2020 - 1970 Exhibits

 

2020-2011

Own an Original: Liberating Humor

Exhibit dates: November 20, 2020 - January 2, 2021

The City of Littleton Fine Arts Board proudly presents the 55th Annual Own an Original art competition at the Littleton Museum. Open to Colorado artists, the competition is for any art medium except photography. This year’s theme is “Liberating Humor” and the juror is Sarah Magnatta, Ph.D., www.magnattaart.com

We are living in a time where people are suffering in a variety of ways. For this year’s Own An Original fine art competition, we are looking at the human condition with a lighthearted mood using the theme of “Liberating Humor.”

To liberate is to provide freedom from the limitations of thought or behavior. Humor can be comical or funny, but it can also describe a state of mind. Together, “liberating humor” can provide a freeing experience, like how a good belly laugh can lighten one’s mood.

A digital version of the exhibit is available by clicking the button below.

Digital Exhibit

2020 Winners:

  • Best of Show ($1000.00 and joint Best of Show exhibition in 2021) – Olga & Aleksey Ivanov, “My Las Vegas Money”
  • 1st Place ($500.00) – Anne Feller, “Embrace”
  • 2nd Place ($250.00) – Matthew Bollinger, “Chromaticism VI”
  • 3rd Place ($100.00) – Will Barker, “Upheaval”
  • Honorable Mention #1 – Jesse Guess, “Talk to the Moon”
  • Honorable Mention #2 – Heidi Rounds, “The Sprinkler”
  • Honorable Mention #3 – Shara Oliman, “Carrot-ish”

Vibrant Bounty: Chinese Folk Art from the Shaanxi Region

Exhibit dates: August 14 - October 17, 2020

Shengtao Zhao, Harvesting Sugar Cane in the North, 1985-1991, tempera on paper

Shengtao Zhao, Harvesting Sugar Cane in the North, 1985-1991, tempera on paper.

As brilliant as the petals of a lotus and as bold as a spring storm, the folk paintings and artifacts of rural China reveal a national spirit that is as charming as it is vital. The artifacts in Vibrant Bounty reveal a humanity that aids us in understanding a people half a world away. By depicting scenes of labor within lavish pastoral settings, the paintings celebrate the farmers’ unity amidst the immensity of nature.

Vibrant Bounty: Chinese Folk Art from the Shaanxi Region invites visitors on a journey through Shaanxi Province, one of the cradles of Chinese civilization. The capital city, Xi’an, was once the eastern terminus of the Silk Road, and is famous for its ancient ruins, most notably the Mausoleum of Qin Shi Huang and his Terracotta Army. In an area outside of the city’s center lies Huxian (or Hu) County, where, since the 1950s, local artists have been producing objects similar to the twenty-five paintings and fourteen objects found in Vibrant Bounty. This tradition has achieved great renown in China, culminating in the state Ministry of Culture awarding Huxian the honorary title of a “Village of Chinese Modern Folk Painting” in 1988.

These peasant, or farmer, paintings are closely related to the traditional Chinese arts of embroidery, batik (a fabric dyeing method), paper-cut, and wall painting. The artists use shui fen (paint powder and water—similar to gouache or tempera) on thick paper to create the paintings. While Huxian peasant paintings depict ordinary aspects of people’s lives, the vibrant colors emanate from an animated atmosphere, and are only enriched by frequent hyperbole and moral connotations. Festivals, parades, the harvest, music, village traditions, farm animals, winter, kitchen work, and children are all celebrated in these paintings.

The artifacts included in this collection expose us further to Chinese rural life and they show, in detail, traditional Shaanxi customs. They range from children’s clothing and toys to New Year’s prints and decorative household items, often embroidered with lucky figures and animals. Not only are they carefully handmade and beautiful, they also hold symbolic wishes for good luck, good marriage, and good health.

Both the art and the objects featured in this exhibition introduce us to a region of China, which like the American Midwest, is dominated by agriculture and populated with working people. Through these peasant paintings and the artifacts which accompany them, we gain a greater understanding of the customs and culture of people who, despite great distances, share with us essential similarities.

This exhibit is curated by America Meredith, Cherokee Nation artist and arts writer and is a program of ExhibitsUSA and the National Endowment for the Arts.

