Turned and Sculpted: Wood Art from the Collection of Arthur and Jane Mason
May 14 – August 7, 2016

A photograph of a turned wood bowl that almost looks like a flower opening up. The outside features the wood grain, but the inside is white.

Hours

Shop closes 15 minutes prior.

the serene beauty of modern design expressed in wood

This exhibition featured the serene beauty of modern design expressed in wood by studio artists. Most of the objects were created at least in part on a lathe, an ancient tool used to turn wood while a chisel cuts shapes into the material. The forms can be precise geometry or undulating polymorphous design, but all of them reveal the inner beauty of wood. Although most of the objects were inspired by the role of a vessel or bowl, they transcend function and become an experience of form wedded to the dramatic beauty of revealed wood grain of many species.

The museum’s Henry D. Green Center for the Study of the Decorative Arts pursues collecting and researching modern studio craft. These objects, a gift to the museum, constitute a comprehensive collection of examples by the foremost wood artists working in the United States. This collection was carefully assembled through decades of discernment and connoisseurship by Arthur and Jane Mason. An accompanying catalogue published by the museum(opens in new tab) focuses on a statement of the history and meaning of their many years of collecting.

 

Curator
Dale L. Couch, curator of decorative arts

Sponsors
The W. Newton Morris Charitable Foundation and the Friends of the Georgia Museum of Art