Animals in art on display in Muscatine

Muscatine Art Center has gone to the dogs – and cats, barnyard creatures, circus animals, bucking broncos and swans — in its new “Animals in Art” exhibition that is currently on view.

The exhibition at 1314 Mulberry Ave., combines paintings, prints, drawings, and sculptures from the Art Center’s permanent collection with selections of art pottery on loan from Mark and Marie Latta. Featured are works by John Steuart Curry, Thomas Hart Benton, Marc Chagall, Pablo Picasso, Virginia Myers, Nathanial Currier, and many others including Muscatine artist William Bunn (1910-2009), according to a museum release.

Some of the art in the “Animals in Art” exhibit at Muscatine Art Center.
Some of the art in the “Animals in Art” exhibit at Muscatine Art Center.

“This exhibition brings together treasures from the permanent collection with over 150 pieces of American Art Pottery,” Melanie Alexander, director of the Muscatine Art Center, said. “Planning this exhibition has been a real joy. It is not often that we have the opportunity to display a charcoal and pastel by Edgar Degas next to lithographs by Grant Wood.”

Among the artwork displayed on the Stanley Gallery’s walls are paintings that were added as recently as November 2023, works on paper that were framed especially for this exhibition and had not previously been on view, and paintings that were cleaned or restored in 2023.

“Even our frequent visitors will encounter works of art never before displayed at the Muscatine Art Center,” Alexander said.

Ceramic frogs in the exhibit.
Ceramic frogs in the exhibit.

The display of American Art Pottery is the second major exhibition in the Stanley Gallery to feature the Latta collection. In 2006, approximately 100 pieces were on view for “Weller Pottery: The Rare, The Unusual, The Seldom Seen.”

While that exhibition spotlighted the work of a single pottery company, “Animals in Art” celebrates the creations of three main pottery studios – Rookwood, Roseville, and Weller – along with examples of works by more contemporary potters.

“Muscatine Art Center staff selected examples of larger garden ware, vases, other vessels, and smaller objects,” Alexander said. “Each person on staff has a few favorites like the garden ware swans that measure about 18 inches or the highly decorative vases that feature fish or owls. There is something for everyone among the examples of art pottery.”

Collectors Mark and Marie Latta have collected American Art Pottery for decades, and the couple have served on the board of the American Art Pottery Association. Mark is the past president of the organization and is the current president of the Board of Trustees for the Muscatine Art Center.

The couple has lent their collection to museums in the Midwest, such as the Brunnier Art Museum on the Iowa State University campus and the Zanesville Museum of Art.

The couple will give a guided tour of their collection on view in “Animals in Art” at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. y 29 in the Stanley Gallery. Admission is by donation, and reservations are not required.

For more information, visit the art center website HERE.

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