3. ART
FABRIC OF SURVIVAL see page 4 – 6
Esther Nisenthal Krinitz (1927-2007)
used fabric arts to tell her story of
surviving the Holocaust in Poland. The
nationally touring exhibition of her
work, THROUGH THE EYE OF THE
NEEDLE – FABRIC OF SURVIVAL will
be presented in the Old Gallery from
September 7 – November 30.
In 1942, 15-year-old Krinitz
and her 13-year-old sister left
their family and ran away when
the Jews of their village were
ordered by the Nazis to report
to a nearby train station. The
sisters evaded the Gestapo for
two years by pretending to be
part of a Catholic farm family.
In 1977 at the age of 50, Krinitz
began creating works of fabric
art to tell her story of survival.
Trained as a dressmaker but
with no formal education in
art, she created 36 remarkable
fabric pictures with strong, vivid
images and folk art realism.
She meticulously stitched the
narrative of her story beneath
each picture.
The textiles reveal an incongruity
between the beauty of the
pastoral landscape and the
violence, terror and betrayal
the sisters experienced
on their journey. Although
Krinitz created her art for her
family, her daughters Bernice
Steinhardt and Helene McQuade
believed her art deserved to
be seen by a wider audience.
They established a non-profit
educational organization to
create a traveling exhibition of
their mother’s art.
Working with CYPRESS
(Committee to Promote Respect
in Schools), community partners
from the Evansville-Vanderburgh
Public Library, Evansville
Philharmonic Orchestra, Public
Education Foundation, Arts
Council of Southwestern
Indiana, Temple Adath B’nai
Israel, University of Evansville,
University of Southern Indiana,
and WNIN have joined the
Museum in developing
educational and cultural
programming focusing on World
War II and the Holocaust.
Presented in partnership with CYPRESS, THE SHAVITZ FOUNDATION, THE JEWISH COMMUNITY COUNCIL,
BILL & LISA MULLER, ROSEMARY O’DANIEL, and BARBARA TROCKMAN
Textile Exhibition Documents Heroic Journey
4
On Friday, October 17, at
1 p.m. in the Evansville Museum’s
Old Gallery, Jon Kay, Director
of Traditional Arts Indiana, will
present a program on “Memory,
Art and Aging” that specifically
looks at folk art as a strategy
of successful aging. Kay, an
assistant research scholar in
the Department of Folklore and
Ethnomusicology at Indiana
University, was named the 2013-
2014 Archie Green Fellow at
the American Folklife Center,
Library of Congress and is a
consulting curator at the Mathers
Museum of World Cultures in
Bloomington, Indiana.
Kay will address the importance
of life review and art-making to
the successful aging process in
the lives of seniors. The program
will include a presentation of
case studies from his years of
working with senior folk artists.
He will share his observations
about how and why seniors
make and use art and its impact
on their daily lives. From colorful
walking sticks and quilts to
paintings and hooked rugs,
seniors make art to reflect upon
their lives, record their memories,
and to share their stories with
others. Kay will probe these
three distinct aspects of art
making and explore what we
can learn from them. Seniors are
encouraged to bring examples
of their art projects to show and
share at this gathering.
Memory, Art and Aging Topic of Program
From Director of Traditional Arts Indiana
Esther Nisenthal Krinitz, textile
MY CHILDHOOD HOME
In conjunction with the
program, the exhibition Tell
People the Story: The Art of
Gustav Potthoff will be on
view. The exhibition shares
the life and work of Gustav
Potthoff, a memory painter
who paints to remember
his fellow prisoners of war,
who, as captives of the
Japanese, were forced to
build the Burma Thailand
Railway during World War II.
Concerned that more than
16,000 people who died
constructing the bridge
over the River Kwai and the
Hellfire Pass will be forgotten,
the artist paints to tell their
story and to make peace with
his wartime memories.
4. Art and Remembrance
Founders Bernice Steinhardt
and Helene McQuade to Share
Reflections on their Mother’s Art
On Sunday, September 14, 2014
at 2:00 pm in the Old Gallery, the
founders of Art and Remembrance, an
arts and education non-profit based
in Maryland, will present a program
in conjunction with the exhibition
Through the Eye of the Needle – Fabric
of Survival.
