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Small Wonders Breaking the Mold

2 | Realms of Earth and Sky 6 | Rodin

WINTER | 2016

SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM of ART Anatomy of an... [Indian Miniature]

Where to Find It: Realms of Earth and Sky: Indian Paintings from the 15th to the 19th Century Small Special Exhibitions Gallery through February 14, 2016 The Curator: Daniel Ehnbom, The Fralin Museum of Art, University of Virginia

Who is this? Why is he blue? What does it say? This is Krishna, a Hindu deity known for his These Hindi verses are from the Rasikapriya, irresistible attractiveness at every age in his Who painted it? completed by the poet Keshav Das in 1591. This mortal life and considered the model for all lovers The artist Sahibdin was a Muslim who served in a very popular work describes the characteristics of and heroes. He is described in scripture as dark in Hindu court in the 1600s and even illustrated men and women in love. color, and the Sanskrit word for dark can also Hindu scriptures for his patron, the rana of mean blue, so it became conventional to depict Mewar. He painted in a brightly colored and Krishna as blue. heavily stylized manner that is thought of as traditionally Indian.

What is going on? Krishna lavishes his attention on his beloved. Maids attend them on each side; one waves a yak tail flywhisk—like the parasol, an attribute of gods and kings—and the other carries a serving tray. The couple is at rest, their shoes discarded before them as they listen to female musicians, whom the god rewards with gold pieces.

Above and detail on the cover: Leaf from a Rasikapriya of Keshav Das: Where is the rest of the book? Krishna as Ideal Hero and Lover This miniature is one of a large set of illustrations to the text from the Attributed to Sahibdin, Mewar, c. 1630–35 hand of Sahibdin himself. Pages are now scattered in collections all Opaque color and gold on paper, 10 5/8 x 8 1/4 in, 26.25 x 20.50 cm Museum Purchase with Curriculum Support Funds, 2003.1 over the world. The artist and his workshop made a second set that Collection of the Fralin Museum of Art and the University of Virginia has stayed together in a library in Udaipur, the capital of the former This exhibition is made possible with the support of the Sarah Cambell Bla er Foundation. state of Mewar where the artist lived.

2 WINTER | 2016

2015–2016 BOARD of TRUSTEES 4 6 11

OFFICERS Marie Hal , Chairman Claudia Huntington, Vice Chairman Jorge del Alamo, Treasurer W. Richey Wyatt, Secretary

VOTING TRUSTEES Martha S. Avant Jorge del Alamo Dale F. Dorn John Eadie Thomas Edson Anthony Edwards Barbara Gentry Table of Contents Claire Golden Chave Gonzaba Marie Hal 4 Corita Kent and the Language of Pop Emory Hamilton Edward Hart 6 Up Next: Roberto de la Selva; Rodin; Highest Heaven Rose Marie Hendry Karen Herrmann 7 Calendar Karen Hixon Candace Humphreys 10 New and Noted Claudia Huntington Harriet Kelley 11 ArtWorks Rosario Laird Kim Lewis 12 Keeping Up with Jones Avenue Stephen McCreary Jr. Gilbert Lang Mathews 13 ArtScene Bruce Mitchell Thomas I. O’Connor 14 Give & Join William Rasco Roxana McAllister Richardson Corinna Holt Richter Elizabeth McAllen Roberts William Scanlan Jr. Banks M. Smith Beth Smith Nancy Steves Ruth Eilene Sullivan Rich Walsh From the Director Suzanne Ware Mark Watson III Dear Members, Kenneth L. Wilson W. Richey Wyatt Happy New Year! It’s already been a great new year at the Museum. Karen Lee Zachry We’ve just heard that the John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation, a fund of LIFE TRUSTEES the Area Foundation, will sponsor Art Party in 2016 and 2017. Lenora Brown The late John L. Santikos was a long-time supporter of the Museum. He often Betty Kelso attended Art Party and many other Museum events, bringing first-time Peggy Mays Museum guests with him. The great generosity of the Santikos Foundation is Patsy Steves also supporting the renovation of our auditorium. In the future, look forward ADVISORY TRUSTEES to enjoying lectures and films in the new comfort of the John L. Santikos Margery Block Memorial Auditorium. Friedrich Hanau-Schaumburg Martha Lopez We have also been awarded a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Katherine Moore McAllen to support two new fellowships. These postdoctoral positions will allow us to Henry R. Muñoz III attract scholars to conduct research on our collections. Raul Ramos, MD Gerard Sonnier Finally, the National Endowment for the Arts has awarded the Museum a Linda Whitacre prestigious grant to support Corita Kent and the Language of Pop.

NATIONAL TRUSTEES This funding represents terrific financial support and signifies our relevance and Lila Cockrell importance to the life of our city, region, and nation. Eva Garza Lagüera 2016 Jane Macon We hope one of your New Year’s resolutions will be to spend more time at the Jan 8 Realms of Earth and Sky Janey B. Marmion Museum. Come learn about Sister Corita Kent, and mark your calendars for Feb 12 The Juiciest Tomato Ann R. Roberts second Fridays at Art Party, where we can toast Mr. Santikos and the support March 11 Art Madness John J. Roberts of our sponsors and members. April 8 Viva Fiesta Around the World Nelson A. Rockefeller Jr. May 13 Rodin: The Human Experience Marie Schwartz See you at the Museum! June 10 Egyptomania Saints Above! HONORARY TRUSTEES July 8 Black and White H. Rugeley Ferguson Aug 12 Edith McAllister Sept 9 The Geometry of Art Ricardo Romo, PhD Oct 14 Art on Tap Nov 11 Z is for Zombies EX-OFFICIO TRUSTEE Katherine C. Luber, PhD Dec 9 Peace, Joy, Art Katherine C. Luber, PhD The Kelso Director

3 On Now

CORITA KENT AND THE LANGUAGE OF POP examines the artist’s intense engagement with prevailing artistic, social, and religious movements from 1964–69. More than sixty of her prints will be on view alongside works by contemporaries such as Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha, Jim Dine, and Roy Lichtenstein.

In 1964, Corita Kent—Catholic nun, educator, and artist—produced the juiciest tomato of all, two years after Andy Warhol’s infamous representation of a Campbell’s tomato soup can sparked the beginning of the American pop art movement. Kent’s twist (see image, p. 7) depicts the Virgin Mary by spelling out TOMATO in red, orange, and yellow, with an inscription that appropriates a then-popular Del Monte tomato sauce slogan and proclaims, “Mary Mother is the juiciest tomato of them all.” Unsurprisingly, Warhol was a fan.

While Kent’s work coincided with the development of pop art and employed many of the same tactics, it never received the same acclaim as that of her male counterparts. Yet, in a 1966 article for Look magazine, George Leonard wrote, “Sister Mary Corita is a FEBRUARY 13–MAY 8, 2016 di erent kind of pop artist. Whereas the New York boys [read Warhol, Lichtenstein, etc.] deal in a certain brittle archness (they are chic), Sister Corita and her students COWDEN GALLERY unabashedly arm and celebrate the here-and-now glories of God’s world.”

4 SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM of ART WINTER | 2016

Working during a period marked by the populist reforms of the Second Vatican Council, Kent appropriated slogans and tenets related to the Vatican’s reforms along with words, phrases, and logos from consumer culture as a way to dissolve the boundary between religion and everyday life. In for eleanor (on the cover), Kent repositions the General Mills slogan “the big G stands for goodness” within an entirely di erent spiritual context, suggesting that “the big G” could, in fact, represent God. Throughout her life, Kent made nearly 700 screenprints, undertook public art commissions and ad campaigns, produced films, and orchestrated happenings.

