manager  Veronica Treviño, Exhibitions and Publications Coordinator

Efren Ramirez, Operations Maintainer

Guest PhilippaServices Maples, Assistant Manager of Guest Services Operations  Samantha Velarde, Assistant Manager of Guest Services  Raquel Sandoval, Guest Services Supervisor  Brenda Trevizo, Guest Services Associate Operations   Tammy Bradley, Receptionist  Genet Mamuye, Guest Services Associate  Cathy Davis-Famous, Guest Services Associate Fikirte Sima, Guest Services Associate Al Curry, Guest Services Associate Lesley Ayala, Guest Services Associate Maddy Figueroa, Guest Services Associate Sebastian Robles, Guest Services Associate Elvis Guaman, Guest Services Associate Paulos Feerow, Guest Services Associate

Finance & Accounting

Sally Pietsch, Chief Financial Officer  Karen Black, Controller  Kimberly McNiece, Senior Accountant  Linda Kelley, Payroll Manager  Angela Rogers, Manager of Accounts Payable  Linda Smith, Asset Accountant  Leslie Martinez, Staff Accountant

CRAFTING THE JOURNEY THE DMA STAFF

Jenny McCoy, Gallery Attendant Manager  Denise Augusta, Scheduling Manager  Claudia Choy, Gallery Attendant Supervisor  Asheber Shoamanal, Gallery Attendant Supervisor  Jasmine Howard, Gallery Attendant Supervisor  Troy Camplin, Gallery Attendant Supervisor  Jonathan Martinez, Dual Rate Gallery Attendant  Katy Drabek, Dual Rate Gallery Attendant  Mulualem Selassie, Gallery Attendant Ronald Baxter, Gallery Attendant Andre Anthony, Gallery Attendant Greg Gourley, Gallery Attendant Merertu Lelissa, Gallery Attendant Beza Haile, Gallery Attendant Alemayehu Kenno, Gallery Attendant Edward Zambrano, Gallery Attendant Joyce McCloud, Gallery Attendant Lincoln Butts, Gallery Attendant Doris Barkins, Gallery Attendant Hanna Deme, Gallery Attendant Clint Skinner, Gallery Attendant Vicki Turner, Gallery Attendant Aweke Beza, Gallery Attendant Patricia Hamra, Gallery Attendant Crystal Houston, Gallery Attendant Ndukwe Ijomah, Gallery Attendant Anthony Hill, Gallery Attendant Feliza Vidaurri, Gallery Attendant Renata Mitchell, Gallery Attendant Genet Wako, Gallery Attendant Kelly Randall, Gallery Attendant Detra Lewis, Gallery Attendant

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Marti Hail, Gallery Attendant Brandon Harden, Gallery Attendant Robert Saldana, Gallery Attendant Yasmin Hernandez, Gallery Attendant Ron Ray, Gallery Attendant David Herrera, Gallery Attendant Rachel Oney, Gallery Attendant Jake Ledbetter, Gallery Attendant Sandi Newmon, Gallery Attendant Nancy Lujan, Gallery Attendant Anne Bowen, Gallery Attendant David Geary, Gallery Attendant Shiree Williams, Gallery Attendant Zayda Lara, Gallery Attendant Riley Widener, Gallery Attendant Jessa Ogle, Gallery Attendant Norma Molina, Gallery Attendant Stephanie Perez, Gallery Attendant Indi Gonzalez, Gallery Attendant Loui Hernandez, Gallery Attendant Fred Wikelski, Gallery Attendant Cindy Balderas, Gallery Attendant Robin Glanville, Gallery Attendant Timothy Evers, Gallery Attendant

Gallery Attendants

Human Resources

Library & Archives

Jenny Stone, Interim Director of Libraries and Librarian  Kathleen Alleman, Associate Librarian  Mary Leonard, Reference Librarian  Cathy Zisk, Manager of Technical Services  Anna Rockey, Assistant Librarian for Cataloging  Hillary Bober, Archivist

Brad Pritchett, Chief Marketing & Communications Officer  Lizz DeLera, Creative Director  Vynsie Law, Senior Art Director  Kenna Montgomery, Graphic Designer  Taylor DeCarlo, Graphic Designer  Janet Hitt, Director of Marketing  Estefany Mendoza Salazar, Content Manager  Laura Spooner, Marketing & Communications Coordinator

Aschelle Morgan, Director of Communications & Public Affairs  Ellee McMeans, Communications Manager  Trey Burns, Multimedia Producer

DMA

IT & Digital Media

Fall 2022 43

AlisonStoreSilliman, Director of Retail  Marta Gonzalez, Assistant Store Manager  Marissa Negrete, Museum Store Supervisor  Alex Montenegro, Shipping and Receiving Processor  Robert Opel, Sales Associate  Bryony Smith, Sales Associate  Rachael Armstead, Sales Associate  Elisette Marin, Sales Associate