Art and Remembrance brings the work
and story of Holocaust survivor and
fabric artist Esther Nisenthal Krinitz to
a wider audience. The founders wanted
to maximize the educational potential
of her art and unique story and
promote the use of art and personal
memoir as tools for promoting healing
and awareness.
Art and Remembrance was founded by
Krinitz’s daughters, Bernice Steinhardt
and Helene McQuade. Steinhardt and
McQuade grew up with the stories of
Margaret McMullan will Discuss
Holocaust Research through the
Lens of her own Family Members
Margaret McMullan is the author of six award-winning adult and young adult novels
including In My Mother’s House, a Pen/Faulkner nominee and Sources of Light, which was
nominated for the National Book Award. Margaret has received a National Endowment
of the Arts Fellowship in literature and a Fulbright grant to research and teach at the
University of Pécs in Pécs, Hungary. She is the National Author Winner of the Eugene
and Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Award and she currently holds the Melvin Peterson
Endowed Chair in Creative Writing and Literature at the University of Evansville. Recently,
she edited Every Father’s Daughter, an anthology of essays about fathers by daughters
with an introduction by Phillip Lopate, due out in spring 2015. Her novel-in-stories
Aftermath Lounge is also due in spring 2015.
Author and University of Evansville professor Margaret McMullan will talk
about her search for a forgotten family member, Richárd Engel de Jánosi.
De Jánosi died at Mauthausen Concentration Camp in Mauthausen, Austria.
On Sunday, October 26 at 2 p.m., McMullan will discuss the journey that led
her to Israel, Hungary, and finally to Mauthausen.
In the course of her research, McMullan was able to piece together the life of
her great uncle de Jánosi, one of 4,000 Hungarian Jews who were taken to
concentration camps and murdered during the last months of World War II.
Sixty-four years later, McMullan returned to Pécs, Hungary, with her own family
to learn about de Jánosi’s life so that he might be properly remembered.
Margaret wrote about the Engel de Jánosi family in her forthcoming memoir,
Where The Angels Lived.
April 27 – July 6
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Legacies of World War II Exhibition
Saturday, June 14, 12:30 pm
Shrinersfest on the Evansville Riverfront
D-Day Re-enactment - By LST 325, Freedom
Heritage Museum, IN Military Museum
Sunday, June 29, 2 pm
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Speaker: Dr. James MacLeod, professor of
history, University of Evansville, “To You
From Failing Hands We Throw the Torch;
American Memorials and Cemeteries of the
Two World Wars”
FRIDAY, AUGUST, 22 8 AM – 3 pM
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
“Echoes and Reflections” Holocaust
Education Workshop for Educators
Coordinated by CYPRESS
Monday, September 1, 9 pm
WNIN PBS (Channel 9)
Documentary: Through
The Eye of the Needle
September 7 – November 30
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Through the Eye of the Needle – Fabric of
Survival Exhibition
Sunday, September 7, 3 pm
WNIN PBS (Channel 9)
Film: Escape From a Nazi Death Camp
Monday, September 8, 9 pm
WNIN PBS (Channel 9)
Film: Escape From a Nazi Death Camp
Saturday, September 13, (Time TBD)
Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana
HeART and Story Workshop
Saturday, September 13, 6 pm
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Exhibit Opening Reception for Evansville
Museum Members
Sunday, September 14, 3 pm
WNIN PBS (Channel 9)
Documentary: Through
The Eye of the Needle
Sunday, September 14, 2 pm
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Speakers: Bernice Steinhardt & Helene
McQuade (Artist’s daughters)
Wednesday, September 17, 6 pm
USI – Kleymeyer Hall (Liberal Arts 0101)
Film: The Nasty Girl (1990; dir. Michael
Verhoeven): Introduction and discussion
by Dr. Silvia Rode, associate professor
of German; Chair, World Languages and
Cultures, USI.