Corita Kent and the Language of Pop is organized by the Harvard Art Museums and curated by Susan Dackerman, a Scholar at the Getty Research Institute. The exhibition is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

KNOW MORE Lecture: Salvation at the Supermarket by Susan Dackerman, PhD

Sunday, February 14 | 3:00 p.m.

Top: Bottom: Right: Opposite and page 3: Corita Kent (American, 1918–1986) Corita Kent (American, 1918–1986) Roy Lichtenstein (American, 1923–1997) Photography of Corita Kent Exhibition, circa 1964 life is a complicated business, 1967 i can handle it, 1966 Paper Plate (1), 1969 © Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Screenprint Screenprint Screenprint Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles 22 x 23 inches Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Margaret 10 3/16 inches Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Margaret Fisher Fund, 2008.152 Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Margaret Fisher Fund, 2008.171 © Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Fisher Fund, M23830 © Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein Heart Community, Los Angeles Image © President and Fellows of Harvard College Image © President and Fellows of Harvard College Image © President and Fellows of Harvard College

5 Up Next

New World Order Breaking the Mold

NICARAGUAN-BORN ROBERTO DE LA SELVA (1895–1957) moved to Mexico City in 1921 in protest against US military occupation of his native country. He stayed for the rest of his life. “In a period when Diego Rivera and Pablo Picasso were the world’s most powerful artists, Mexico was where the action was—where modernism and politics intersected,” said Curator of Latin American Art, Marion Oettinger Jr.

De la Selva studied art at Mexico City’s Academy of San Carlos and apprenticed as a wood craftsman in Apizaco. Working in dense white mahogany, he produced bas-relief panels that meld woodworking—a prized pre-Hispanic craft—with modernist painting and the social zeitgeist of post-revolutionary Mexico. “His message of the new order honoring folk art, indigenous people, and the working class helped shape that period’s understanding of what Mexico was IN COMMEMORATION OF the 100th anniversary of the death of sculptor about,” said Oettinger. The small exhibition includes seven large-scale bas-reliefs Auguste Rodin (French, 1840–1917), the San Antonio Museum of Art is one of and six smaller reliefs. several US museums to host Rodin: The Human Experience, selections from the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Collections. Included are the artist's famous depictions of writers Victor Roberto de la Selva: Hugo and Honoré de Balzac; his monumental Torso of the Walking Man; works derived Modern Mexican Masterpieces in Wood from his masterpiece, The Gates of Hell; and his portrayal of God—which is also a January 29, 2016–June 26, 2016 self-portrait. Golden Gallery The first truly modern sculptor, Rodin transformed sculptural form into expressions of emotion with exaggerated poses that broke with traditional notions that art told historical stories. His revolutionary style included an anity for partial figures, which convey complex human feelings through subtle formal relationships, and his finished Saints and Angels works retain the marks of the sculptural process.

Rodin: The Human Experience showcases thirty-two bronzes from the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Collections. The Cantors are major sponsors of the Musée Rodin in Paris, which recently named a hall of the museum in their honor when it reopened after an extensive three-year renovation. For more than thirty-five years, the Cantor Foundation has made its Rodin collection—one of the largest outside the Musée Rodin in Paris—available to the public through its traveling exhibition program.

Rodin: The Human Experience March 5–May 29, 2016 Small Special Exhibitions Gallery

KNOW MORE Member Preview Day Friday, March 4 | 10:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m.

Lecture: Experiencing Rodin by Judy Sobol, Executive Director, HIGHEST HEAVEN: Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Art from the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Foundation Roberta and Richard Huber Collection explores the cultural and religious Sunday, March 6 | 3:30 p.m. world of the Iberian Colonial possessions of the Altiplano, or high plains, of South America, which stretch from northern Argentina to the flatlands of Peru. Focusing on the artistic achievements of 18th–century Colonial South America, Highest Heaven reveals the use of religious art to spread the Catholic faith.

Top left: Right: The exhibition includes more than 100 works—paintings, sculptures, ivories, silver Roberto de la Selva, Nicaraguan, n.d. Albert Harlingue, At the Fair (En la Feria) (detail), 1934 Rodin au milieu de sa collection d'antiques objects, and furniture—drawn from a distinguished private art collection Polychromed white mahogany Gelatin silver proof, acquired over nearly forty years by Roberta and Richard Huber of New York City. h. 59 in. (149.9 cm); w. 47 in. (119.4 cm) h. 4 3/5 in. (11.7 cm); w. 6 4/5 in. (17.5 cm) Museum purchase, 59.19.5 Musée Rodin, Paris. Ph.00007 Photography by Peggy Tenison

Highest Heaven: Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Art Bottom left: from the Roberta and Richard Huber Collection Gaspar Miguel de Berrío (Bolivian, 1706–1764), Our Lady of Mount Carmel with Bishop Saints (detail), ca. June 11–September 4, 2016 1764, oil on canvas, h. 38 1/2 in. (97.8 cm); w. 33 1/16 in. Cowden Gallery (83.9 cm), Roberta and Richard Huber Collection. Photograph by Graydon Wood, Philadelphia Museum of Art

6 SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM of ART LECTURES

JANUARY | FEBRUARY 2016 Art History 101: American Art El Jaleo by John Singer Sargent by Annie Labatt, PhD Friday, January 15 | 6:00–7:30 p.m. Auditorium and Great Hall | Free with Museum admission Annie Labatt, PhD, Professor of Art History and Criticism at UTSA, focuses on a seminal work in the last of this 3-part lecture series. Lecture begins at 6 p.m. followed by discussion and reception. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Limited auditorium and Great Hall overflow seating.

Lecture: Salvation at the Supermarket—Corita Kent and Pop Art by Susan Dackerman, PhD Sunday, February 14 | 3:00–4:00 p.m. Auditorium | Free with Museum admission Organizing curator, and Scholar at the Getty Research Institute, Susan Dackerman, PhD, discusses how Corita Kent’s 1964 screenprint the juiciest tomato of all established her reputation as a renegade. The Roman Catholic artist-nun used a Del Monte tomato sauce slogan and the strategies of pop art to depict the Virgin Mary. In this and other prints of the 1960s, she employed the language of advertising to articulate religious ideals.

Lecture: Building the Face of San Antonio by Tom and Cosmo Guido of Guido Construction Sunday, February 28 | 3:00–4:00 p.m. Auditorium | Free with Museum admission Since 1927, Guido Brothers Construction has built and restored landmarks across the city including the new DoSeum and the Museum itself. Hear from Tom and Cosmo Guido—the fourth generation in this family business—about their company's integral role in the development of the San Antonio cityscape.

GALLERY TALKS

Tours for Visitors Who are Blind or Visually Impaired First Saturdays | 10:00–11:00 a.m. EVERY WEEK Free with Museum admission | Register: 210.978.8138 Docent-led tours include descriptive language, touch, sound, and smell to enhance visitors’ experience with art. Guide dogs, sighted companions, and others are welcome, as are wheelchairs and other walking aids. For more Gallery Talk: Museum Highlights information visit samuseum.org. Advance registration required. Tuesdays | 4:30–5:30 p.m. Sundays | 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Great Hall | Free Art to Lunch Third Thursdays | 12:30–1:00 p.m. Gallery Talk: Corita Kent* Meet in the Great Hall Tuesdays | 5:30–6:30 p.m. Free for members | $5 non-members Sundays | 12:00–1:00 p.m. Take a bite out of your lunch hour with a two-object tour Free with special exhibition surcharge to feed your artistic appetite. Bring your own lunch to enjoy at the end. *Starting February 14 Art O The Wall Sketching in the Galleries Friday, January 29 | 6:00–7:30 p.m. Tuesdays | 6:00–8:00 p.m. $10 members | $20 non-members Meet in the Great Hall | $10 non-members Register: samuseum.org/calendar Enjoy an evening of casual instruction based on works in the collections. In this monthly installment of “I’m not an art historian!”, Shelby A. Guevara, Meditation in the Japanese Gallery stylist and co-owner of Montage Vintage, will give her perspective on favorite Saturdays | 10:15–11:00 a.m. works in the Museum collection. End the tour with bites and brews provided Free with Museum admission | Cushions and stools are provided. by our neighbors, Alamo Beer Company. Space is limited.

