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By Laura Beach
WILLIAMSBURG, VA. â When the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum (AARFAM) opened at Colonial Williamsburg in 1957, it was the first museum in the world dedicated solely to American folk art.
With a guide written by Boston collector and amateur scholar Nina Fletcher Little, the 424-piece assemblage gathered by Rockefeller, a founder of New York Cityâs Museum of Modern Art and the wife of John D. Rockefeller Jr, became a touchstone for folk art enthusiasts everywhere. A half century later, the collection has grown nearly tenfold and is rich in objects such as textiles, pottery, painted furniture and toleware that Rockefeller herself, an enthusiast of paintings and sculpture, all but overlooked.
In honor of the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museumâs 50th birthday, its holdings have been moved to new quarters within Colonial Williamsburg, the museum of early American life that John D. Rockefeller Jr helped create in 1926.
Construction of the new museum, located in the former garden of the DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum, began in late 2004. The facility was designed by Samuel Anderson Architects of New York City and funded in part by a $1 million grant from the Gladys and Franklin W. Clark Foundation.
âMuseum visitation had been dropping, partly because of AARFAMâs location, which was well off and south of Colonial Williamsburgâs historic area. The original museum building, constructed in 1957 and expanded in 1992, was increasingly surrounded by hotel facilities,â explains Carolyn J. Weekley, the Juli Grainger director of museums at Colonial Williamsburg.
AARFAMâs new location is more efficient for staff operations, provides more flexible gallery space and gives AARFAM access to the Hennage Auditorium and Museum Café at the DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum.
âFrom a programming standpoint, these are huge benefits,â says Weekley.
Featuring 11 new exhibitions, the galleries at the intersection of Francis and South Henry Streets will open to the public this weekend, February 3â4. The debut coincides with the 59th annual Colonial Williamsburg Antiques Forum, February 4â8, this year dedicated to âThe Arts of the American South.â
Guests enter the museum through the 1773 Public Hospital. Exploring a variety of themes, the new exhibits include beloved favorites as well as recent accessions, among them portraits by Joseph H. Davis of a Dover, N.H., man and his wife, and three watercolors attributed to Charles Burton depicting Richmond, Va., sitters. There are also spaces dedicated to the display of textiles and works on paper.
An initial exhibit provides an overview of the museum, introducing visitors to Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, who died in 1948, leaving her folk art collection to Colonial Williamsburg. The display includes two icons, âBaby in Red Chairâ and an 1832 version of âThe Peaceable Kingdomâ by Edward Hicks, featuring a seated lion.
On view in the Gladys and Franklin Clark Foundation Gallery is âWe The People: Three Centuries of American Folk Portraits.â More than 100 oil paintings, watercolors, photographs and a few sculptures illustrate changing sensibilities and artistic considerations between the early Eighteenth Century and the present, says curator Barbara Luck. One highlight is a full-length portrait of Deborah Glen dating to 1739.
AARFAMâs collection has grown over the years to include folk musical instruments. âCross Rhythmsâ features banjos, fiddles, dulcimers and one-off instruments made to look like furniture or sculpture. The show was organized by curator John Davis and conservator John Watson, an expert in musical instruments. One unusual item is a âHippoceros,â a walnut sculpture resembling a cross between a hippopotamus and a rhinoceros that has a Victrola built into it.
Designed for children and families, âDown on The Farmâ combines paintings of barnyard scenes and animals with folk sculpture, such as decoys and weathervanes. Young visitors are invited to share in the adventures of Prince, a carved wood terrier, as the dog roams the countryside meeting cows, pigs and roosters.
Furniture curator Tara Chircida illustrates a variety of decorative styles and techniques in âExciting Expressions,â a display containing painted furniture. Included is a Maine dressing table painted to resemble rosewood, an Ohio wall cupboard, Pennsylvania German painted chests and a case piece by Shenandoah, Va., craftsman Johannes Spitler (1774â1837).
Linda Baumgarten and Kim Ivey collaborated on âFlowers, Birds, and Baskets: Pattern in Nineteenth Century Bed Coverings.â Twelve large quilts and coverlets join sewing tools and accessories from the collection of Foster and Muriel McCarl in the gallery funded by the Pennsylvania collectors. One highlight is a Baltimore album quilt of about 1850.
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller did not collect quilts, but she did gather mourning embroideries, some of which are featured in âIn Memoriam: Mourning Art in Early America,â celebrating the early Nineteenth Century fashion for remembering the loved and lost through individual memorials. The exhibit offers 60 embroidered and painted memorials and commemorative pieces, jewelry and other objects, many inspired by the death of George Washington in 1799.
âWe See Americaâ contemplates American landscape painting and considers why folk artists chose the subjects they did. âThe railroads, natural wonders like Niagara Falls and a variety of other locations were important enough that Americans felt compelled to commemorate these views and share them with others,â Weekley explains.
âChasing Shadows: Silhouettes from The Collection of Mary B. and William Lehman Guytonâ unveils 100 of the nearly 250 silhouettes presented to the museum by the Guytons since 1994. The instructive arrangement offers different types of silhouettes, shows different techniques and showcases different hands. The final sections of the show feature silhouettes that were fully or partially printed, as well as Twentieth Century examples, says curator Barbara Luck.
Organized by Suzanne Hood, âInspiration and Ingenuity: American Stonewareâ gathers ceramics dating from the Nineteenth Century to the present and explores the evolution of decorative motifs and techniques. This is the first time AARFAM has displayed its stoneware collection as an entity, says Weekley.