Saturday, September 20, (Time TBD)
Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana
HeART and Story workshop
Monday, September 22, 9 pm
WNIN PBS (Channel 9)
Film: Orchestra of Exiles
Wednesday, September 24, 6 pm
USI – Kleymeyer Hall (Liberal Arts 0101)
Film: KZ (2006; dir. Rex Bloomstein):
Introduction and discussion by Dr. Casey
Harrison, professor of history, director for the
Center for Communal Studies, USI
Sunday, September 28, 3 pm
WNIN PBS (Channel 9)
Film: Orchestra of Exiles
Friday, October 3, 8 pm
WNIN Cable 12
Film: Escape From a Nazi Death Camp
Friday, October 10, 7 pm
UE – Eykamp University Center – Room 251
Thomas C. Fiddick Memorial Lecture: Speaker:
Professor Theodore Wilson, University
of Kansas, “The GI Generation: Sending
American Soldiers into Battle in WW II”
Friday, October 10, 8 pm
WNIN Cable 12
Documentary: Through
The Eye of the Needle
Sunday, October 12, 2 pm
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Eykamp String Quartet Performance
Friday, October 17, 1 pm
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Speaker: Jon Kay, Department of Folklore
and Ethnomusicology, Indiana University and
Director of Traditional Arts Indiana, “Memory,
Art and Aging”
Exhibition Tell People the Story: The Art of
Gustav Potthoff on loan from Traditional Arts
Indiana
Friday, October 17, 8 pm
WNIN Cable 12
Film: Orchestra of Exiles
Thursday, October 23, (Time TBD)
UE – Neu Chapel
UE Interfaith Committee
Remembrance/Memorial Service
Sunday, October 26, 2 pm
Evansville Museum of Arts,
History & Science
Speaker: Margaret McMullen, Melvin Peterson
Endowed Chair in Creative Writing and
Literature, University of Evansville, discusses
her upcoming book Where the Angels Lived
Tuesday, October 28, 7:30 pm
Victory Theatre
Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library’s
One Book One Community: In the Garden of
Beasts; Erik Larson, author
Saturday, November 15, 7 pm
Victory Theatre
Evansville Philharmonic Classics Series:
Britten’s War Requiem; A Tribute to
American Veterans
Sunday, November 16, 3 pm
Temple Adath B’nai Israel
Speaker: Dr. Mark Roseman, director of
Jewish Studies, Indiana University
EVANSVILLE REMEMBERS
The Holocaust & World War II
This summer and fall, the Tri-State area will have the unique opportunity to experience a
multi-faceted educational and cultural program focusing on the Holocaust and World War II.
CYPRESS (Committee to Promote
Respect in Schools) is coordinating
this collaborative effort between many
of the area’s major organizations and
institutions. The Evansville Museum
of Arts, History & Science, Evansville-
Vanderburgh Public Library, Evansville
Philharmonic Orchestra, Public
Education Foundation, Arts Council
of Southwestern Indiana, Temple
Adath B’nai Israel, WNIN, University
of Evansville, University of Southern
Indiana, and other community
partners will contribute their expertise
and resources to create this rich and
varied tapestry of experiences to
commemorate the Holocaust and
World War II.
5
their mother’s courage and suffering as
a child during the war. Years later, after
Krinitz began to turn her stories into
a narrated series of fabric art pictures,
they realized the incredible power their
mother’s art and her stitched narratives
had. Together, art and story could
help people understand what war and
intolerance are and how they feel to
those who endure them.
The organization has produced the
nationally touring exhibition of Krinitz’s
work, published the award-winning
book Memories of Survival, developed
and distributed curricula for students
from elementary through high school
and produced a multiple award-winning
30 minute documentary entitled
Through the Eye of the Needle:
The Art of Esther Nisenthal Krinitz.
6
Helene
McQuade
AND Bernice
Steinhardt
5. The work of late 19th
and early
20th
century painters T. C. Steele,
William Forsyth, J. Ottis Adams, Otto
Stark and Richard Gruelle, known
collectively as the Hoosier Group,
established plein air, or in the open
air painting as a major art form in
Indiana. From that time forward,
Hoosier artists have led recurrent
movements championing the
tradition of outdoor painting. The
vitality of this style is represented in
PAINTING INDIANA III: HERITAGE
OF PLACE, a juried exhibition of
100 works by 45 contemporary
Hoosier artists, all featuring notable
Indiana landmarks and celebrating
the beauty of every corner of our
State. The exhibition will be featured
in the Main Gallery from July 27 –
September 21.
Organized by the Indiana Plein
Air Painters Association and
Indiana Landmarks, the exhibition
was selected by M. Stephen
Doherty, editor-in-chief of American
Artist Magazine for 31 years. A
prolific writer, Doherty also is an
accomplished painter whose work
has been shown in solo and group
exhibitions across the country.
He is currently Editor of Plein Air
Magazine.