EDUCATOR WORKSHOPS SPONSOR SUPPORT Mary Kargl Lecture Fund and H-E-B generously support Art History 101. Family Programs have been generously underwritten by the San Antonio Area Educator Workshop: Just for Art Teachers—Ceramics Foundation and the Faye L. and William L. Cowden Charitable Foundation. Saturday, January 23 | 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. Art Party is generously funded by the John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation, a $15 members | $25 non-members | Lunch included fund of the San Antonio Area Foundation. 5 CPE/GT | Register: samuseum.org/learn/educators M.E. Hart Foundation, Risto E. and June A. Hurme, and the San Antonio Museum This artist-led workshop surveys the history and technology of ceramic art of Art Docents help make Sketching in the Galleries possible. production. Practice hand-building and molding techniques in the studio and Collection and special exhibition lectures are made possible by generous support receive tips for glazing and decoration. Space is limited. from the Louis A. and Frances B. Wagner lecture fund.

Educator Workshop: Corita Kent and the Language of Pop Saturday, February 13 | 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. $15 members | $25 non-members | Lunch included 5 CPE/GT | Register: samuseum.org/learn/educators Above: The work of artist, educator, and Roman Catholic nun Corita Kent expanded and Corita Kent (American, 1918–1986) the juiciest tomato of all, 1964 challenged the boundaries of the pop art movement. Experience Kent’s own Screenprint creativity exercises, hands-on printmaking, and tours of the exhibition. See how 29 3/4 x 36 inches Collection of Jason Simon, New York the pop art movement influenced 20th–century art across the Museum’s © Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles collection. Space is limited. Image © President and Fellows of Harvard College CALENDAR OF EVENTS JANUARY | FEBRUARY 2016

Visit samuseum.org for calendar updates 23 | SATURDAY 12 | FRIDAY Educator Workshop: Member Preview Day: EVERY TUESDAY & SUNDAY Just for Art Teachers—Ceramics Corita Kent and the Language of Pop Gallery Talk: Museum Highlights 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Tuesdays | 4:30–5:30 p.m. $15 members | $25 non-members Art Party: The Juiciest Tomato Sundays | 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Register: samuseum.org/calendar Gallery Talks: 5:30, 6:15, and 7:15 p.m. Gallery Talk: Corita Kent* 24 | SUNDAY Party: 6:00–8:00 p.m. | Bar: The Esquire Tavern Tuesdays | 5:30–6:30 p.m. Film: Rara Avis—John James Audubon 13 | SATURDAY Sundays | 12:00–1:00 p.m. and the Birds of America Exhibition Opening: Corita Kent *Starting February 14 2:30–4:30 p.m. 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. EVERY SATURDAY Meditation in the Japanese Gallery 25 | MONDAY Educator Workshop: Saturdays | 10:15–11:00 a.m. Music at the Museum Corita Kent and the Language of Pop 5:30–9:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. $50 | RSVP: samuseum.org/calendar $15 members | $25 non-members Register: samuseum.org/calendar 26 | TUESDAY Sketching in the Galleries 14 | SUNDAY JANUARY 6:00–8:00 p.m. Lecture: Salvation at the Supermarket— Free for members | $10 non-members Corita Kent and Pop Art by Susan Dackerman, PhD 1 | FRIDAY 27 | WEDNESDAY 3:00–4:00 p.m. Museum Closed Playdates: Grecian Gold 10:00–10:45 a.m. 16 | TUESDAY 2 | SATURDAY Register: samuseum.org/calendar Sketching in the Galleries Tour for Visitors Who are 6:00–8:00 p.m. Blind or Visually Impaired 29 | FRIDAY Free for members | $10 non-members 10:00–11:00 a.m. Art O the Wall Register: 210.978.8138 6:00–7:30 p.m. 17 | WEDNESDAY $10 members | $20 non-members Playdates: Paper Dragons 3 | SUNDAY RSVP: samuseum.org/calendar 10:00–10:45 a.m. Exhibition Closing: 28 Chinese Register: samuseum.org/calendar Gallery Talk: 12:00–1:00 p.m. Circle Night: First Sundays for Families: 28 Chinese Corita Kent and the Language of Pop 11:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. FEBRUARY 5:00–7:00 p.m. | Free for Circle Members RSVP: 210.978.8133 or samuseum.org/calendar 5 | TUESDAY Sketching in the Galleries 18 | THURSDAY 2 | TUESDAY 6:00–8:00 p.m. Homeschool Student Workshop Sketching in the Galleries Free for members | $10 non-members 9:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. and 1:00–3:30 p.m. 6:00–8:00 p.m. 6 | WEDNESDAY Free for members | $10 non-members Art To Lunch Playdates: Brown Bear, Brown Bear 12:30–1:00 p.m. 10:00–10:45 a.m. 3 | WEDNESDAY Young Friends: Register: samuseum.org/calendar Playdates: Magical Doors 10:00–10:45 a.m. A Conversation about Corita Kent 6:00–7:30 p.m. 8 | FRIDAY Register: samuseum.org/calendar RSVP: 210.978.8133 or samuseum.org/calendar Art Party: Realms of Earth and Sky 6 | SATURDAY Gallery Talks: 5:30, 6:15, and 7:15 p.m. 19 | FRIDAY Party: 6:00–8:00 p.m. | Bar: Blue Box 19th Annual Mays Symposium 9:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Luminaria Take Two 7:00 p.m.–midnight 12 | TUESDAY $50 members | $75 non-members | $25 students Register: samuseum.org/calendar Art Fit: Art + Exercise 20 | SATURDAY 6:00–7:00 p.m. Tour for Visitors Who are Members-Only Tour: Young Friends + Blind or Visually Impaired Corita Kent and the Language of Pop 6:00–7:30 p.m. 10:00–11:00 a.m. 10:00 and 11:00 a.m. RSVP: 210.978.8133 or samuseum.org/calendar Register: 210.978.8138 RSVP: 210.978.8123 or samuseum.org/calendar

Sketching in the Galleries 7 | SUNDAY 21 | SUNDAY 6:00–8:00 p.m. First Sundays for Families: Animals in Art Performance by Musical O erings Free for members | $10 non-members 11:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. 3:00–4:00 p.m. $15 members | $25 non-members 13 | WEDNESDAY 9 | TUESDAY RSVP: samuseum.org/calendar Playdates: Black and White Art Fit: Art + Exercise 10:00–10:45 a.m. 6:00–7:00 p.m. 23 | TUESDAY Register: samuseum.org/calendar Sketching in the Galleries Sketching in the Galleries 6:00–8:00 p.m. 14 | THURSDAY 6:00–8:00 p.m. Free for members | $10 non-members Art Crawl: Faces, Faces, Faces Free for members | $10 non-members 10:00–10:45 a.m. 24 | WEDNESDAY 10 | WEDNESDAY Playdates: Lines, Lines Everywhere! 15 | FRIDAY Playdates: Oceanic Masks 10:00–10:45 a.m. Art History 101: American Art 10:00–10:45 a.m. Register: samuseum.org/calendar 6:00–7:30 p.m. Register: samuseum.org/calendar 28 | SUNDAY 19 | TUESDAY 11 | THURSDAY Lecture: Building the Face of San Antonio Sketching in the Galleries Art Crawl: Wiggly, Squiggly, Red, and Blue by Tom and Cosmo Guido 6:00–8:00 p.m. 10:00–10:45 a.m. of Guido Construction Free for members | $10 non-members Member Opening Reception: 3:00–4:00 p.m. 20 | WEDNESDAY Corita Kent and the Language of Pop 6:00–8:00 p.m. Playdates: Chihuly Blossoms $30 members Free for Circle Members 10:00–10:45 a.m. Unless otherwise noted, programs are free to members and free to RSVP: 210.978.8123 or purchase tickets at Register: samuseum.org/calendar the general public with the price of Museum admission, or where samuseum.org/memberreception applicable, special exhibition admission. Please check samuseum.org for updates to the calendar of events. 21 | THURSDAY Homeschool Student Workshop Opposite: Corita Kent (American, 1918–1986) 9:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. and 1:00–3:30 p.m. power up, 1965 Screenprint Art To Lunch Four prints, each: 28 3/4 x 35 inches Loaned by the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles 12:30–1:00 p.m. © Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles FOR FAMILIES (Free for children 12 and under)

