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View various paintings and photographs from the Massillon Museum's Permanent Collection. Our gallery currently features
recent acquisitions by Ohio artists.
You may have noticed that some of our galleries are blocked off. Stay tuned for more information on this exciting project.
March 5 - April 4, 2010
On display March 2010 in conjunction with the NEA Big Read. The reading selection for 2010 will be The Shawl by Cynthia Ozick.
To learn more about the book and the project, visit the NEA's Big Read website.
In 1943, a sympathetic Christian family hid eight-year-old Nelly Zygmunt and her mother from the Nazis in Lwow, Poland. During their year of confinement, Nelly created brightly detailed watercolor dreams of her ideal world. Her optimistic paintings are an important counterpart to the cruelty depicted by most children of the Holocaust.
(Image above: Nelly Zygmunt Toll, "Self-Portrait," c. 1944)
Prints of Nelly Zygmunt Toll’s childhood watercolors, “Imagining a Better World,” will be displayed in the Massillon Museum’s Studio M through April 4.
After World War Two, Nelly Toll pursued formal art training, earning a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania and publishing three books on the topic of the Holocaust and related art.
“Nelly Toll: Now,” the artist’s recent paintings and collages will be exhibited in the Museum’s second-floor gallery through April 11. This will be the first exhibit of Toll’s 2009-2010 body of abstract and impressionistic artwork.
“The dual openings will enable visitors to experience Nelly Toll’s growth as an artist, from viewing prints of her childhood watercolors to the vivid paintings of her adulthood,” said Massillon Museum Curator Alexandra Nicholis, who has organized the two shows. “A common thread in both these bodies of work is an overall joyfulness and love of color.”
Toll will visit with Massilloon Middle School students on Thursday, when she will discuss her book, Behind the Secret Window, A Memoir of a Hidden Childhood During World War Two, which the students are reading. She will present a free public program at Kent Stark University Stark Campus on Friday, March 5, at 10:00 a.m.
The exhibitions, programs, and Toll’s travel are funded by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of The Big Read. The Massillon Museum is exhibiting Toll’s work “then and now” as part of The Big Read and the Museum’s 2010 book selection, The Shawl, by Cynthia Ozick.
The Big Read is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) designed to restore reading to the center of American culture. The NEA presents the Big Read in partnership with the Institute of Museum and Library Services and in cooperation with Arts Midwest. The Big Read brings together partners across the country to encourage reading for pleasure and enlightenment.
For more information about the Nelly Toll exhibitions or The Big Read, call 330-833-4061 or visit www.massillonmuseum.org. To learn more about The Big Read, visit www.NEABigRead.org.
The Immel Circus gallery will be closed March 1 through May 15 for an exciting renovation project and re-installation! Stay tuned for details!
The Immel Circus gallery will be closed September 13 through October 24 due to gallery changes. Don't worry- it will be back on display soon!
Click here to follow the 2010 journey of intern Cristina Savu and our faithful volunteers as they conserve the circus.
Immel Circus Conservation Project
In March, the volunteers began the cleaning process. They started by cleaning the horse-drawn wagons around the perimeter of the circus. To make the pieces look like new again, soft sable brushes and cotton-tipped applicators are being used. So far, the results have been incredible. Pieces are once again shining. In April, a scaffolding system was set in place to help reach in the interior of the circus while minimizing the risk of damage.
The newly conserved Immel Circus will be unveiled in conjunction with the opening of the Sawdust and Spectacle exhibit May 19, 2010 at the Massillon Museum in celebration of National Circus Day.
Image above: Cristina Savu and volunteer Deb Altimus carefully remove dust from the Big Top of the Immel Circus.
Click here for more about the Immel Circus.
On display May 19 – August 15, 2010
This will be a colorful summer at MassMu with the circus taking over our second-floor galleries. Sawdust and Spectacle: Under the Big Top in Small Town America opens on May 19 – National Circus Day! Organized by the Southern Ohio Museum in Portsmouth and funded by the Ohio Humanities Council, this exhibit will come to Massillon from its previous venue at the Ohio Art Council’s Riffe Gallery in Columbus.
Along with paintings, drawings and prints by more than two dozen artists, the exhibit will feature posters, sideshow banners, circus toys, postcards and dioramas. The Museum’s own Immel Circus, though not part of the traveling exhibit, will be a focal point of the display. Donated to the Museum upon its move to our current location in 1994, it was unveiled to the public at the Museum’s grand opening in 1996. The miniature hand-carved circus lot replica consists of 2,620 individual pieces. Museum intern Cristina Savu, along with several other volunteers, has been working diligently to dust and clean the circus diorama in time for the Sawdust and Spectacle opening.
Join us for the opening reception on Wednesday, May 19, from 5:00-8:00pm. The Museum’s front lawn will be transformed to bustling activity center featuring clowns, balloon animals, cotton candy, dance performances by the Ananda Center, and more! Free for all ages.
To follow the Immel Circus Conservation progress, visit our blog.
article by Alexandra Nicholis
On display September 18 - November 14, 2010
This exhibit commemorates the 100th year of Scouting in the United States. The national and local history of Boy Scouts is told through photographs, patches, Scout literature, clothing, and a documentary produced by Fred Gray. Highlights of the exhibit include a composite Boy Scout uniform, Order of the Arrow items, and early editions of local scout newsletters. Many of the photographs depict Massillon-area Scouts and their activities at Camp Tuscazoar.
The
Massillon Museum houses over 60,000 photographic images in its permanent
collection. Among these are various types of images, including daguerreotypes,
ambrotypes, tintypes, cyanotypes, glass plate negatives, and paper prints.
Many of the photographs date to the late 19th and early-20th centuries,
and document people, places, and significant events in Massillon’s
history, as well as on a national level. The images document changes in
fashion, social movements, key political events and artistic innovation.
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