Art in Indiana, 1916
“To live out-of-doors in
intimate touch with nature,
to feel the sun, to watch
the ever-changing face
of the landscape, where
waters run and winds blow
and trees wave and clouds
move, and to walk with all
the hours of the day and
into the mysteries of night
through all the seasons of
the year – this is the heaven
of the Hoosier Painter!”
Presented in partnership with BARB & BILL BEARD
A Grand Tradition Endures
In The Hoosier State
8
Chris Newlund, oil, 24” x 18”
Chris Newlund, oil, 24” x 24”
BARTHOLOMEW COUNTY COURTHOUSE
MONUMENT CIRCLE
7
Presented in memory of
VIRGINIA B. LOWENTHAL
The Evansville
Museum and the
Arts Council of
Southwestern
Indiana Collaborate
with Regional
Artists in Annual
Juried Exhibition
For the 21st
consecutive year,
regional artists will participate
in a juried exhibition entitled
WORKING TOGETHER.
Presented in memory of Virginia
B. Lowenthal, the July 13 –
August 24 Old Gallery exhibition
is presented in cooperation
with the Arts Council of
Southwestern Indiana.
Juror for this year’s competition
is Marianne Richter, executive
director of the Swope Art
Museum in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Prior to coming to the Swope
in 2011, she had over 20 years
experience in curatorial positions
at the Briscoe Western Art
Museum in San Antonio, the
Union League Club of Chicago,
the Dayton Art Institute and the
Brandywine River Museum in
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania.
- William Forsyth
Virginia J. Kramer, pastel, 13” x 20.5”
CASTLE ON THE HILL
MARIANNE RICHTER
6. Presented in partnership with
BRAD & JACQUI GORDON and BARB & BILL BEARD
Mid-States Art Exhibition
Featured In Old Gallery
The 57th MID-STATES ART EXHIBITION
will be presented in the Old Gallery
from December 14, 2014 – January
25, 2015. The exhibition is a regional
competition open to artists in a six state
area including Indiana, Illinois, Ohio,
Kentucky, Tennessee and Missouri.
Over $10,000 in purchase and merit
awards, underwritten by Evansville
individuals, corporations, foundations
and philanthropic organizations will
be presented on the December 13
awards evening. Purchase awards
allow the Museum to acquire works
for the contemporary art collection,
and merit awards are important for
the encouragement and recognition of
regional artists.
Juror for the competition is artist
and educator Ephraim Rubenstein.
After receiving his BA in Art History
from Columbia University, Rubenstein
earned his MFA in Painting from
Columbia University’s School of the
Arts. He has had ten solo exhibitions
in New York at the Tibor de Nagy
Gallery, Tatistcheff & Co. and most
recently at the George Billis Gallery.
From 1987-1998 he was associate
professor of art at the University
of Richmond. He has taught at the
Rhode Island School of Design and
the Maryland Institute College of Art,
and he is currently on the faculty at
Columbia University, the National
Academy of Design and the Art
Students League.
2012 Mid-States Guild Purchase Award, Kim Krause, oil and spray paint on canvas, 40” x 36”
Suzanne Scherer and Pavel Ouporov, silverpoint,
graphite, gold leaf on mylar, 2005
ELUSIAN MYSTERIES #8
10
Presented in partnership with STEVE & SUSAN WORTHINGTON
Les Miley Ceramics Featured
in John Streetman Alcove
A ceramics professor and chairman of the art department at the
University of Evansville for more than 40 years, Les Miley is now
professor emeritus and continues to teach part time and organize
summer workshops in New Harmony. Miley’s ceramic works have been
exhibited in more than 200 competitive and invitational art exhibitions
throughout the United States and Europe.
The September 14 – December 28 exhibition in the John Streetman
Alcove will be a retrospective of this esteemed artist’s work. His
ceramics are included in numerous corporate, private and museum
collections, and have been featured in national ceramics magazines and
professional journals, as well as several books. In addition, Miley has
been honored for his teaching, receiving Teacher of the Year from the
Evansville Alumni Association, the Outstanding Faculty Scholar Award
from the University of Evansville, and the Art Educator Award from the
Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana.
Visiting Artists
Suzanne Scherer and
Pavel Ouporov Offer
Workshop
American-born Suzanne Scherer
and Russian-born Pavel Ouporov will
conduct an intensive art workshop
on Sunday, August 10 – Tuesday,
August 12. For details see page 25. The
workshop will be in conjunction with an
exhibition of their work in the Richardt
Room from July 27 – August 24.