First Sundays for Families Great Hall | 11:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. New Hours! Sunday, January 3 | 28 Chinese Sunday, February 7 | Animals in Art The San Antonio Museum of Art invites children and families to explore the collections, create art, and share Sundays together at the museum.

Homeschool Student Workshops Thursday, January 21 and February 18 9:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. and 1:00–3:30 p.m. | Free with admission Register: 210.978.8174 or [email protected] Participate as a family in a guided tour and hands-on art activity. Extend learning through art at home with Museum materials. Advance registration required.

Art Crawl: Gallery Tours for Caregivers and Babies 0-18 months Second Thursdays | 10:00–10:45 a.m. Thursday, January 14 | Faces, Faces, Faces Thursday, February 11 | Wiggly, Squiggly, Red, and Blue SPECIAL EVENTS Put your babies in their slings or strollers. Art selections engage both you and your infant. Includes playtime. Art Party Playdates (Ages 2-4) Second Fridays | 6:00–8:00 p.m. Wednesdays | 10:00–10:45 a.m. Gallery Talks | 5:30, 6:15, and 7:15 p.m. RSVP required at samuseum.org/calendar Free with admission | Cash bar Cultivate, nurture, and inspire creativity through stories, Cocktails and music inspiration: gallery activities, movement, music, and art making. January 8: Realms of Earth and Sky | Bar by Blue Box February 12: The Juiciest Tomato | Bar by the Esquire Tavern

Art Party is a collaboration of the Museum and KRTU Jazz 91.7. It is generously funded by the John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation, MEMBERS-ONLY EVENTS a fund of the San Antonio Area Foundation. Art Fit: Art + Exercise Second Tuesdays | September–June | 6:00–7:00 p.m. Meet in the Great Hall | Free Young Friends + Blue Star Contemporary Tuesday, January 12 | 6:00–7:30 p.m. Enjoy a short gallery talk on fitness and the visual arts in the Museum, followed RSVP: 210.978.8133 or samuseum.org/calendar by dierent forms of exercise and a run down the river led by coaches from Run Wild Sports. Blue Star Contemporary will host two tours of their current exhibition beginning at 6:15 p.m., followed by light refreshments with a second Art Fit: Art + Exercise is endorsed by the Mayor’s Fitness Council and tour at 6:50 p.m. Let’s Move! Museums and Gardens.

Member Opening Reception Film: Rara Avis—John James Audubon Corita Kent and the Language of Pop and the Birds of America Thursday, February 11 | 6:00–8:00 p.m. Sunday, January 24 | 2:30–4:30 p.m. Great Hall | $30 members | Free for Circle Members Free with admission

RSVP: 210.978.8123 or purchase tickets at samuseum.org/memeberreception A documentary about the life of John James Audubon, an American Members will celebrate the exhibition opening with an exclusive preview frontiersman who made crucial contributions to aviary science, wildlife accompanied by music, drinks, and hors d’oeuvres. conservation, and the visual arts. Followed by a Q & A with the film’s director and producers. Space is limited. Member Preview Day: Corita Kent and the Language of Pop Friday, February 12 | 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Music at the Museum Monday, January 25 | 5:30–9:00 p.m. Members see the exhibition first. Docent-led tours will be available at $50 | RSVP: samuseum.org/calendar 11:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. This collaborative fundraising event of the League and Members-Only Tour: Corita Kent and the Language of Pop the San Antonio Museum of Art Docents supports art and music programs for Saturday, February 20 Bexar County students. Enjoy wine and hors d’oeuvres, a silent auction, and Tour Group #1: 10:00–10:45 a.m. (reception to follow) musical performances featuring San Antonio Symphony Concert Master Eric Tour Group #2: 11:00–11:45 a.m. (reception prior) Gratz. Space is limited. River Pavilion | Cowden Gallery | Free for members RSVP: 210.978.8123 or samuseum.org/calendar 19th Annual Mays Symposium: Looking East • Looking West— Chinese Art in a Global World Members will enjoy light refreshments and a docent-led tour of the exhibition. Saturday, February 6 | 9:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m. $50 members | $75 non-members | $25 students Circle Night: Corita Kent and the Language of Pop Lunch included | Register: samuseum.org/calendar Wednesday, February 17 | 5:00–7:00 p.m. Free for Circle Members Join our distinguished speakers as they explore the rich cross-cultural interplay RSVP: 210.978.8133 or samuseum.org/calendar of eastern and western traditions in Chinese Art from the Renaissance into the Circle Members are invited to a private after-hours viewing of the exhibition. 21st century. Space is limited. Complimentary refreshments. This is the nineteenth in a series of fine and decorative arts symposia underwritten by the Mays Family Foundation. Young Friends: A Conversation about Corita Kent Thursday, February 18 | 6:00–7:30 p.m. Luminaria Take Two RSVP: 210.978.8133 or samuseum.org/calendar Friday, February 19 | 7:00 p.m.–midnight Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art Anna Stothart and Mun Free | luminariasa.org Moorman, PhD, explore the relationship between Corita Kent’s work and Twenty-plus artists and performers will enliven our campus. medieval illuminated manuscripts.

Las Americas with Musical O erings Sunday, February 21 | 3:00–4:00 p.m. $15 members | $25 non-members RSVP: samuseum.org/calendar Explore the music of the Americas as part of the city-wide celebration Las Americas Festival. Works by composers Ginastera, Villa-Lobos, Gershwin and more. New & Noted

Every new cohort of docents is extraordinary—extraordinary in their passion for art and learning and for their commitment to the Museum. This year’s class stands out in another way: their varied professions (past and present) and their ages. The youngest is 18 years old and the oldest is 70. Along with several teachers, there is a master gardener, an engineer, an architect, a realtor, a yoga instructor, a professional baker, and a restaurant manager. To learn more about becoming a docent, visit samuseum.org/about/volunteer.

