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    You are at:Home»Local News»K-State Activity»Beach Museum opens virtual exhibit showcasing Kansas artist’s affinity for sunrises

    Beach Museum opens virtual exhibit showcasing Kansas artist’s affinity for sunrises

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    By KMAN Staff on June 30, 2021 K-State Activity, Local News, Manhattan
    "Sunrise over Kansas" by John Steuart Curry is a mixed-media on canvas. The 1935 painting was purchased by the Beach Museum of Art, with support from the Friends of the Beach Museum of Art, in 1996 and recently underwent conservation treatment. (K-State Marketing and Relations courtesy photo)
    “Sunrise over Kansas” by John Steuart Curry is a mixed-media on canvas. The 1935 painting was purchased by the Beach Museum of Art, with support from the Friends of the Beach Museum of Art, in 1996 and recently underwent conservation treatment. (K-State Marketing and Relations courtesy photo)

    The Beach Museum of Art has opened a new John Steuart Curry art exhibit.

    The exhibit includes a virtual exhibit open to the public now, as well as an in-person exhibit when the museum officially reopens on August 24th. It includes several of Curry’s paintings, prints, drawings, and book illustrations.

    Beach Museum curator Liz Seaton spoke about the timing of the exhibit given the status of the pandemic.

    https://1350kman.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Liz-Seaton-1.mp3

    The Beach Museum is home to more than 900 works by Curry, who was born in 1897 and grew up on a farm in Jefferson County, Kansas. His love for Kansas continued even after he moved out of state. He died in Wisconsin in 1946.

    Seaton explains the importance of Kansas to Curry, which she says shows in his works.

    https://1350kman.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Liz-Seaton-2.mp3

    The centerpiece of the exhibit is Curry’s Sunrise over Kansas painting. Seaton says Curry experimented in the 1930s with mixing natural resins and oil-based materials which causes some distracting discoloration of the sun over time. It hasn’t been on display for many years as a result. Only recently was it restored by art conservator Kenneth Bé of the Gerald R. Ford Conservation Center in Omaha.

    A before and after slider can be viewed in the virtual exhibit, which can be seen here: Marianna Kistler Beach Museum Curry exhibit.

    Liz Seaton will be featured during In Focus at 9:45 a.m. Friday on News Radio KMAN.

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