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MISSISSIPPI
ROADS
SHOW
#2708
Mississippi
Museum
of Art
Airs
2/15/07
Mississippi
Roads travels to downtown Jackson to browse
the wonderful works of art on display at the
Mississippi Museum of Art.
http://www.msmuseumart.org
As
Mississippi 's largest art museum, the Mississippi
Museum of Art is home to some very extraordinary
works of art. And it's not simply the best in
local and regional art that they have on display.
Every year, some of the best exhibitions in
the nation come here to Jackson for people to
enjoy.
The
organization's seed was planted in 1903 when
Miss Bessy Cary Lemly, an artist and art professor
at then all-female Belhaven College founded
the Art Study Club. Miss Lemly would invite
some town ladies twice a month to come have
tea and discuss art with her and her students.
In 1911 they were asked to put on a display
of local art work at the Mississippi State Fair
for public viewing. Thus the Mississippi Art
Association was born at the State Fair and their
first meeting was held inside a bug infested
tent to avoid the noise and confusion of the
rowdy Fair crowd. In 1978 the current facility
opened it's doors here at 201East Pascagoula
Street in downtown Jackson and officially became
the Mississippi Museum of Art.
So
over a span of one hundred years, the Mississippi
Museum of Art has evolved from a parlor room
tea party to an outstanding regional art institute.
And
speaking of evolving, in our first story we
go beneath the waters and explore the ever changing
world of scuba diving.
Jacque
Cousteau, the infamous underwater explorer,
popularized the sport of Scuba worldwide with
his unending quest to reveal the beautiful mysteries
of the Ocean's depths. The exploration of the
underwater world continues right here in Mississippi
by many across the state in waters far off and
even close to home. Deep South Scuba of Ridgeland,
Mississippi , shows the ins and outs of getting
started in the sport of SCUBA and what Mississippi
's offering are for the trained diver off our
own coast.
http://www.deepsouthscuba.net/
The
Mississippi Museum of Art offers educational
programs and activities for both old and young,
in a dynamic and energetic environment.
For
adults, the museum offers a monthly Unburied
Treasure Series, the Jazz, Art and Friend Series
combines music and art for a perfect blend that
you can enjoy after work or you can become a
member or a volunteer at the museum to help
support this great private, not for profit organization.
Children
also have numerous options at the museum. Schools
are encouraged to view the museum on guided
tours and get hands-on learning in the Closer
Look Gallery. After school programs and art
camps are a great way for kids to tap into their
creative potential and the Scholastic Art Awards
provide young writers and artists with recognition
and scholarships to help spark their interest
in the arts.
In
our next story, we meet two men who set out
on a journey to discover their own brand of
art; the true blues sound was their holy grail
as they traveled along Highway 61.
“
Angels on the Backroads”
was a very simple idea. Eddie and Frank Thomas,
two musically gifted brothers from Iuka took
a tape recorder, some musical instruments
and a desire to rediscover the blues with
them as they drove down Highway 61 from Memphis
to New Orleans . Their goal was to play and
record each song where it was originally performed.
By doing so, they hoped to recapture that
unique feeling with only nature's sounds around
them as their accompaniment. By the time they
finished, their trip had lasted eight years,
covered countless miles, and produced a CD
of 65 blues songs they hope will help us all
rediscover the “Angels
on the Backroads”.
http://www.angelsonthebackroads.com
From
an initial collection of only several hundred
works, the Museum's Permanent Collection has
grown to over 4,000 pieces with an emphasis
on mid-nineteenth and twentieth-century American
art.
Its
holdings of American art include paintings,
sculptures, prints, drawings, and photographs.
This makes up about seventy-five percent of
the permanent collection with twenty-five percent
of that featuring Mississippi artists like:
Walter
Anderson, Marie Hull, George Ohr, Edgar Parker
and more than 280 works by William Hollingsworth.
The
final twenty-five percent of the permanent collection
is made up of European, Asian and Ethnographic
Art. The museum has works representing important
aspects of art history, including works on paper
by Degas, Picasso and Renoir. Collections of
Asian objects, pre-columbian ceramics, African
artifacts, Japanese prints and Oceanic artifacts
demonstrate the diversity of the collection.
Well
you now know that you can find exquisite beauty
and magnificent treasures here at the Mississippi
Museum of Art.
In
our next story we meet a group of people who
enjoy a different kind of beauty. They prefer
being outdoors and experiencing mother natures'
beauty on two wheels.
A
common misconception in Mississippi is since
there are no mountains there must be no mountain
biking. Mississippi has plenty of opportunities
for what is more appropriately called off-road
cycling. Riders say Mississippi has its
advantages as a place to hit the trials over
such hillier states as Georgia and Tennessee
. We take a look at the sport in Mississippi
and highlight the thrills you can experience
when you get out and go mountain biking, Mississippi
style.
http://www.msmtb.org/
The
Mississippi Museum of Art is moving. Although
only a block away into the Arts Pavilion, culturally
it will introduce a new world of art and community
to both downtown Jackson and the State of Mississippi-
not to mention serve as a model for the 21st-century
museum. Along with the new digs comes a new
exhibition. In June 2007, Between God and Man:
Angels in Italian Art opens in the new building.
The museum is working to secure works from some
of the most prestigious collections in Italy
. A lot of these works have never traveled to
the United States and will return to Italy at
the show's conclusion. So make sure you come
down an experience this once in a lifetime event.
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