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per·spec·tives: Best of Show exhibition featuring artwork by Gabrielle Graves and Courtney Cotton

Exhibit dates: May 22 - August 2, 2020 

The Littleton Museum presents the artwork of Gabrielle Graves and Courtney Cotton, 2019 winners of the Eye of the Camera and Own an Original exhibits, respectively.

While both of the artists’ current body of work focuses on the idea of "perspectives," each artist approaches it with her own unique emphasis and skillset. Cotton’s conceptual painting is meant to bring awareness to mental wellness and emotional intelligence by using visual metaphors and color to embody concepts such as transformation, and possibility. Graves explores the complex narrative of identity and its intersection with consumption and mental health. Her process employs photography, painting, video, and installation to create intimate experiences revolving around changing landscapes and internal dialogue.

Gabrielle Graves received her B.A. in Psychology with a minor in Art & Design from the University of Michigan in April 2017. Shortly after graduating, Gabrielle moved to Snowmass Village, CO to work in the Photography & New Media and Painting departments at the internationally known Anderson Ranch Arts Center. She has also worked as a studio assistant for Isa Catto Studio. Her work has been featured in group exhibitions such as the Patton-Mallott Gallery at Anderson Ranch and the Littleton Museum, and she has collaborated with other artists to create installations such as DECONSCIOUSNESS: Three Levels of Consciousness, which was shown at the Stamps School of Art & Design in 2017. Gabrielle’s practice employs photography, painting, installation, and writing to divulge honest articulations of the psychological space. She is inspired by relationships and forms of identity.

Courtney Cotton is a Denver-based visual artist who is unafraid to express herself by giving visual expression to feeling, which can be seen in many of her paintings and collages. Other inspiration stems from music, mindfulness, and objects that give her a visceral reaction. Whatever the impulse, the result is the fruition of a process, usually grounded in personal discipline that may be spontaneous and rapid or labored and introspective. What transpires, ideally captures the inspiration and transforms it into an exuberant explosion or a contemplative and solemn stillness.

Her work sometimes poses more questions than answers, but it offers room for interpretation and new perspectives. It connects to something universal and hence touches a lot of people. Cotton says, "I have more than one visual voice and some find it hard to define or categorize my style." Sometimes her work is thematic, but just as often she has the impulse to create something without representing anything. Some of her favorite pieces just came about from the act of playing with paint and paper. She explains, "I consciously react with the medium, the activity of creating is paramount, and therefore the results happen automatically with the unconscious influence of experiences and emotions."

Cotton studied art and architecture at the University of South Carolina, Rhode Island School of Design, and Queens College.


Postcard announcing the 2020 Eye of the Camera exhibit at the Littleton Museum

Eye of the Camera: Artificial vs. Natural

Exhibit Dates: March 20 - April 26, 2020 

Artificial is something made by humans, or an imitation or substitute for something natural. Natural is what is produced or arising from nature, or the world without human impact. The tension between artificial and natural is experienced by humans and animals on a daily basis. This year’s juror for the exhibition is Angela Faris Belt, a visual artist who works with photographic processes ranging from historical to digital. She is particularly suited to the theme as she creates artwork that centers on humankind’s relationship with the natural world and combines specific media to underscore the concepts behind each body of work. Her images are exhibited nationally and abroad and held in many corporate and private collections. She is Program Chair for the Studio Art and Art History programs at Arapahoe Community College, where she teaches darkroom and digital photography. Angela is author of The Elements of Photography: Understanding and Creating Sophisticated Images, a textbook that centers on making meaningful images by integrating photography’s technical aspects with concepts and aesthetics. Angela is represented by Michael Warren Contemporary in Denver, Colorado. More information and images can be viewed at www.angelafarisbelt.com.

This year's exhibit features the artwork of 43 artists. Awards were given for Best of Show, First Place, and Second Place, with $2,400.00 in total prizes. The winner of Best of Show was invited to participate in a two-person Best of Show exhibit at the Museum in 2021.

