Exhibit Explores Diversity of African Art
By
四虎影院

四虎影院 neighbors Fima and Jere Lifshitz, who have collected African art for 40 years, exhibit many of their pieces Feb. 8 through March 24 at the 四虎影院 Ridley-Tree Museum of Art. An opening reception for 鈥淎frica through Its Sculpture: Highlights from the Lifshitz Collection鈥 will be Thursday, Feb. 8, from 4-6 p.m. at the museum.

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The exhibition will be thematically organized according to topics, including Zoomorphic Forms, Powerful Figures, Royalty, Portraits, Deities and Beliefs, Images of Women, Passages, and The Rediscovery of Nok. The ancient Nok culture is the Iron Age civilization that flourished during the first century before Christ in the area of modern Nigeria.
In the fall of 2017, the couple lent artwork to 鈥淕uatemala from 33,000 km: Contemporary Art, 1960-Present.鈥 Judy Larson, R. Anthony Askew professor of art history and museum director, and Chris Rupp, museum collection manager, were invited to the Lifshitz home. 鈥淲e were amazed by the depth and scope of the collection,鈥 Larson says.
Over the past several decades, the couple has steadily accumulated an impressive collection of modern and contemporary African art, modern and contemporary European art, Latin American art, ceramics, and outdoor sculptures.

鈥淭hey graciously opened their home to 四虎影院 students in my museum studies course last semester, where they discussed the joys of building a collection,鈥 Larson says. 鈥淲e hope this exhibition will offer an educational introduction to the history, culture, and diversity within African art to 四虎影院 and the community.鈥
The exhibition will be accompanied by a separate display of African masks downstairs.
鈥淭he English department and a few others have intentionally expanded their coverage of African themes in recent years,鈥 says Provost Mark Sargent, 鈥渁nd this exhibit can certainly enhance our community鈥檚 engagement with the aesthetic and intellectual worlds of Africa.
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