Graduates of the popular Art History 101 talks can look forward to a new series that will delve deeper into specific areas of the Museum’s collection. It kicks o on March 18 with Art History 201: Contemporary Art. Still no papers. Still no exams. Just a glass of wine and a thoughtful art conversation to start your weekend. The first event, with artist Sarah Cain, is March 18, which coincides with the reopening of the contemporary galleries by Anna Stothart, Brown Foundation Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art. Look for familiar For readers and book clubs, there's a new favorites but also works that you’ve never seen before, program this spring, Art by the Book. Discussion guides including a new acquisition: love seat (2015) by Sarah will be available on our website to help make Cain (below). Cain’s work enters the collection with connections between literary works and the visual arts. funds provided by the Friends of Contemporary Art. Art by the Book tours will also be available to schedule. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez and Latin American art will be the first discussion guide (available in January) followed by Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi and Islamic art (May). Not in a book club? Join other readers for a discussion and tour in April (One Hundred Years of Solitude) and August (Persepolis). Look for tour dates later this spring. Marie Halff is the new Chairman of the Museum’s Board of Trustees. She will serve a two-year term. A long-time supporter of the Museum, Mrs. Hal endowed the American art curator position in 2013 in honor of her late husband Hugh, who was a founding member of the Museum. Mrs. Hal has been a member of the board for the last four years. “I’m thrilled to have the chance to help the Museum expand and reach more people and strengthen its place in the community,” said Mrs. Hal. New board members include Voting Trustees Suzanne Ware and Candace Humphreys and Advisory Trustees Linda Whitacre and Martha Lopez. Corinna Richter has moved from Advisory to Voting Trustee.

EXHIBITION OPENINGS

Photo: Julius Chan Photography AND CLOSINGS Realms of Earth and Sky: Indian Painting from the 15th to the 19th Century November 6, 2015–February 14, 2016 Love was in the air at the Museum In San Antonio, nothing compares to the Roberto de la Selva: Mays Symposium. This day-long decorative and fine arts when Major L. Nicholas Smith and his wife Dr. Yvette Modern Mexican Masterpieces in Wood event, now in its nineteenth year, is underwritten by the Smith arrived to have his retirement photos taken on January 29–June 26, 2016 Veterans Day. He posted his pictures on Facebook and Mays Family Foundation and has brought scholars from Corita Kent and the Language of Pop around the country and the world to speak. The theme of wrote, “Because of the war eort, my wife and I never February 3–May 8, 2016 had the chance to get formal wedding photos. After all this year’s event on February 6 is “Looking East, Looking Rodin: The Human Experience West: Chinese Art in A Global World” and features four these years, we have a lot more grey hair but our love March 5–May 29, 2016 for each other and of art has only grown. Having these distinguished speakers: Timothy Brook, PhD, University Highest Heaven: photos taken inside the Museum made the experience of British Columbia; Richard Ellis Vinograd, PhD, Stanford Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Art from the University; Colin Mackenzie, PhD, Nelson-Atkins Museum special.” An artist himself, Major Smith has served in Collection of Roberta and Richard Huber June 11–September 4, 2016 of Art, and Julia F. Andrews, PhD, Ohio State University. the U.S. Army for 26 years, including many combat See the calendar for registration details. tours and international humanitarian missions. He and Carlos Mérida: his wife met on a blind date in Paris and have lived all Selections from the Permanent Collection over the world. July 8, 2016–January 29, 2017 In the Dust of this Planet October 22, 2016–January 15, 2017

Sarah Cain (American, born 1979), love seat, 2015 Acrylic, beads, gouache and gold leaf on canvas and sofa, h. 95 in. (241.3 cm); w. 52 in. (132.1 cm); d. 30 in. (76.2 cm) Purchased with funds provided by Friends of Contemporary Art, 2015.18.a-c Photography by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

Dao Yan (Chinese, 1335-1419), River Landscape China, Ming dynasty, dated to 1382 Hand scroll, ink and colors on paper, l. 109 in. (276.9 cm); w. 11 1/8 in. (28.3 cm) Gift of the Ewing Halsell Foundation in honor of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. George, 87.19. Photography by Peggy Tenison ArtWorks SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM of ART WINTER | 2016

Robert Langston received his BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and his MA in Administration from the University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio. He started at the Museum two years ago as an on-call educator and last fall became the Coordinator of Teacher Programs, Curriculum, and Interpretation.

6 Questions for...

ROBERT LANGSTON, Coordinator of Teacher Programs

How did you become an art educator? I started as a substitute art teacher in the public schools in Chicago. I ended up teaching art at a private college preparatory school where I was hired to build their program from scratch.

You are responsible for the Museum’s Educator Workshops—you teach teachers. What’s your strategy? 1 2 I first led workshops for teachers at the University of Chicago’s South Asia Educational Outreach, and it was there I realized how valuable educator workshops are. Teachers coming in with low morale really turned around when they had access to primary source material and presenters who are experts in their field. In the same way, I want to help San Antonio teachers discover how the Museum can be an incubator for fresh ideas.

What’s the history of teaching teachers at the Museum? Educator workshops go back more than a decade. I am building on a strong program with a good reputation. Our four-day Summer Teacher Institute usually sells out months in advance. Recently we’ve put resources into doubling the number of workshops to nearly 15 a year and serving over 600 teachers. Our last workshop was on the current exhibition Realms of Earth and Sky. Teachers from as far away as Floresville and Comal came to hear a gallery talk and then made art in the studio as inspiration for lesson plans.

3 Where do you get your inspiration? My focus at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago was South Asian art history. Travel has been a big influence on my art and professional development. I received a Fulbright-Hays award to travel to India, and my trip to China and South Korea was through Trinity University’s EAST program. As one of the first recipients of a Toyota grant, I traveled to Japan. I continue to unpack these experiences to this day. KNOW MORE Teacher workshops provide What are your favorite works in the Museum collection? SBEC-approved CPE and GT hours. Many of the pieces in the Asian Collection remind me of my travels and studies. The screen of Scenes in and around Kyoto depicts recognizable For dates and themes shrines as they were centuries ago. Other works draw me through powers samuseum.org/learn stronger than reminiscence—I have a visceral reaction. The hair on the back of my neck stands up when I lock eyes with Aizen Myō-ō.

What is the biggest challenge you’re facing in your new job? Keeping up with the changing landscape of education. So far, we have 1) Aizen Myō-ō education programs geared towards homeschooling, after-school programs, 2) Hands-on art for teachers charter schools, summer schools, and special needs schools, and the list is always growing! There are so many dierent ways to learn at the Museum. 3) Lesson planning in the galleries Continuing to evolve and stay relevant—that’s a top priority.

Aizen Myō-ō, Japanese, Late Kamakura period, 14th century Wood with gesso, pigment, and gold; gilt metal fittings, h. 19 3/4 in. (50.2 cm) Purchased with the Lenora and Walter F. Brown Challenge Fund, 91.20.a-b. Photography by Peggy Tenison.

11 Keeping Up with Jones Avenue

FINDS AND CURIOSITIES IN WALKING OR BIKING DISTANCE OF THE MUSEUM

CORITA KENT AND THE LANGUAGE OF POP examines the artist’s intense engagement with prevailing artistic, social, and religious movements from 1964–69. 1 More than sixty of her prints2 will be on view alongside works by contemporaries such4 as Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha, Jim Dine, and Roy Lichtenstein.

In 1964, Corita Kent—Catholic nun, educator, and artist—produced the juiciest tomato of all, two years after Andy Warhol’s infamous representation of a Campbell’s tomato soup can sparked the beginning of the American pop art movement. Kent’s twist (see image, p. 7) depicts the Virgin Mary by spelling out TOMATO in red, orange, and yellow, with an inscription that appropriates a then-popular Del Monte tomato sauce slogan and proclaims, “Mary Mother is the juiciest tomato of them all.” Unsurprisingly, Warhol was a fan.

While Kent’s work coincided with the development of pop art and employed many of the same tactics, it never received the same acclaim as that of her male counterparts. Yet, in a 1966 article for Look magazine, George Leonard wrote, “Sister Mary Corita is a FEBRUARY 13–MAY 8, 2016 di erent kind of pop artist. Whereas the New York boys [read Warhol, Lichtenstein, etc.] deal in a certain brittle archness (they are chic), Sister Corita and her students COWDEN GALLERY unabashedly arm and celebrate the here-and-now glories of God’s world.” 3

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1] BIG HOPS GROWLER STATION “THE 3] HOTEL EMMA — 0.5 MILES BRIDGE” — 0.5 MILES 136 E. Grayson St. | 210.223.7375 316 Austin St. | 210.320.1470 thehotelemma.com bighops.com If you don’t know that the Pearl’s Second Empire–style Neighborhood brewheads have more to bubble about brewhouse opened in full transformed glory as the with the addition of this new location of Big Hops. Hotel Emma last November, you may have been living Tucked at the foot of the Hays Street Bridge in the under a rock. So what can you enjoy there short of former Boneshakers space, the bar is a popular stop for booking a (truly luxurious) room? Besides the new bicycling hipsters. The sta is particularly well schooled restaurant Supper and the bar/club room Sternewirth, in the nuances of the 30-odd craft beers on tap, we like the Larder, which sells high-end provisions and two-thirds of which are brewed in . Take your beer prepared foods to go. Pick up a hot pressed sandwich home in a 64- or 32-ounce growler, or relax and drink it like Wood-Grilled Lamb with Labneh, Cucumber, Apple, in-house with a bite from a visiting food truck. and Mint Caper Relish on Ciabatta. You can enjoy it at home, at the Larder, or elsewhere in the hotel’s dramatic public spaces. It’s all just a 7-minute walk up 5] NUEZZ MURAL / RIVER WALK 2] TORO TACO BAR — 0.6 MILE river from the Museum. APARTMENTS — 0 MILES 114 Brooklyn Ave. | no phone 207 / 111 W. Jones Avenue torotacobar.com  facebook.com/torotacobar luminariasa.org  alamomanhattan.com 4] THE SHOP AT THE SAN ANTONIO Perhaps you’ve noticed a colorful “sign”—and a huge Chefs Josh Cross and Rick Frame have elevated the MUSEUM OF ART — 0 MILES construction project—on Jones Avenue across the outdoor taquería concept by pairing exceptional 200 W. Jones Ave | 210.978.8140 street from the Museum’s Latin American wing. cuisine with a friendly, low-key vibe. The tacos are samuseaum.org/shop served Mexican street-food style, with a mix of Mexico City artist Nuezz (Miguel Mejia)—whose tag traditional and novel ingredients. The Lengua taco has Get your clutches on some fashionable, wearable art plays with the Spanish word for “nut”—painted the sublimely tender beef tongue, roasted garlic, nopales, at the Museum Shop in the form of a Kent Stetson site-specific mural last fall under commission for the corn, and jalapeños; Cabrito Guisada comes with handbag. “Each piece is really a work of art. I’m not Luminaria arts festival. “He uses bold colors and lines pickled onions, cilantro, and queso cotija; and a salad of using that term loosely,” said Caitlin Brown-Clancy, to call attention to Mexican imagery, pre-Hispanic cucumber, chamoy, lime, cilantro, and cacahuetes Manager of Retail Operations. Stetson, who trained in graphics, and contemporary street culture,” said japonéses (addictive crunchy roast peanuts) comforts sciences at Brown University, makes digital art, prints Luminaria Executive Director Kathy Armstrong. vegetarians. There’s a full bar with plenty of tequilas, the images on canvas, varnishes the canvas, and sews With a 191-unit luxury apartment complex under mezcals, and sotols and a good selection of Mexican them into handbags in his Providence, RI, studio. “In construction at W. Jones Ave and the River Walk and Texas beers. Crackling campfires built in 2003, as a framing experiment, I presented one of my (the projected completion date is Q2 2017), the cinderblock pits make it warm enough to eat outdoors digital paintings as a handbag, and have since made intersection of public art and our neighborhood’s during a San Antonio winter and live bands often play bags for collectors throughout the world,” said Stetson. real-estate development boom is quite literal. If you’re later at night. “I hope that by blurring the line between art and wondering what the new building will look like, check fashion I can in some small way inspire people to out the rendering in the “projects” section of the live beautifully.” developers’ website, alamomanhattan.com.

124 Art Scene SANSAN A ANTONIONTONIO MUMUSEUMSEUM ofof ARTA WINTER | 2016

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1. Amanda Williams and Ruth Eileen Sullivan, Destination London co-chairs

2. Tom Wensinger, Xitlalt Herrera

3. Marie Hal , Board Chairman

4. Lara Luce, Josie Davidson, Becky Cerroni

5. Mark Randolph, Mary Ann Randolph, Karen Heydenreich, Francie Mannix, Hunt Winton, Margaret Judson, Robert Heydenreich, Joy Fuhrmann, Lisa Wol , Kim Winton