2020 Award Winners

  • Best of Show - Ashley Allen, Snow
  • First Place - Richard Eisen, Daylily Daffodil 04232018
  • Second Place - Kathryn Charles, Clearcut Sunrise
  • Honorable Mention - Steve Sorensen, The Jungle Always Wins, Hong Kong
  • Honorable Mention - Christine June, Chemical Leakage Stain
  • Honorable Mention - Thomas Carr, Places In-between #2

Postcard announcing

Opening Outward: Sculpture by Jeff Glode Wise

Exhibit Dates: January 24 - March 1, 2020

Wise’s sculpture is rooted in balance, with great respect for materials and their inherent textures. Bases of concrete and wood suggest earthbound elements, while forged bronze and gold plating suggest the fluid motion of the heavens. He interprets visual gestures found in nature and astronomy, from swirling galaxies and the rhythmic movement of birds and fish to the human figure and spirit. In short, he attempts to “elude the grasp of gravity, allowing rocks to float and metal to flow like water.”

In Opening Outward, Wise has gathered some of his works that best reflect his journey of imagination. With a range of interests, the selected works illustrate a pathway of exploration, experimentation, and discovery.


54th Annual Own an Original: Destination

Exhibit dates: November 22 - December 29, 2019

The City of Littleton Fine Arts Board proudly presents the 54th Annual Own an Original art competition. Open to Colorado artists, the competition is for any art medium except photography. This year’s exhibition explores the concept of “destination.” In recent years, American culture has idealized the saying, “it’s the journey, not the destination.” A destination is really the end for which someone or something is going or sent. With so much focus on the journey, has the end point lost its meaning? What if the reason or objective of the journey held more value than the voyage itself?

This year’s theme of “Destination” will be juried by Gwen Chanzit, Curator Emerita of Modern Art and the Herbert Bayer Collection and Archive at the Denver Art Museum. Over her 36-plus years at the Denver Art Museum, Dr. Chanzit organized more than 30 exhibitions, including over a dozen on Bauhaus artist Herbert Bayer. She is regarded as the world expert on Herbert Bayer; and has published several books highlighting Bayer’s wide-ranging artistic contributions.

2019 Winners:

  • Best of Show ($1,000 & 2020 joint exhibit) - Courtney CottonLanding, 2019, Acrylic on canvas
  • First Place ($500) - Pat Finley, Dreaming of Africa, 2019, Acrylic & Resin
  • Second Place ($250) - Linda O’Neill, Beyond Ordinary Limits, 2019, Acrylic, acrylic paint pen, collage, caran d’ache crayon
  • Third Place ($100) - Olga & Aleksy Ivanov, Wishbone, 2018, Oil
  • Honorable Mention #1 - William Rohs, Wonder of the Other Side, 2019, Acrylic and charcoal on panel
  • Honorable Mention #2 - Katherine Walter, Floating the Arkansas, 2019, Acrylic on linen canvas
  • Honorable Mention #3 - Barbara Veatch, Migration of Equus Ferus Caballus, 2018, Pastels, charcoal, acrylic ink & collage

Within and Without: Works by Nathan Abels

Exhibit dates: September 20 - October 27, 2019

Winner of the 2018 Littleton Fine Arts Board Own an Original competition, Nathan Abels brings his distinctly enigmatic style of pencil drawings and oil and acrylic paintings to the Littleton Museum.

The Littleton Museum is proud to present Within and Without, an exhibition of artwork by Nathan Abels. In a series of paintings and drawings, Abels depicts a speculative future after climate change. Residents of this future world have chosen to either try to leave the planet, or to withdraw from the larger remaining culture. The success of those who have migrated away from the planet is doubtful, but the desire to leave is understandable. Alternatively, is the withdrawal from culture creating a sort of “monastic option.” The hermits and solitary people in these works are neither heroes, nor are they doomsday preppers. Instead, they are changing the depth of the remaining culture, not the direction of it.


Flyer announcing

Play of Light: Works by Jane Guthridge

Exhibit dates: June 28 - August 25, 2019

Inspired by the brilliance of Colorado’s sunshine, Jane Guthridge succeeds in manipulating thin, layered materials and altering the directionality of light. Playing with the very nature of light, she manages to capture the intangible by copying shapes made by natural dappled sunlight and shadows, then abstracting those compositions. Whether suspended, layered, or reflected, the “light forms” she creates evoke familiar visions of a moment in nature.


