Zillman Art Museum (ZAM) announces 2025 Winter Exhibitions

February 20, 2025
CLAUDIA OLDS GOLDIE: FLY AWAY HOME
JANUARY 17 - MAY 3, 2025


The Zillman Art Museum is delighted to present Fly Away Home, a fantastical menagerie of Claudia Olds Goldie’s sculpted figures. The sculptures are constructed from slabs of white stoneware that are formed into hollow cylinders, shaped from the inside and out, then finely modeled to create their figurative details. The artist then covers the surfaces with intricate graphite pencil drawings or layers of graphite powder to produce a rich, silvery finish. Olds Goldie’s figures capture strength in stillness and a powerful sense of determination. Considerable emotion is portrayed on the faces of the characters and conveys a push and pull between reality and dreaminess.  

Olds Goldie’s series of heads represents an intersection between realism, fantasy, and irony. The faces portray individuals with aspirations and anxieties and offer a stylistic nod to the history and culture of portrait sculpture. Since the artist does not work from live models, she is free to employ an intuitive and inventive process that allows the personality of each head and figure to reveal itself as she manipulates the clay.  

Olds Goldie explores pattern and tone with her installation piece In Concert. By layering graphite designs she creates dimension through divergent motifs. The arrangement of the orbs is unified by shape and form and their abundance creates a dynamic display. These non-figurative pieces reveal the patterns of rhythmic movement through an innovative use of design.
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JOELLYN T. DUESBERRY: MOMENTS IN PLACE
JANUARY 17 - APRIL 19, 2025


Moments in Place features 23 works by noted landscape painter, Joellyn T. Duesberry (1944-2016). The exhibition features works that were inspired by distinct locations in Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, New Mexico, and New York. DueSberry’s images were often initially realized en plein air and then finished in the studio. These selected works are part of a recent gift to the Zillman Art Museum and are on display for the first time in this exhibition.

Duesberry created a stunning assortment of monotypes, which often informed compositional and palette choices in her larger oil on canvas works. The monotypes embody an unlabored approach characterized by spirited gestural brushstrokes and vivid color combinations. In contrast to the more detailed landscapes, they exude a freshness while the imagery at times borders on abstraction.

Amongst Duesberry’s assortment of picturesque landscapes is an intentional outlier, First Pairing of Elephant Graveyard and Memory Time-Lapse, 2002. This deeply personal and emotionally charged split composition depicts an elephant graveyard on the left side that the artist encountered in Kenya, while on the right side she captures the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 tragic attack on the World Trade Center. For six months prior to 9/11, Duesberry painted on the 91st floor of the North Tower of World Trade Center in conjunction with an artist grant program. Duesberry stated that she juxtaposed these two very different graveyards, “simultaneously and side-by-side, in a studio, haunted until the horror was expressed outside my nightmare-cursed self.”

Duesberry’s works are represented in numerous collections including the Denver Art Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Smith College Museum, Phoenix Art Museum, and Yale University.
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NOTE:
Leonard Lecture Series Presents:
Rose Fredrick, Denver-based Independent Curator and Art Consultant
 
Wednesday, February 5, 5:30 - 7:00 pm
Rose Fredrick, Independent Curator and Art Consultant, will be joining us from Colorado for a special evening presented by the Zillman Art Museum's Leonard Lecture Series. Her talk on the late artist Joellyn T. Duesberry and ZAM's Moments in Place exhibition will include a powerpoint presentation.
 
Please RSVP as soon as possible as seating is limited! (first come, first serve to secure your seat) Please call 581-3300 or email Mary Ellen Merlino at mary.ellen.merlino@maine.edu 
 
Rose Fredrick is a curator and writer who has spent the last three decades producing exhibitions that have launched the careers of many artists. Her writing has appeared in Western Art & Architecture, 5280-Denver's Mile High MagazineOvationSouthwest ArtArtRevueBreckenridge Magazine, and many others. She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts grant and was awarded Rock West Curator of the Year. Her book credits include Best Multicultural Book from the New Mexico/Arizona Book Awards, and she was a finalist for the Colorado Book Award. She is Art Consultant and Curator of the Joellyn T. Duesberry Collection, located in Denver Colorado.
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YOAHN HAN: SCULPTED DREAMSCAPE
JANUARY 17 - MAY 3, 2025


Sculpted Dreamscape showcases the intricate imagery of Boston-based artist YoAhn Han. Through his use of stratified mixed-media, Han explores concepts of life and death depicting human bodies and flora and their metaphorical meanings. The artist superimposes various materials to create these artworks; gouache, watercolors, color pencils, Flashe, ink, and precisely cut Yupo paper illustrate images that demand close consideration. In Sound of Spring delicate flowers mingle with a torso and an outstretched hand. Shades of blue and purple evoke an aquatic environment that is balanced by the warmth of the flaxen flecks.  
 
Han attributes his creative process to living with cerebral arteriovenous malformation - a lifelong medical condition where one may experience seizures. Han explains his artistic process as, “the attempt to control chaos and the seemingly uncontrollable quality of the body that I live with.” Han’s work investigates the “paradoxical union of life and death.”
 
Chrysanthemums appear in many of the artist’s works. Korean-born Han states, “this flower represents the promise of life when it blooms, it is also used at funerals in Korea and therefore is associated with the sorrow of everlasting sleep.” The reconfigured bodies and floral shapes represent the juxtaposition of pain and pleasure – a fundamental concept that influences Han in his art and life.
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2025 YOUNG CURATORS: RITUAL OF MOTION
JANUARY 17 - MAY 3, 20025
The Zillman Art Museum is pleased to present a selection of artwork curated by its 2024-2025 class of Young Curators. This innovative program is unique to ZAM and provides local high school students with an in-depth opportunity to experience the behind-the-scenes workings of an art museum. Students conduct research and collaborate to create a unique exhibition from the collection.

Ritual of Motion highlights two-dimensional pieces that explore the energy and movement of people, from daily activities such as brushing one’s teeth twice a day to coming-of-age occasions like a Bar/Bat Mitzvah or First Communion. The exhibit features artwork, both representational as well as abstract, that is infused with rhythm and motion. In Stella Johnson’s photograph, Day of the Dead Tamales, Mexican women are gathered around a table shaping masa into cornhusks. This ceremonial practice is performed as an offering to the deceased.

Several of the abstract images selected are not prescribed rituals but imply motion through mark-making and formal elements. These works are part of the story that our Young Curators are hoping to tell.

 

2025 Young Curators:

 

Ella Beaulieu, Hampden Academy

Layla Messahel, Hampden Academy

Ruby Sanders, John Bapst Memorial High School

Indigo Santana, Bangor High School

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SUCH A CHARACTER: A LOOK AT FACES IN THE COLLECTION

JANUARY 17 - APRIL 19, 2025

Showing in the first and second floor galleries

 

Please contact me for additional information and/or high resolution images for the above exhibitions.

 

Kathryn Jovanelli
Assistant Director for Finance, Administration & Membership
Zillman Art Museum - University of Maine
40 Harlow Street, Bangor, ME  04401
zam.umaine.edu
207.581.3370
 
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