• RAW: Recognition of Art by Women at the Norton Museum

    Date posted: June 16, 2011 Author: jolanta

    The Norton Museum of Art has announced a $1.5 million grant from The Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund/MLDauray Arts Initiative for a six-year project called RAW (Recognition of Art by Women). RAW’s mission is to discover, highlight, showcase, and promote living women artists, a group the grantors believe has been substantially underrepresented, and that the Museum wishes to champion.

    Jenny Saville, Atonement Studies (Panel 2), 2005-2006. Oil on paper, 252 x 185 cm.

    “RAW’s mission is to discover, highlight, showcase, and promote living women artists, a group the grantors believe has been substantially underrepresented, and that the Museum wishes to champion.”

    Jimmy Saville, Atonement Studies

    Jenny Saville, Atonement Studies (Panel 2), 2005-2006. Oil on paper, 252 x 185 cm.

    RAW: Recognition of Art by Women at the Norton Museum

    Norton Museum of Art

    The Norton Museum of Art has announced a $1.5 million grant from The Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund/MLDauray Arts Initiative for a six-year project called RAW (Recognition of Art by Women). RAW’s mission is to discover, highlight, showcase, and promote living women artists, a group the grantors believe has been substantially underrepresented, and that the Museum wishes to champion.

    With this grant, the Museum will organize six special exhibitions, one in each of the next six years (2011-2016). The inaugural exhibition will premier this fall and feature the rarely-exhibited paintings and drawings of British artist Jenny Saville. It is being organized by the Norton’s Curator of Contemporary Art, Cheryl Brutvan. The grant encompasses exhibition, publication, research, and education programming, and includes the funding of the first Sophie Davis Curatorial Fellow, which the museum is now recruiting, and will allow the Museum to expand its research and exhibition development.

    Museum Executive Director Hope Alswang said, “This grant not only represents an incredible opportunity for the Museum to continue a relationship with the Davis family — a family that has been an important part of its history and development over the past two decades — but it is also completely transformative to our contemporary collection. It gives us a dynamic new platform from which to engage our many audiences, and affords our curators the opportunity to speak and publish on important topics. In short, it allows the Museum to influence the way art is being discussed today.”

    Alan Davis, son of Leonard and Sophie Davis, who directs the fund, said, “My wife (Mary Lou Dauray) and I discussed opportunities to make a statement about the gender discrimination that still exists today, and the lack of representation of women artists in many museums. We came up with a program that made sense for both the Norton and for us.”

    The late Leonard and Sophie Davis were part-time New York City residents and among Palm Beach’s most prominent philanthropists. Sophie Davis also served on the Norton Museum’s board, and the couple’s contributions included $2.5 million toward the Museum’s expansion, and a gift of Chinese art.

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