Finally, âConserving the Carolina Roomâ documents the museumâs ongoing conservation of a Nineteenth Century painted room that it acquired in the 1950s out of an 1836 house in North Carolina. Says AARFAMâs director, âIt had a lot of overpainting. As a result of our work, the room is much brighter and lighter with more vivid pattern than before.â
While in town, visitors are also encouraged to tour the refurbished galleries of the DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum, where a sampling of Colonial Williamsburgâs 60,000-piece collection of American and British furniture, silver, ceramics, paintings, textiles, weapons and prints dating from 1600 to 1830 is on view.
Among three new displays is an introduction to the Museums of Colonial Williamsburg, âPounds, Pence and Pistareens: Coins and Currency in Colonial America,â and âCanisters, Caddies and Chests: Fashionable Tea Containers of The Eighteenth Century.â
Continuing exhibitions include âMasterworks,â arraying highlights from the Colonial Williamsburg collections. âRevolution in Tasteâ features 2,400 artifacts, from tea cups to epergnes, that were available to Eighteenth Century consumers. âLock, Stock & Barrel: Early Firearms from the Colonial Williamsburg Collectionâ offers Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century military and civilian firearms. âArtistry & Ingenuityâ looks at Eighteenth Century cooking equipment. Finally, âThe Murray Sisters: A Closer Lookâ studies the conservation of a late Eighteenth Century double portrait by French artist Bouché of two Maryland sisters.
Those eager for a glimpse of how the Rockefellers lived while visiting Colonial Williamsburg can tour Bassett Hall, containing folk art that Abby Aldrich Rockefeller chose for her private quarters. The simple, two-story Eighteenth Century house with its extensive gardens was a Rockefeller retreat between 1936 and 1980. Restored between 2000 and 2002, it now looks much as it did in the 1930s and 1940s, when Mrs Rockefeller spent part of each year there.
âLuckily, we found Mrs Rockefellerâs inventory for the house and were able to get things back in place as they were in her lifetime, complete with appropriate rugs and upholstery. She had the most incredible eye,â says Weekley.
The reinstallation of the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum is part of a larger plan for the development of Colonial Williamsburgâs museums, says the director.
âEventually, there will be a new entrance for both museums and a larger, yet-to-be-built, addition. We are expanding in a fashion that ensures that we have adequate kinds of exhibition support space, public service space and educational space, as well as additional exhibition space. All these things are very important to make the core experience a good one for our visitors.â
Adds Weekley, âWe were all a little wistful about moving. That is what happens when you have been in a building for half a century, but it was a good decision.â
For information, 800-HISTORY or www.colonialwilliamsburg.com.
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum
Reopens At Colonial Williamsburg
âAbby Aldrich Museumâ
Celebrates 50th Birthday
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum
Celebrates 50th Birthday In New Quarters
âAbby Aldrichâ Reopens At Colonial Williamsburg
By Laura Beach
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1931 100 1.jpg
âBaby in Red Chair,â artist unknown, possibly Pennsylvania, circa 1810â1830, oil on canvas. From the collection of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller; gift of David Rockefeller. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âNiagara Fallsâ by Edward Hicks (1780â1849), Bucks County, Penn., circa 1825, oil on yellow poplar panel. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âHippocerosâ by Edgar Alexander McKillop, Balfour, N.C., 1926â27, black walnut wood, leather, glass, bone, horn, wool, iron, copper and a phonograph. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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Chest over drawers, maker unidentified. Lehigh County, Penn., 1769, tulip poplar; iron, brass and paint. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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Album quilt, maker unidentified, probably Baltimore, Md., circa 1850, cottons with supplementary ink details and cotton tape. Gift of Mr and Mrs Foster McCarl Jr. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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Face pitcher, possibly by Trees Point Pottery, Charles City County, Va., stoneware, salt glazed, gray with ocher. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âSelf Portraitâ by Jonathan Adams Bartlett (1817â1902), South Rumford, Maine, probably 1841, oil on canvas. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âMemorial for Polly Botsford and Her Children,â artist unknown, Connecticut, circa 1815. From the collection of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller; gift of the Museum of Modern Art. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âThe Old Plantation,â artist unknown, probably South Carolina, circa 1795, watercolor on laid paper. Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âGeorge Washington Memorialâ by Samuel Folwell (1764â1813). Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âWallowa Lakeâ by Stephen W. Harley (1863â1947), Oregon, circa 1927â28, oil on canvas. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âPortrait of Deborah Glen,â artist unknown, Albany, N.Y., circa 1739, oil on canvas. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âThe Christopher Shirk Farmâ by Paul A. Seifert (1840?â1921), Richland County, Wis., 1891â1900, oil, watercolor and pencil on paper. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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Dressing table, maker unidentified, probably Maine, circa 1830, eastern white pine; basswood, brass, iron, paint and metallic powder. Anonymous gift. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
1977 609 1.jpg
Appliquéd quilt, maker unidentified, circa 1891, cotton. Gift of Mr and Mrs Foster McCarl Jr. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âSun & Moonâ fiddle by Joseph Henry Hunley, Virginia, circa 1935, wood and metal. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âIsabella Ann Bishopâ by Martha Ann Honeywell, 1826, cut black paper on off-white paper with inscriptions in brown ink. Gift of Mary B. and William Lehman Guyton. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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âMan and Woman with Red Cow and Pigâ by Shields Landon Jones (1901â1997), Hinton, W.Va., 1992â94, pastel and ballpoint pens on wove paper. Gift of Ellin and Baron Gordon. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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Quadruplicate hollow-cut profile portraits of Dr John Watts by Isaac Todd, New York City, 1803â1811. Cut wove cream-colored paper. Gift of Mary B. and William Lehman Guyton. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.
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Pig flask by Anna Pottery, attributed to Cornwall Kirkpatrick, Anna, Ill., 1865â1866, stoneware, salt glazed, brown. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum.