Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art
Kirkland Museum displays decorative art from 1880 to 1980, with over 3,300 examples of Arts & Crafts, Art Nouveau, Glasgow Style, Wiener Werkstätte, De Stijl, Bauhaus, Art Deco, Modern, and Pop Art. A retrospective of Colorado's distinguished painter, Vance Kirkland (1904-1981), and over 600 works of other modernist Colorado artists are also on view. Kirkland Museum is a member of Historic Artists' Homes and Studios, a program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Kirkland Museum displays a nationally important collection of decorative art (1878-1980) with more than 3,500 examples on view. A retrospective of Colorado painter Vance Kirkland (1904-81) is shown, as well as the work of 170 other regional artists.
INTERNATIONAL DECORATIVE ART
Kirkland Museum has one of the most important public displays of international decorative art in North America, from the last quarter of the 19th century through the first three quarters of the 20th century. More than 3,500 works are on view of Arts & Crafts, Art Nouveau, Glasgow Style, Wiener Werkstätte, De Stijl, Bauhaus, Art Deco, Modern and Pop Art. In this extensive collection, the works of more than 60 architects are on view.
COLORADO AND REGIONAL ART
A major survey of Colorado art and some regional art is documented. Over 700 works by about 170 artists are shown at any one time, drawing from a collection of more than 500 Colorado artists and about 4,900 works. The Colorado collection is concerned with a period from 1820 to about 1980 (traditional through modern), with an emphasis on the 1870s onwards.
VANCE KIRKLAND (1904-1981), COLORADO PAINTER
The museum shows a retrospective of Colorado's distinguished painter, Vance Kirkland (1904-1981). All five of Kirkland's major periods are on view: Designed Realism, Surrealism, Hard Edge Abstraction, Abstract Expressionism and the Dot Paintings. Kirkland's unique oil paint and water mixtures become fictitious nebulae; surrealist worlds unfold with deadwood creatures and fantastical plants from the Rocky Mountains; dot paintings coalesce as imaginary galaxies; Colorado's ghost towns and dramatic mountain scenes are frozen in time by Kirkland; pure abstractions are created from Kirkland's Synesthesia, an ability to sense color from-in Kirkland's case-listening to classical music and translating the sound vibrations into color combinations in his paintings.
UNUSUAL MUSEUM EXPERIENCE
In addition to its three collections, the way Kirkland Museum is displayed gives it a noticeably different atmosphere than most other museums. The art is arranged in "salon style" with fine art (paintings and sculpture) shown in the same galleries with decorative art. While rare, a few other museums have done this such as the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston and the Neue Galerie in New York. Furthermore, at Kirkland Museum paintings and objects are sometimes composed as vignettes where, for instance, Art Deco furniture is grouped together with a period radio, lamp, phone and other accessories, as if you have walked into someone's vintage home. Comparative displays are done where several styles of design, such as Arts & Crafts, Art Nouveau and Wiener Werkstätte are placed in the same gallery so that comparisons are facilitated. With the extensive displays of tableware, glassware and flatware of different eras, along with the furniture, Kirkland Museum illustrates the history of eating, drinking and sitting of much of the 20th century.
NATIONAL TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION
Kirkland Museum is a member of the Historic Artists' Homes and Studios, a program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. This division includes Kirkland's studio with those of Jackson Pollock/Lee Krasner, Thomas Hart Benton, Georgia O'Keeffe, Charles Burchfield, N. C. Wyeth, Grant Wood and others. The Kirkland Studio building, a former art school dating to 1911, is one of only two "Artists' Homes and Studios" sites in the 8-state Mountain Plains Region of the National Trust, along with the Charles Russell Museum in Montana. Kirkland's studio workroom has been maintained virtually as Kirkland left it and is part of the larger Kirkland Museum.
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