13 Give & Join

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Lopez Nancy and Harold Black Lt. Col. and Mrs. Robert E. Kelso Miki and Sebastian Izzard Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Droste Bonnie and Grant Lyons Dr. Bonnie L. Blankmeyer Mrs. Kim Lewis Mr. John S. Jockusch Dr. and Mrs. Richard Dulany Ms. Claudia Maceo Mr. Anton G. Blieberger and Ms. Mary Anne Mr. and Mrs. Dennert Ware Dr. Joe E. Johnson and Dr. Karen Diaz Ms. Patricia Flynn Dr. and Mrs. Walt W. Magnus Svetlik Emily and Brad Jones Judi Free and Paul Hamborg Cary Marriott and Jim Taylor Mr. Matthew Bloemer DIRECTOR'S CIRCLE ($25,000) Ms. Dianne Kamolsri Dr. John P. Giolma Mr. Oswin P. McCarty Mrs. Linda R. Blount Mrs. Marie Hal Mr. Chris Karcher and Ms. Karen Keach Dr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Goldzieher Dr. Adele McCormick Ms. Marty Bock Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Kennedy Mr. Kenneth Grams Mr. and Mrs. Dana McGinnis Ms. Norma Bodevin and Dr. Raul Yordan Mr. and Mrs. Greg King Mrs. Denise Green Mr. and Mrs. John G. 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Muñoz III Mr. Charles T. Wright Ms. Jennifer Schooley and Mr. William Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Daniels Alan Ashworth, MD, PhD Col. and Mrs. William Dean Rasco Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Wulfe Saunders Ms. Carmina Danini Virginia and Andre Bally Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Richmond Mr. and Mrs. Jim Williams Dr. Wayne Schwesinger Mr. and Mrs. Ted E. Davis Mr. John Bardgette Corinna and J.B. Richter Mr. and Mrs. Bartell Zachry Henriette and Josef Seiterle Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Day Dr. Marguerite Barzun Mr. and Mrs. Barry C. Roberts Sarah and Gerard Sheridan Mrs. Patricia Diaz Dennis and Mr. Michael Dr. and Mrs. Carlos Bazan III Mr. Banks M. Smith Ms. Alice C. Simkins Dennis Dr. and Mrs. Dale E. Bennett Mr. and Mrs. Forrester M. Smith CORPORATE MEMBERS Mrs. Diane Smith-Waynick Rollie and Steve Devlin as of September 30, 2015 Ron Binks Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Spanjer Marga Speicher, PhD Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan S. Dowben Ms. Claudia L. Bocanegra Mr. and Mrs. George Spencer Maj. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Draper Mr. and Mrs. Edward Steves CORPORATE DIRECTOR'S CIRCLE Elise and Craig Boyan Pat and Marcy Stehling Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Dreyfus Mrs. Louis H. Stumberg ($25,000) Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Buchanan Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Steves Jr. Mr. James Duerr and Mrs. Pamela Hall Mr. and Mrs. George M. Williams Capital Group Mr. John Butchkosky Mrs. Karen Stiles and Mr. David Delambre Roberto A. Duran Mr. and Mrs. Richey Wyatt H-E-B Mr. Daniel S. Cantu Drs. John and Peggy Stoll Je rey Dyer and Meryle Dyer Mr. and Mrs. David Zachry Valero Energy Foundation Mrs. Jennifer Cantu Dr. Tom Swanson and Mrs. Annette Revs. Doug and Mary Earle Alan Carl and Jennifer Sutton, MD ART SOCIETY CIRCLE ($1,000) CORPORATE BENEFACTOR'S CIRCLE Swanson, RN Mrs. Mildred Ehrenberg Mr. Chris Carson Dr. Fortunato Abello ($5,000) Mr. William Thomas Dr. Wayne J. 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Finlayson Mr. and Mrs. Hal Adams Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Graham Mr. Edward E. Collins III Zachry Corporation Mr. William Fisher and Ms. Mariana Munante Mr. Alfred Alaniz Dr. Harry A. Greer Mr. and Mrs. Taliaferro Cooper Mr. Paul Fitzpatrick and Ms. Collette Daubner Dr. and Mrs. Horatio R. Aldredge Mrs. Dorothy F. Grin SMALL BUSINESS ($500) Mr. William R. Crow and Ms. Margaret Ms. Bonnie L. Flake and Dr. Francisco Garcia Ms. Paulette Allen Dr. and Mrs. Fernando A. Guerra Lark Mason Associates Inc. Anderson Mrs. Magdalene Flannery Dr. Cli ord Alprin Mr. and Mrs. Eric Guerrero Michael G. Imber, Architects Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Drought Ms. Leah Glast and Mr. Alan Schuminsky Ms. Candace K. Andrews Mr. and Mrs. Tom Guggolz Paloma Blanca Mexican Cuisine Betsy and Brooke Dudley Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Goldsmith Ms. Mary Ellen Archer Mr. and Mrs. Gundersen Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay A. Du UNIVERSITY PARTNERS Ms. Anna C. Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Matt Hall Dr. Ann M. 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Henrich Mr. and Mrs. Joe Babb Mr. and Mrs. Edward Haynes Marion PATRON ($500) Mr. Justin R. Holley Mr. and Mrs. Milton Babbitt Dr. Helen P. Hazuda and Ms. Ann Elizabeth Laura I. Gates Mr. James W. Albert and Dr. Valarie Mr. and Mrs. Gilard G. Kargl Dr. and Mrs. Melvin Baden Richter Mrs. Andrea Giu rida and Mr. Richard Spiser-Albert Dr. Bradley Kayser and Dr. Gemma Kennedy Mrs. Lene C. Bailey Frances J. Hearn Galloway Ms. Ann Grith Ash Mr. and Mrs. Luther King Mr. and Mrs. Richard Banasau Mr. and Mrs. Christian Her Mrs. Claire Golden Ms. Tracy Avery Mr. Scott King Mrs. Betty R. Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Hernandez Dr. Francisco Gonzalez-Scarano and Mr. and Mrs. Hardy S. Bass Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Koepp Mr. J. Cary Barton Dr. Gloria R. Herrera and Mr. Bruce Norton Dr. Barbara Turner Dr. George Beddingfield Howard and Iris Koota Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bashore Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hicks Dr. Thomas A. Berg and Dr. Susan Erickson Ms. Rosemary Kowalski Mr. Peter Batista Ms. Margie Hildreth

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14 SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM of ART WINTER | 2016

