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The Grand Odalisque (detail) by Joseph Park.

 

Paradise XII: Medusa Anhinga by Justin Gibbens.

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Although still the “big dog” on the block, Tacoma Art Museum’s ten-foot-tall cardboard dog, Leroy, The Big Pup (created by Northwest artist Scott Fife) is no longer the only four-legged friend roaming the museum’s hallways. Tacoma Art Museum’s newest exhibition, The Secret Language of Animals, is family-friendly and devoted to our furry, feathery, and slimy friends. Installed in two galleries and the lobby space, animals greet visitors and offer art lovers an opportunity to reflect on their connections to and experiences with the animal kingdom.

Through paintings, sculptures, and videos, The Secret Language of Animals explores not only the role of animal imagery in art, but also our expectations of and emotional attachments to those animals.

“Artists help us better understand why animals are so important to us,” notes curator Rock Hushka. “By looking at various kinds of art, questions about our relationships to animals will arise. Why do we love our dogs and cats so much? How difficult is it to draw or sculpt a horse? What are those elusive qualities about birds that enchant us? The artists reveal how animals symbolize the diverse ways we humans interact in society.”

The works will be on view through June 27 and show a broad range of animal subjects including animals as pastoral backdrops, as the subjects of portraiture, as valued companions, and as symbols of both bounty and death.

Organized in sections by animal type, including dogs, horses, cows, cats, birds, elephants, and rodents, the exhibition features approximately 40 works that span more than 250 years, ranging from Jacques Charles Oudry’s Still Life (1720–1778) to Fred Muram’s 2008 video Sharing a Bowl of Fruit Loops with My Dog.

Works are drawn from Tacoma Art Museum’s collection, including important recent acquisitions such as Marvin Oliver’s Orca Fin, and from key loans that include three Deborah Butterfield horse sculptures as well as notable pieces by George Stubbs and Claude Monet. Collection highlights include works by James McNeill Whistler, Joan Brown, John Sloan, and Vanessa Renwick, as well as works by Northwest masters such as William Cumming, Morris Graves, and Joseph Goldberg. For this exhibition, Seattle artist Jeffry Mitchell has recreated The Pile of Elephants with the help of a team of Tacoma Art Museum volunteers.


Featured Upcoming Program
 Walk on the Wild Side
Free Community Festival

Sunday, April 25, 10 am—5 pm

Take a walk on the wild side at this free community festival as we celebrate The Secret Language of Animals. Come dressed in your best animal costume, see the winning images from our photo contest, learn wildlife photography techniques, draw a "still" rabbit, and more.


Digital Animals Contest

Share how you digitally capture your interaction with pets and wildlife.

Lexington the Minpin with animal toy.

 


   
  

Show off your skills as an animal lover and as an artist. We will display the images in the main lobby of Tacoma Art Museum as well as online at Flickr. The winning pictures will be printed, framed, and presented during the April 25 Spring Community Festival. Awards will be given for first, second, and third place. Please submit your digital images to us online through Flickr or by emailing us the image at Contest@TacomaArtMuseum.org.

Prizes:
1st place: Annual family membership to Tacoma Art Museum
2nd place: $25 gift card for the Tacoma Art Museum Store
3rd place: Two guest passes to Tacoma Art Museum

Contest Rules:
Submit a piece of digital art to Tacoma Art Museum between January 23 and April 16, 2010. You may submit a maximum of five digital images total. After April 16, favorites will be chosen by several impartial judges based on creativity, artistic appeal, and use of animal. Winners will be notified prior to the April 25 Free Community Festival, Walk on the Wild Side, and invited to attend the festival in order to be honored and receive their prize.

If you have any questions, please email us.

Slideshow created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.


New Animal Coloring
Pages Monthly 

 

Sign up for our e-news to be one of the first to find out which artist's animal will be featured on the next coloring page. 

The current coloring page features The Grand Odalisque, by Joseph Park. Available through Sunday, June 27.

Pages only available at Tacoma Art Museum. 

 Joseph Park, The Grand Odalisque coloring page
     
There's More to Explore
in the Open Art Studio 

 

Want to do more with your coloring page? Visit the Open Art Studio to create a story with each month’s featured animal as your main character.

 Mother, son and daughter in Open Art Studio
     
The Making of Jeffry
Mitchell's Elephants
 

Dedicated Tacoma Art Museum volunteers and staff contributed sewing skills to help create individual elephants for Jeffery Mitchell's The Pile of Elephants installation. View the slideshow. More>>>

 

 Ann D. with a completed elephant.

 


This exhibition is organized by Tacoma Art Museum. Support generously provided by
Russell Investments, Click! Network and The News Tribune.

Artwork credits, top to bottom:
Joseph Park
, The Grand Odalisque (detail), 2001. Oil on linen, 30 × 36 inches. Collection of Ben and Aileen Krohn. Photo: Roger Schreiber.

Justin Gibbens, Bird of Paradise XII: Medusa Anhinga (detail), 2008. Watercolor, graphite, gouache, colored pencil, and oolong tea on paper, 40 × 26 inches. Courtesy of K.C. and Jac de Hann. Photograph courtesy of the artist & G. Gibson Gallery.

Coloring page based on Justin Gibben's Birde of Paradise XII: Medusa Anhinga, 2008.

Mother with son and daughter coloring the Leroy, The Big Pup coloring page at the opening celebration of The Secret Language of Animals. Photo: Aislinn Staaby.

Photos from The Making of Jeffry Mitchell's Elephants by Ann Darling.