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Minerva Teichert’s “Pageants
in Paint” on View at BYU MOA
PROVO, Utah — When Minerva
Teichert attended art school in Chicago and New York in the early
1900s, mural paintings and theatrical pageants were dynamic components
of American popular culture. Teichert embraced these popular art
forms and used the visual language they provided to tell the stories
of her religious heritage and the American West.
“Minerva Teichert: Pageants
in Paint,” a new exhibition at the Brigham Young University
Museum of Art presented by Zions Bank, will examine how the American
mural and pageantry movements influenced Teichert’s artistic
production through 47 of her large-scale narrative murals. Some
of the works in the exhibition come from private collections and
have not been seen publicly for many years.

Indian Basket and Pottery Makers,
circa 1935, oil on canvas. Private collection.
The exhibition, which will be on
view from Friday, July 27, 2007 through Monday, May 26, 2008,
also will explore how Teichert’s personal dramatic flair
contributed to the theatrical characteristics of her murals of
religious and western subjects.
“This is a new approach to
looking at Minerva Teichert’s work,” says Marian Wardle,
curator of American art at the Museum of Art. “I hope visitors
don’t get the idea that this is the only way to look at
her work because her work can be examined and interpreted in many
different ways. But the influence of mural painting and pageantry
is one important element that I think will cause people to look
at her paintings in a different light. I hope it will help viewers
understand where Teichert was coming from and the culture of the
time, because, among other things, her paintings are cultural
artifacts of her day.”
The aesthetics of pageants and murals
are nearly identical. Both were meant to be seen from a distance
by large numbers of people for educational purposes. Both convey
their messages by highlighting human form and action through the
absence of detail. Both spread figures across a simple backdrop
— usually a landscape — within a shallow space. And
both use the same compositional devices to achieve their aesthetic
goals: dramatic tableaux, processions, and theatrical poses and
gestures. Each of these elements will be explored in the exhibition.
During Teichert's studies at the
Art Institute of Chicago and the Art Students League of New York,
she became captivated by the educational potential of large murals
in public buildings and their capacity to be seen by great numbers
of people from a distance. It was during her studies in New York
that noted American realist painter Robert Henri challenged her
to paint the “great Mormon story.” This admonition
led Teichert to paint many theatrical depictions of Mormon pioneers,
the West and Book of Mormon scenes.
Drama, theater and the cinema played
a significant role in Teichert’s life. From an early age
Teichert participated in dramatic readings and family plays in
her home. Wardle says Teichert was a movie buff who regularly
attended the weekend movies shown in the Cokeville, Wyoming, Amusement
Hall and occasionally made the 30-mile journey to Montpelier,
Idaho, to see a show.
Later in life, Teichert studied drama
and dance in Chicago along with her visual art studies. During
her art instruction in New York, she performed rope tricks and
Native American dances to help pay her tuition. As an adult, Teichert
directed plays and served for a short time on the committee for
a pageant commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Mormon pioneers’
arrival in Utah.
These personal experiences and the
popularity of pageants at the time led Teichert to think of her
murals as theatrical productions. Before she began work in 1945
on an elaborate mural depicting Bible and Book of Mormon prophesies
of the gathering of Israel, she viewed the 1944 version of the
movie “Kismet,” an MGM picture set in the Middle East,
to see “the camels and warm scenes” of the movie,
which inspired her sketches or “notes” for the painting.
The result, “Return of Captive Israel,” depicts a
theatrical procession of innumerable figures dramatically parading
across the canvas.
Her 1947 commission to paint the
World Room in the Manti Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints resulted in a procession of richly clad people
— kings and merchants — pleased with their own abundance
and ignorant to the misfortunes of the beggars at their feet.
“An abundance of uncaring people
was her conception of the lone and dreary world,” Wardle
says. “But the profusion of human figures in her Manti Temple
mural is more than philosophical. It also involves the stylistic
conventions of mural painting and pageantry, where human forms
create the story. In Teichert’s words, her Manti Temple
mural is a ‘pageantry of nations.’”
“Minerva Teichert: Pageants
in Paint” will open Friday, July 27, 2007 and will be on
view through Monday, May 26, 2008 in the Marian Adelaide Morris
Cannon Gallery on the museum’s main level. This exhibition
is presented by Zions Bank and is sponsored in part by Classical
89 KBYU FM and the State of Utah Office of Museum Services. Initial
research for the exhibition was funded by the Brigham Young University
Women’s Research Institute. Admission to the exhibition
is free of charge.
Exhibition Tours: Free tours of “Minerva
Teichert: Pageants in Paint” will be conducted during regular
museum hours; however, tours must be scheduled at least one week
in advance. Call 801/422-1140 to schedule a tour.
Monday Night Program:
Free family-oriented tours of the exhibition will be offered each
Monday night throughout the exhibition. These tours are specifically
formatted for families and BYU Family Home Evening groups. During
the tour visitors will help in the re-creation of theatrical elements
of Teichert’s murals, such as tableaux and processions.
For more information or to schedule a tour, call the Museum Education
Department at 801/422-1140.
Publication: The
Museum of Art has published a book in conjunction with this exhibition.
“Minerva Teichert: Pageants in Paint,” written by
Marian Wardle, curator of American art at the Brigham Young University
Museum of Art, is lavishly illustrated with 47 full-page color
plates and more then 100 black and white figures. Expanding on
themes explored in the exhibition, Wardle probes the connection
between Teichert’s works and her distinctive personality,
and at the same time ties Teichert’s works to the political
culture of her time. The book also includes an extensive chronology
of the artist’s life, and, published for the first time,
a brief autobiography of the artist written in 1937. This publication
has been made possible through the generous support of Zions Bank
and will be available in September 2007.
Lecture Series: The
Museum of Art will host a lecture series in conjunction with this
exhibition. The lectures will focus on historical perspectives
of Teichert’s life, the early 20th century theatrical conventions
that influenced her style and how modern-day pageants relate to
her work. All lectures will be presented in the Museum of Art
Auditorium on the lower level of the museum at 7 p.m. Two lectures
will be presented in 2007 with additional lectures scheduled for
2008. All lectures are free of charge. The lectures this fall
will include:
- an overview of the exhibition
by Marian Wardle, curator of American art at the BYU Museum
of Art, on Thursday, Sept. 20, 2007.
- a discussion and demonstration
of the theatrical poses and gestures that influenced Teichert’s
work by Judith Tourney, theater consultant and part-time faculty
member of BYU Theatre and Media Arts Department, on Thursday,
Oct. 25, 2007.
Symposium: The Museum
of Art will present a symposium related to the exhibition titled
“Pageants and Processions: Image and Idiom as Spectacle”
on March 7 and 8, 2008. For more information about the symposium,
visit the museum’s Web site.
Podcasts: Free podcast
audio tours will be available for download for this exhibition.
These podcasts will be available to download from the museum's
Web site and at the museum's information desk.
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