SPONSOR ($150) Mr. Elbert McKinlay and Ms. Amelia Ramos Mr. Carroll Schubert DONATIONS General (R) James T. and Dr. Antoinette Mr. and Mrs. Je rey R. McManus Mr. and Mrs. Larry Schulze October 1, 2014–January 31, 2015 Hill Lori and Frederick McNealy Suzy and Robert Schumacher Mr. and Mrs. Mitch Hill Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. McNeel Jr. Mrs. Helen J. Schupbach $100,000 and Above $1,000 to $4,999 Dr. James H. Hines Mr. and Mrs. John A. Mead Dr. and Mrs. Gerry D. Scott The Brown Foundation, Inc. The Nathalie & Gladys Dalkowitz Charitable Mr. and Mrs. Steve J. Hitzfelder Mr. and Mrs. Bill Melson Ms. Chesley Seals Robert J. Kleberg, Jr. and Helen C. Kleberg Trust Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hoelscher Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Menchen John R. Seals, MD and Chesley Seals Foundation Bank of America - San Antonio Ms. Elizabeth A. Hogeda-Romo Mr. Jon Mendlovitz Mr. John Seidenfeld and Ms. Mary Barad The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Mr. and Mrs. George C. Hixon Mark Hogensen and Kimberly Aubuchon Dr. William A. Meriwether Beth Senne-Du and Mark Du K.S. Adams, Jr. Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Williams Mr. Darryl Holmes Mr. and Mrs. C.A. Messina Dr. Anthony P. Sertich II in honor of Patricia Galt Steves Carol Tyrrell Kyle Foundation Ms. Debe Holt Mr. and Mrs. David Middleton Lorian and Mark Sessions City of San Antonio Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hoppes Ms. Christina Minor Col. Joanne Seymour William and Salome Scanlan Foundation Below $1,000 Gretchen and Alex Huddleston Kristina and Nicholas Mistry Col. and Mrs. Paul Sheeld Mrs. Marie Hal Ms. Janet Hughes Mr. and Mrs. John Mize Dr. and Mrs. A.P. Shepherd $10,000-$24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Goldsmith Mr. and Mrs. Christopher D. Hughes Dr. and Mrs. Saul Montelongo Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shivers Marcia & Otto Koehler Foundation Ms. Laurie Huhndorf Mr. Robert Morales Ambassador and Mrs. Sichan Siv Bank of America - San Antonio Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hyslop Chip and Carey Morgan Mr. Larry Skwarczynski E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation TRIBUTES Mr. Robert Imler Holly and Geo ry Morgan Mr. and Mrs. David Smith October 1, 2014–January 31, 2015 Dr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Infante Mr. and Mrs. William Morgan Mr. George F. Smith and Ms. Debra Ms. Claudia Huntington & Mr. Marshall Carol and Laird Ingham Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Morin Barnes Miller Jr. In Honor of Peggy and Lowry Mays Mr. and Mrs. James D. Ivy Mrs. Lillian P. Morris Kaye Tyler Smith Mr. and Mrs. Michael Humphreys $5,000-$999 Mr. Thomas M. Jackson Laura M. Narvaez and Roberto D. Bosquez Ms. Rebecca Gonzalez and Mr. Doug Rose A. Sinkin Trust Susan Seale Jarvis Mr. and Mrs. Franklin W. Neal Smith In Memory of David T. Dillon The Ewing Halsell Foundation Ms. Anna S. Jimenez Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Nicholas Dr. and Mrs. Paul H. Smith Jr. Mrs. Patsy Steves Estate of Ursula S. Fleck-Kestler Cheryl and John Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Neil Nichols Mimi and Paul Snow Mr. Peter C. Selig Mr. Allan Jones and Mrs. Kelsey Menzel Mr. and Mrs. Will Nixon Mr. and Mrs. Bob Sohn Dr. and Mrs. Kim D. Jones Gaylin L. Norris Mr. Earl Stanley Mr. R. Roy Jones Mrs. Rebecca O' Shea Mr. and Mrs. Perry Stansbury Ms. Olga Joukouski Ms. Anne O'Brien Marciel and Drew Stephen Mrs. Ulrike Kalt Mr. and Mrs. Leonard O'Donnell Mr. and Mrs. David Stephenson Bill and Margaret Kanyusik Dr. and Mrs. Fred H. Olin Claire Rhodes Stevenson and Harry Ms. Xonia Kargl Ms. Patricia Olivares Stevenson Mr. Jim Keller Mr. David L. Olson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Craig Stoltz Mr. Thurman J. Kennedy Jr. Eduardo Ortega and Yolanda Castillo Mrs. Alice Ball Strunk Mr. and Mrs. Donald T. Kestler Sr. Drs. Valerie and Victor Ostrower Mr. Juan Carlos Suarez and Ms. Annie Sandra Keyser and Michael Schroeder Dr. and Mrs. John Palmer Domit Darrell and Jodi Kirksey Laurie and Robert Pariseau Mr. Gregory Surfas and Dr. Barbara Lazar Olive Anne and Tres Kleberg Mr. Brad Parman and Mr. Tim Seeliger Dr. and Mrs. Tyson E. Becker Warren and Judy Knowlton Ms. Laura Parodi and Dr. Luis Giavedoni Carroll and Jeanne Talley Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koors Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Parrigan Ms. Cindy Taylor Mr. Chester Koza and Mrs. Adela B. Garcia Dr. and Mrs. Jose F. Pascual Craig Taylor and Alice Blake Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Y. Kruger Mr. Tom Payton and Mr. Art Ordoqui Mr. and Mrs. Dirk Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Kurtti Ms. Brenda Perna Dr. Leopoldo Tecuanhuey Mr. and Mrs. Martin Kushner Mrs. Lee N. Perry Mr. and Mrs. Victor Thacker Ms. Martha J. Kwan and Mr. John Michael Ms. Frances I. Petimezas Ms. Maria Thomas Zaden Carol Pfrommer, PhD Mrs. and Mr. Pam R. Thomas Mrs. Helen B. Kyse Mr. and Mrs. David Phillips Col. Thomas J. Tredici Mr. and Mrs. David Ladensohn Jessica and J. David Pierce Raul and Cynthia Trevino Ms. Lara Dulce and Ms. Maria Jaime Jelyn Pizzitola and Isabella Hancock Mr. Hector A. Troche Drs. Barbara and Leonard Lawrence Dr. and Mrs. Richard O. Poe Mr. and Mrs. Scott Truax Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Lee Mrs. Helen H. Pohly Mr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Ullman Kelly and Michael Lepeska Ms. Laura Powell and Mr. John Hartman Ms. Laura Uzdavines Fred F. LeSieur and René Rone Jean Powell-Pernoud and Michelle Pernoud Jean Van Nest and Randal Cude Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lewis III Ms. Veronica Prida and Mr. Omar Rodriguez Ms. Jill Vassar Mr. and Mrs. Lennard Lewis Ms. Deb Bolner Prost Mr. Gilbert F. Vazquez and Mrs. Crystal Mr. and Mrs. Steve C. Lewis Donald and Dianne Quigley De La Garza Mrs. Linda L. Litle Joni Raba Mary Jane and David Verette Dr. and Mrs. Michael Little Dr. Dawn Rakich Ms. Betty A. Watts Ten Favorite Mr. and Mrs. Chriss Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Randall Mr. and Mrs. Alan Weinblatt Ms. Teresa B. Lopez Mrs. Barbara Schneider Rattan Mrs. and Mr. Patricia Weir Reasons to Visit the Mr. Vic Noel Lopez Professor and Mrs. Gerald S. Reamey Ms. Janet J. Westgate Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Luna Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Jose R. Rebolledo Mr. Adam Wetherell Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Lutter Jr. Mr. Cameron R. Redding Dr. and Mrs. David H. White SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM of ART Mr. Sam E. Maclin Dr. and Mrs. Benito Resendiz Paul and Elizabeth Whitehead Mr. Allan R. Manka Dr. Linda J. Rhodes Mr. Jeremiah Williams Mrs. Florence N. Marriott George Rice and Joan Vanderford Catherine and Jay Willmann John and Sally Marrs Mr. and Mrs. Lane Riggs Mr. Baxter Wilson You can Ms. Kate Martin and Mr. Carl Bohne Mr. Gary Rine Michael D. and Carole A. Wilson Family Art makes see the world Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Martin Mr. Gil R. Robinson Mr. Raj Wilson you smart. without leaving Zelime and John Matthews Mr. Paul A. Rode Dr. and Mrs. Brian Winn the city. Mr. Dennis John Maul Mariel and Lee Rodgers Ms. Necia Wol and Mr. Mike Koets Ms. Beverly Maurer Mr. and Mrs. Roland Rodriguez Dr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Wood Gretchen and Tommy Mayes Samantha and Andrew Rodriguez Mr. and Mrs. Greg Wright Ms. Jerry S. Mazal Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Wyman So many If you’re feeling old, Ms. Nancy McBrine Mr. and Mrs. David Roth Mr. and Mrs. John F. Younger conversation we’ve got older Billy and Jenny Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. Juan Ruiz-Healy Mr. and Mrs. Peter Zacher (5,000 years older). Ms. Pam McCollum Lewis and Jan Russell Mrs. Cathy Zapata starters. Mr. Gary McCown Mr. and Mrs. Je rey D. Ryan Ms. Robin Zimmerman Martha K. McCulloch Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Salazar Terri and Bob McDowell Jorge and Robin San Pedro It's like hitting Mr. Michael McGowan Cessie K. Sanchez the refresh Mr. and Mrs. Edgar McHugh Ms. Maria T. Sanchez Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. McKenna We put the art button. in PARTY every 2nd Friday. PLEASE SAVE THE DATE THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 2016 A Botero Venus, Members a Korean Buddha, see it first an Indian Yogini… and for FREE! Passion for Art we've got it all! A GALA CELEBRATION HONORING This is your Where else are art collection, you going to take KAREN JOHNSON HIXON San Antonio. your in-laws?

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BENEFITTING THE SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM OF ART

15 NONPROFIT ORG 200 W. Jones Avenue • San Antonio, TX. 78215 U.S. POSTAGE PAID SAN ANTONIO, TX PERMIT NO. 2716 FRI AY NIGHT at the MUSEUM

Your weekend starts here! Open ’til 9 p.m. JANUARY 8 | Friday Art Party: Realms of Earth and Sky Gallery Talks: 5:30, 6:15, and 7:15 p.m. Party: 6:00–8:00 p.m. | Bar: Blue Box 15 | Friday Art History 101: American Art 6:00–7:30 p.m. 29 | Friday Art O the Wall 6:00–7:30 p.m. RSVP: samuseum.org/calendar FEBRUARY 12 | Friday Art Party: The Juiciest Tomato Gallery Talks: 5:30, 6:15, and 7:15 p.m. STAY IN TOUCH Party: 6:00–8:00 p.m. | Bar: The Esquire Tavern Follow us on Facebook 19 | Friday Twitter, Instagram Luminaria Take Two C 7:00 p.m.–midnight M Art Party is generously funded by the John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation, a fund of the San Antonio Area Foundation. SAMUSEUM.ORG Y

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MEMBER MAGAZINE

EDITOR Cary Marriott

MANAGING EDITOR Tatiana Herrerra-Schneider

CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Betsy Beckmann

EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Lucie Taylor Amanda Thomas

DESIGNER DVS Design

PHOTOGRAPHY Rudy Arocha ATG Photography Betsy Beckmann Julius Chan Parrish Photography Daniela Riojas Peggy Tenison

ON THE COVER: Corita Kent (American, 1918–1986) for eleanor, 1964 Screenprint 29 5/8 x 39 inches Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Margaret Fisher Fund, 2008.143 © Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles Image © President and Fellows of Harvard College

Auguste Rodin, French (1840-1917) Saint John the Baptist Preaching, modeled about 1880, Musée Rodin cast, 1925, Alexis Rudier Foundry Bronze, h. 31 1/2 in.; w. 19 in.; d. 9 1/2 in. Lent by Iris Cantor Luminaria lit up the night last October. See you for Luminaria Take Two on February 19.