Display from the

Over the Top: Selling the First World War to a Nation Divided

Exhibit dates: July 27, 2018 - June 2, 2019

Prior to entering the war in 1917, many Americans were against joining the conflict in Europe. A series of dramatic events, including the sinking of the HMS Lusitania, prompted President Wilson to ask Congress for a declaration of war. Within days, the US government mounted the largest propaganda campaign ever seen. Its goal was to convince the American people that survival of the nation and democracy depended upon entering and winning the First World War.

Using images and artifacts from the Littleton Museum's collection, visitors are invited to experience and learn about forms of propaganda and how it was used in World War I.


Eye of the Camera - Best of Show

Exhibit dates: April 19 - June 2, 2019

Photography exhibit featuring the work of 2018's Eye of the Camera Best of Show winners Karen Kirkpatrick and J. R. Schnelzer


Eye of the Camera - EVOKE

Exhibit Dates: February 22 - March 24, 2019

The City of Littleton Fine Arts Board proudly presents the 53rd Annual Eye of the Camera photography competition. Open to Colorado photographers, the competition explores the concept of “Evoke.”

This year’s competition was juried by Gary Emerich, a fine art photographer, who has exhibited regionally and nationally, and is represented by Robischon Gallery in Denver. All of the pieces in the exhibit are available for purchase.

2019 Winners:

  • Best of Show - Gabrielle Graves, A Temporary Martyr
  • 1st Place - Devin Johnson, Healing Process: Privacy; Shinjuku Crosswalk
  • 2nd Place - Steffany Wing, Youth Won't Stop
  • Honorable Mention - Robert Hyatt, Imagined Landscape No. 115
  • Honorable Mention - Peter York, Unity

Full Circle: Works by Terry Maker

Exhibit Dates: June 29 - August 19, 2018


Preserving Memory and Place

Exhibit Dates: May 26, 2017 - February 18, 2018


Mile High National Pastel Exhibition

Exhibit Dates: March 9 - September 20, 2017

Pastel Society of Colorado presents its 13th annual Mile High National Pastel Exhibition with over 100 artists from across the United States and abroad that submitted 332 paintings to the competition.


The Best Roads Lead Uphill: A Decade of Paintings by rita derjue

Exhibit Dates: September 23, 2016 - February 26, 2017


Fifty Two by Shohini Ghosh

Exhibition Dates: June 24 - September 19, 2016

2016 - 52 by Shohini Ghosh


The Littleton Story in 125 Objects

Exhibit Dates: October 10, 2015 - June 19, 2016


Highlights of the Fine Arts Board Collection

Exhibit Dates: June 26, 2015 - August 23, 2015


Frida Kahlo: Through the Lens of Nickolas Muray

Exhibit Dates: June 20, 2014 - August 17, 2014

Courtesy of Gallery Guest Curator Traveling Exhibitions


Littleton Goes to War: 1941-1945

Exhibit Dates: April 5, 2014 - August 16, 2015


Being There: Ralph Nagel

Exhibit Dates: September 20, 2013 - October 27, 2013

Solo show, 2012 Own an Original Best in Show Winner for Pine Needle Branch


A Quilter's Craft: Marie Agnes Conway Retrospective

Exhibit Dates: July 11, 2013 - March 16, 2014


Ramp It Up: Skateboard Culture in Native America

Exhibit Dates: March 8, 2013 - April 28, 2013


Mapuche: The People of the Land

Exhibit Dates: June 28, 2012 - January 13, 2013


Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography

Exhibit Dates: December 8, 2011 - February 26, 2012


Forged & Fabricated: The Art of Bill Weaver

Exhibit Dates: July 1 - Aug 21, 2011


Pivotal Points: The Exploration and Mapping of the Trans-Mississippi West

Exhibit Dates: September 30, 2010 - October 16, 2011

2010-2001

Two Potters Revisited: Macy Dorf, Larry Paul Wright, & Frank Gray

Exhibit Dates: July 2 - August 22, 2010


Wonders of the Weavers: Maravillas de los tejedores

19th Century Rio Grande Weavings from the Collection of the Albuquerque Museum

Exhibit Dates: March 25 - June 27, 2010


The Double-Edged Weapon: The Sword as Icon and Artifact

Exhibit Dates: November 18, 2009 - January 24, 2010

From the Higgins Armory Collection, Worchester, Massachusetts

Smith Kramer Fine Art Services, with items from Higgins Armory Museum.


Step on It: Braided Rugs Then and Now

Exhibit Dates: May 29 - July 5, 2009

From LHM & private lenders. Some loans from Rocky Mountain Rug Braiders Guild


Difficult Times, Difficult Choices: Why Museums Collect After Tragedies

Exhibit Dates: April 21 - September 20, 2009


Ceramica y Cultura: The Story of Spanish and Mexican Mayolica Ceramics

Exhibit Dates: November 15, 2005 - February 15, 2006


Cowboys & Their Gear

Exhibit Dates: November 24, 2008 - February 15, 2009


The Presidential Hopefuls

Exhibit Dates: August 7, 2008 - November 2009


Life is a Leaky Boat: The Whimsical Sculpture of Don Mitchell

Exhibit Dates: May 23 - July 12, 2008


In Focus: National Geographic Greatest Portraits

Exhibit Dates: April 5 - June 1, 2008

Courtesy SITES - Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service


The Art of Westward Exploration

Exhibit Dates: March 23, 2007 - August 27, 2007


Rose in the Wilderness

Exhibit Dates: October 2, 2007 - March 5, 2008

Quilts from Littleton Museum collection


Paper Cuts: The Art of Contemporary Paper

Exhibit Dates: May 22 - June 20, 2007

Courtesy ExhibitsUSA


The Saga of the American West in Prints

Exhibit Dates: March 22 - August 27, 2007


Art of the Stamp

Exhibit Dates: October 18, 2006 - January 7, 2007

Courtesy SITES - Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service


Sneak Peek: The Curtis Collection

Exhibit Dates: June 1 - July 17, 2006


The Grogan Collection: Contemporary Native American Art

Exhibit Dates: May 18 - September 11, 2006


Asian Games: The Art of Contest

Exhibit Dates: March 25 - April 30, 2006


Feast Your Eyes: The Unexpected Beauty of Vegetable Gardens

Exhibit Dates: September 9 – October 30, 2005


An Endless Enthusiasm: rita derjue Retrospective

Exhibit Dates: April 14, 2005 - July 17, 2005


The Furniture Collection

Exhibit Dates: February 5 - August 22, 2005


The Littleton Collection Artwork

Exhibit Dates: February 5 - April 2005


Art for Healing Hearts

Exhibit Dates: September 1 - November 1, 2002

Paintings (mostly watercolors) by Colorado artists for sale with entire proceeds given to NYC’s Twin Towers Orphans Fund


The Message of Maps

Exhibit Dates: May 2001 - September 2002

2000-1991

Scott Engel Photographs: A Littleton Portrait

Exhibit Dates: September 2000 - October 2000


Encuentro: Todo Ceramica

Exhibit Dates: February 2000 - April 2000

Gallery Exhibit of international ceramic artists, all of whom attended classes at a Cuban university,


Ralph Moody's Littleton

Exhibit Dates: December 11, 1998 - December 1999


A Look Back - The Littleton Fine Arts Collection, 1964-1998

Exhibit Dates: September 1998 - December 1999


Household Elegancies

Exhibit Dates: May 1998 - September 2001

Fine parlor items from LHM collection


Toys: A Kaleidoscope of Change

Exhibit Dates: April 1997 - February 1999

Title of exhibit on wall with cut-out of jack-in-the-box toy behind it

Vintage dolls in a glass display case

Vintage toys in an exhibit display case

Photo from outside looking in windows showing oversized toys


Working the Wool: The George Kelly Collection of Navajo Rugs

Exhibit Dates: April 1997 - August 1998


The Way of the Anvil: Francis Whitaker

Exhibit Dates: April 1996 - September 1996

Sign on red wall with title of exhibit

Wrought iron display


Littleton: The Homefront During World War II

Exhibit Dates: March 1995 - September 1997

Title of exhibit in white text on red and blue wall

Brown WWII uniform on display

Photo of wall with photos from WWII mounted

Kitchen cabinets from 1940s


Gifts of the Decades

Exhibit Dates: 1992

From the collections of Littleton Historical Museum

Title of exhibit in 3-D letters

Photo of old fashioned toys on platform

Photo of old fashioned toys behind glass with stone wall behind them


World War II: The Artists View

Exhibit Dates: 1992


A Littleton Portrait: Photos by Scott Engel

Exhibit Dates: 1991

Black and white photos of Littleton

1990-1981

Appeal of the Wheel Bicycles From the Beginning Bicycles

Exhibit Dates: 1989


Selling It: the elegant art of advertising on tin

Exhibit Dates: November 19, 1988 - Spring 1989


Bravery in Bronze: Sculptures of Dave McGary

Exhibit Dates: January 23, 1988 - May 1988


Idle Hands: Victorian Parlor Pastimes

Exhibit Dates: December 1981 - January 1982


The Wonder of Wood American furniture

Exhibit Dates: April 15, 1984 - October 1984


Rita: A Retrospective

Exhibit Dates: October 27, 1984 - January 1985


After Barbed Wire

Exhibit Dates: January 16, 1983 - March 13, 1983

Cowboy photos by Kurt Markus


Littleton in Stitches

Exhibit Dates: November 12, 1982 - December 30, 1982

Applique by Arlette Gosieski


Littleton's 10

Exhibit Dates: June 15 - July 20, 1981


Textiles Twice Around

Exhibit Dates: April - June 1981


Artists on the Western Frontier

Exhibit Dates: March 1981

Courtesy Humphrey Traveling Exhibition Service


Works by American Artists

Exhibit Dates: December 1980 - February 1981

1980-1970

Getting There/Getting Away Transportation in Littleton 1860-2000

Exhibit Dates: May - October 1980


Objects of Life - Arapahoe/Cheyenne

Exhibit Dates: May - April 1980


A Welder, Some Wood, Some Whimsey

Exhibit Dates: February - April 1980

Varian Ashbaugh, Littleton Sculptor


The Machines our Grandfathers Dreamed Of

Exhibit Dates: August 1977 - February 1978

Motorcycles


They Called it Jazz - A Return to Normalcy!

Exhibit Dates: November 1978 - May 1979

Jazz Age, post WWI: The things, the times, the music of the 1920s


The Restoration of a House: Steps involved in selecting & restoring a farmhouse for the museum's living history farm

Exhibit Dates: June 1979 - February 1980


Hats

Exhibit Dates: March 1978 - June 1978


The Men Who Volunteered

Exhibit Dates: March 1978 - June 1978


A Museum Collects

Exhibit Dates: August 1978 - October 1978

Collections by category


Rose in the Wilderness

Exhibit Dates: February 1977 - July 1977

Quilts from LHM Collection


Faces and Places: A Half Century of Littleton Images

Exhibit Dates: December 1977

Photos of Littleton's people


Farming in Littleton

Exhibit Dates: July 1976 - April 1979


Ride On Bicycles

Exhibit Dates: 1977


The Seat of American Invention

Exhibit Dates: November 1976 - January 1977


Suiting Everyone

Exhibit Dates: July 28, 1976 - September 26, 1976


A Child's Christmas - Toys of the Past

Exhibit Dates: December 15, 1975 - January 19, 1976

An exhibit of children's toys.


Littleton's Growing Pains

Exhibit Dates: 1975


Christmas/1920's

Exhibit Dates: Dec 1, 1974 - Jan 17, 1975

Christmas gift suggestions from 1920-1929


The Needlework Exhibit Needlework

Exhibit Dates: 1973


The Sculpture Show

Exhibit Dates: 1973


Littleton's Lifestyle

Exhibit Dates: April 30, 1972 - 1975

Included a false front on museum building.


American Painting 1900-1950

Exhibit Dates: Apr 1972

IBM touring exhibit


Littleton's Growth, then, now & tomorrow

Exhibit Dates: April 18, 1971


Richard S. Little: Founder of Littleton Colorado, 1862

Exhibit Dates: August 8, 1970


Armistice Day 1918

Exhibit Dates: November 6, 1970

Posters from World War I, Army recruiting posters, and items pertaining to the Armistice.


The Presidents

Exhibit Dates: October 18, 1970 - October 31, 1970