February 2018

Seven Folds from Tires to Roof

“If big things come in small packages, what comes in a 10 pound, seven ounce, brown paper package that measures 2 feet by 2 feet by 5 1/2 inches?

A 10 foot 3 1/2 inch[-tall] 36 foot 2 inch-long life-size poster of a Greyhound bus, what else?”

 

That was the beginning of an article by Sandee Krupp for an unnamed publication, a clipping of which was found in a University Gallery Press Book from 1969. The photo in this article shows the artwork being unfolded in a hallway in Northrup Auditorium, the former home of the art collection and the University Gallery. The unfolding and refolding of a life-sized screen-printed photomural of a Greyhound bus sounds like happening in itself!

Page from the 1969 Press Book in the Weisman Art Museum archival collection at the University of Minnesota.

This enormous print was conceived by Mason Williams. Williams is known more for his music and the theme song he wrote for the (sometimes controversial) Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour than for his other artistic expressions. One of the Weisman Art Museum’s registrars shared this enlightening document from the object file of Actual Size Photograph of an Actual Size Bus.

120 feet of Scotch brand double-faced tape? Is that archival?!

Document from WAM’s object file for “Actual Size Photograph of an Actual Bus”, circa 1967.

Krupp’s article ends:

One observer suggested a new gallery–just for the bus.
And so, after many “Well, what can we do with it?” and not one workable answer, the bus was folded back up again, seven folds from tires to roof and 32 folds from headlights to the rear bumpers.

“Seven folds from tires to roof and 32 folds from headlights to the rear bumpers”, it lay safely tucked away in 1969 and waiting for decades to come. It took not just a new gallery but a whole new building for there to be enough space to display this work of art.  Seen here, too large to be framed, photographed while on display in the exhibition Reviewing the Real (6/8/2013 to 9/8/2013).

Mason Williams, with photography by Max Yavno, Actual Size Photograph of an Actual Bus, 1967, screenprint on paper, 123-1/2 x 434 in., Collection of the Weisman Art Museum, University of Minnesota, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ruben, 1969.30.

And “seven folds from tires to roof and 32 folds from headlights to the rear bumpers”, it lays today, safely tucked away and waiting for the next time.

Heather Carroll is the processing archivist for the Weisman Art Museum‘s collection at the University of Minnesota Archives. This project was made possible by funds provided by the State of Minnesota from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the Minnesota Historical Society.

 

 


Bits and Pieces

 Life is so often in the details, all the little things mixed up together that make your life yours.  Artist Lawrence Weiner may have put it best in his public artwork formerly on the exterior of the Walker Art Center: “Bits and pieces put together to present a semblance of a whole”.

Many art exhibitions pull together the most exemplary highlights of a movement or time period, an artist’s career, the most brilliant or desired works in a collection or shining stars of a thematic discourse…in short: The Most. On the other hand, Sometimes exhibitions leave The Most and cross over into a different territory with items so mundane or so unknown or so unusual that we gain a new perspective or a different understanding about the bits and pieces of life. I felt this a few years ago at the Minneapolis Institute of Art’s eye-opening exhibition “The Look of Love”, a collection of Georgian eye miniatures gathered by the David and Nan Skier.

I experienced this again in discovering archival materials about the Weisman Art Museum’s 2001 exhibition The Fritz Stransky Family Bookplate Collection – A Precarious Legacy of Hitler’s Europe. The title alone exploded with questions for: Who is Fritz Stransky and his family? What does it have to do with Hitler’s Europe? Why is a bookplate collection interesting or important? Why is the whole thing so precarious? My curiosity was piqued and slowly my questions were answered over the months of processing WAM’s archival materials.  First, I found an invitation to the exhibition’s opening. Weeks later, I discovered some slides of the bookplate artworks, then some drafts of the museum labels and a press release. Months later, the last items I found were the exhibition booklet and WAM newsletter containing so many answers.

From a draft of the exhibition’s label text, this exhibition contained “some 100 miniature prints from a personal collection that survived the Holocaust. The special exhibition examines the cultural and artistic milieu in which these bookplates were made and collected as well as their extraordinary journey from Czechoslovakia to Minnesota.”

 

Who are Fritz Stransky and his family? What does this have to do with Hitler’s Europe?

“Fritz Stransky, an avid bookplate and fine art collector and a lawyer by profession, was arrested and transported to Auschwitz concentration camp, where he died. Before he was arrested he gave some of his personal possessions, including the bookplate collection, to neighbors for protection. After World War II, this family returned the Stransky belongings to Mrs. Stransky and her daughter, Anita, both of whom survived the Holocaust. The bookplates remained in two suitcases in Madison, Wisconsin, where Anita Stransky lived with her husband, Walter Schwarz until they moved to St. Paul. She donated them to the Weisman Art Museum and the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies after the death of her mother in 1995.”

 

Why is a bookplate collection interesting or important?

“The Fritz Stransky collection represents a popular European hobby in the late 19th and early 20th centuries—bookplate collecting. The Stransky family lived in Czechoslovakia, a country within the lands of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire. Germany and Austro-Hungary were particularly strong outposts for bookplate creation and collecting. The exhibition includes etchings, engravings, lithographs, woodcuts, and more…These bookplates display the wealth of artistic styles that reigned between 1890 and 1930 in Europe. Superb examples of the modern styles of expressionism, futurism, art nouveau, and art deco contrast with older styles including neoclassicism, romanticism, and symbolism. The exhibition is divided into categories based upon the bookplates’ thematic content: mythology, periods of history, images of men and women. World War I, erotica, religion, and the influences of new art movements.”

To read more, click the exhibition booklet and finished press release:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From WAM’s Fall 2001 newsletter: “Though the exhibition The Fritz Stransky Family Bookplate Collection, focuses on one family’s precious collection and its survival of the Holocaust, the accompanying education programs present a broad set of issues connected to this historic period in Europe.”

Programs included the following lecture/talks:

  • Objects and Issues: The Question of Restitution of Looted Art from the Nazi Era and the Holocaust, presented by Stephen Feinstein with Lyndel King
  • The Architecture of Auschwitz, presented by Robert Jan van Pelt
  • Fritz Stransky: The Several Worlds of a Jewish Lawyer in Early 20th-Century Bohemia, presented by Gary B. Cohen

The Stransky story could have fallen apart and off the pages of history at so many points: if the neighbor family in Prague entrusted with Stransky’s belongings hadn’t been able to keep their promise; if none of the Stransky family had survived the concentration camps or had decided not to go back to Prague; if the suitcase of small prints had been forgotten along the way or been eaten by bugs while being stored in an attic or basement; if decedents hadn’t realized the value of these bookplates both as art objects and in representing their own family story. Precarious legacy, indeed. But the story didn’t fall apart or off the pages of history, but rather found a new home of research and access at UMN–“the bits and pieces put together to present a semblance of a whole.”

 

Heather Carroll is the processing archivist for the Weisman Art Museum‘s collection at the University of Minnesota Archives. This project was made possible by funds provided by the State of Minnesota from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the Minnesota Historical Society.


Power, Mutiny and Monster Island

While processing the archival materials of the curatorial department of the Weisman Art Museum, I came across an article from MN Daily called Imaginative Immersion: Three Days, Five Artists, which was about an atypical exhibit at the Weisman Art Museum in February of 2008. These five artists were part of a group independent study with UMN’s art department inspired by Paul Shambroom’s exhibit at WAM the previous spring titled Picturing Power. The independent course culminated in “a semi-impromptu mural” titled Mutiny. The students–Andy Brinkman, Brett Gustafson, Miles Mendenhall, Rhett Roberts and Travis Hetman–formed the group known as Monster Island. Over the course of three(ish) days, Monster Island installed Mutiny in the Shepherd Room of the Weisman Art Museum.

Monster Island

mon·ster is·land
-noun

  1. Multi-headed art beast originating from Minneapolis, MN. Known to eat art.
  2. Geographical location designed specifically for the containment of gigantic creatures.
Thanks to the Wayback Machine for the snippet above from Monster Island’s former website

To exhibit in a museum is a truly amazing opportunity for students. The only caveat to this opportunity: they could leave no mark or trace on the walls of this room. Instead the students used large sheets of paper “(sketched, painted and chalked) and a whole lot of blue masking tape.” 

“In their five-day project, Monster Island sought to address this relationship between public and private space, and the power between and throughout those spaces, not only through the final piece, but also through the interactive experience of construction. While the process unfurled as a sea of paper, paint and chalk onto the carpeted floor of the Shepherd Room, the guys encouraged museum-goers to enter, examine and discuss.”

MN Daily reporters followed the mural project’s installation, evolution and soundtrack from beginning to the opening celebration on Feb 24, 2008. The article mentions a timelapse of the installation that I’d love to see someday.

For more, click on the images below or contact nationalsales@mndaily.com for the more information or a copy of the article.

Mutiny article, part 1.

Mutiny article, part 2.

Mutiny article, part 3.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Heather Carroll is the processing archivist for the Weisman Art Museum‘s collection at the University of Minnesota Archives. This project was made possible by funds provided by the State of Minnesota from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the Minnesota Historical Society.