Andi Orkin, Human Resources Supervisor  Heather Phillips, Recruiter  Sarah Coffey, Human Resources Specialist for Internships  Monica Rodriguez, Human Resources Coordinator

Amir Tabei, Chief Information Officer  Jeff Brownlee, Senior Application Developer  Dan Reaka, Information Systems Manager  Cameron Adkins, IT Support Specialist  Brian MacElhose, Collections Information Manager  Giselle Castro-Brightenburg, Digital Media Manager  Paul Molinari, Intellectual Property Manager  Brad Flowers, Head Photographer  Chad Redmon, Collections Photographer  Carl Daniel, Manager of Multimedia Services  JD Shipman, Multimedia Services Technician  Irl Ellis, Multimedia Services Technician

Marketing & Communications

Mr. Lamont and his wife, Mary Noël Lamont, were dedicated supporters of many of the Museum’s initiatives. Married since 1974, Mr. and Mrs. Lamont joined the Museum as members in 1988 and supported major programs and exhibitions, including Art Ball and Silver Supper, the Ellsworth Kelly in Dallas exhibition catalogue, and the presentation of Mexico 1900–1950: Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, José Clemente Orozco, and the Avant-Garde , as well as the construction of the Inge-Lise Eckmann Lane Paintings Conservation Center. In 2005 one of the Museum’s quadrant galleries was named the Mary Noël and Bill Lamont Gallery in recognition of the couple’s philanthropy. Mrs. Lamont has also served as a DMA trustee and as a member of the Collections Committee, and, along with her family, endowed the Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art position in 1995.

“Bill was a special friend and a superb leader to all of us at the DMA,” said Dr. Agustín Arteaga, the DMA’s Eugene McDermott Director. “He was known for his wide-ranging interests in all facets of the Museum’s operations, and he was always eager to learn more and provide insight and guidance where he could. His influence on me was tremendous. Most recently, Bill played a significant and immeasurable role in guiding us through difficult times and charting our course for the future as a truly 21st-century museum. I am thankful I had the opportunity to know and learn from Bill, and I offer my condolences to his wife, Mary Noël, and to his sons, Max and Miles, and their families. We will miss his keen insights, brilliant mind, kind and steady influence, and sly humor. His loss will be felt deeply.”

The Dallas Museum of Art greatly mourns the passing of William “Bill” M. Lamont, Jr., Chairman of the DMA’s Board of Trustees and a longtime friend and supporter of the Museum. A beloved friend and inspiring leader, Mr. Lamont was known for his steady leadership, wise counsel, and love for the institution, along with his quick wit and charm. His deep and personal commitment to the work and mission of the DMA has shaped the Museum into the strong institution it is today.

IN

“Bill loved our museum as he loved our city. The future of the Dallas Museum of Art is brighter because of his strong, steady leadership and his magnificent dedication as our Chairman and longtime trustee,” said Catherine Marcus Rose, former President of the DMA’s Board of Trustees. “He was my partner and our friend. The Board of Trustees and Museum leadership are deeply grateful for his innumerable contributions in service and his steadfast and enthusiastic support of our mission."

Statement on the Death of William M. Lamont, Jr., Board Chairman and Longtime Friend and Supporter of the Dallas Museum of Art WILLIAMMEMORIAMM. LAMONT, JR.

Mr. Lamont’s contributions to the Museum of time, expertise, and support over the years were many. He had served on the Board of Trustees since 2013 and was elected Chairman in 2018. Since 2004, when he first joined the Board’s Budget and Finance Committee, the Museum greatly benefited from his extraordinary expertise and dedication. Most recently, Mr. Lamont’s sure direction during the Museum’s closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic and related financial challenges ensured the institution’s stability and survival through this challenging period. He will also be fondly remembered for his good cheer, kindness, and friendship. He never hesitated to express his encouragement and appreciation of the DMA’s accomplishments and successes.

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Rooted is organized by the Dallas Museum of Art. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

@dallasmuseumart CONNECT WITH US dma.org

Guadalupe Rosales: Drifting on a Memory is organized by the Dallas Museum of Art. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism is organized by the Dallas Museum of Art. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form is organized by the Dallas Museum of Art. Support for this exhibition comes from The Jorge Baldor Curatorial Fund for Latin American Art. Exhibition catalogue support is provided by the Texas Art Collectors Organization (TACO). The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

Fall 2022 45

Saints, Sinners, Lovers, and Fools: 300 Years of Flemish Masterworks is co-organized by the Denver Art Museum and The Phoebus Foundation, Antwerp (Belgium). The exhibition is presented by Texas Instruments. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances is organized by the Dallas Museum of Art. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

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