Scherer and Ouporov are a
collaborative team who met while
studying at the Moscow Surikov State
Academy Art Institute. Scherer earned
a BFA from Florida State University,
and an MFA from Brooklyn College.
At age 11, Ouporov won admittance
into the Moscow State Academy
Art Lyceum. He graduated at 18 and
earned a Master of Fine Arts from the
Moscow Surikov State Academy Art
Institute.
Scherer and Ouporov have received
national and international recognition
for their collaborative works and they
are represented in the permanent
collections of many national and
international institutions. Their
exhibition at the Museum will feature
over a dozen works donated to the
Museum in 2010 by Dr. Richard Daigle,
as well as several recent works.Les Miley, salt-fired stoneware, 18” x 2.5”
WABASH HORIZON
9
Presented in partnership with
THE EVANSVILLE MUSEUM
CONTEMPORARIES
Amy Musia
Exhibition
Continues in John
Streetman Alcove
Amy Musia’s exhibition,
CAPITAL PROJECTS, will be
displayed through September 7.
Musia specializes in site-specific
works of art for healthcare
environments, public spaces
and corporate and private
collections. In her 30-year
career, Musia has completed
numerous public commissions
including Bend in the River
on Evansville’s riverfront. She
has a sculpture included in the
Museum’s permanent collection,
and she has been featured in
competitive and invitational
exhibitions across the country.
A graduate of the University
of Southern Indiana, Amy
Musia serves on the Evansville
Public Arts Commission and
has been an active member of
the Evansville Greenway Art
Committee. She is represented
by the Begley Art Source,
a division of the Evansville
Museum Shop.
GUARDIAN
7. Main Gallery Exhibition
Pays Tribute to the
Preservation of Nature
ON NATURE’S TERMS: THE WILDERNESS PAINTINGS OF THOMAS
PAQUETTE is a contemplation of special places where nature dominates.
Fifty years after the Wilderness Act was signed into law in 1964, this
exhibition celebrates the places preserved by that law – places that thrive
not by industry and scientific progress but by the forces of nature alone,
protected from significant human intrusion.
Pennsylvania artist Thomas Paquette was inspired to create the collection
by his visits to federal wilderness areas all around the country during
the last two years. The diversity and vitality of the environments that
comprise the National Wilderness Preservation System – from southwest
canyons and high peaks, to east and west seashores, and lowland swamps
and deserts – are reflected in these oil and gouache paintings.
In addition to the December 14, 2014 – March 8, 2015 presentation at the
Evansville Museum, the exhibition will be shown in California and New
York during 2014 and 2015.
12
2011, 34 x 28”
The Fallen and the Standing
Blue Mountain Panorama
2008, 25 x 35”
Presented in partnership with the
EVANSVILLE MUSEUM
CONTEMPORARIES,
JOANN SCHWENTKER,
LISA & MARTY IMBLER, and
CARRIE & PETE MOGAVERO
Jean-Jacques
du Plessis
Explores New
Directions
From October 5 – November
30, the Main Gallery will be the
setting for the paintings of Jean-
Jacques du Plessis. Born in 1984
in Cape Town, South Africa,
du Plessis earned his Master of
Fine Arts at Temple University’s
Tyler School of Art. He received
a post-baccalaureate degree
from Brandeis University and his
Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in
painting and printmaking from
Ohio Wesleyan University.
In 2012, du Plessis attended the
Skowhegan School of Painting
and Sculpture in Maine. He has
had solo exhibitions in Rome,
Italy and Philadelphia and has
participated in group exhibitions
in Boston, New York, Philadelphia
and Rome.
This fall du Plessis will exhibit
a body of recent work that
continues to explore his interest
in painting, and also addresses
ideas about the ways in which
paintings function within space
and in terms of signage, personal
expression and traditional notions
of place.
Untitled, 2012
Untitled I, 2014
TOP
RIGHT
11
Presented in partnership with PHYLLIS R. & WILLIAM C. H. GRIMM, JR.
8. EXHIBITION INTERPRETS CITY’S BREWING HISTORY see page 14
During Prohibition, Sterling
Brewery adapted to the time
and produced drinks other
than beer.
Presented in partnership with
TIN MAN BREWING CO.
and DR. VICTOR V. SCHRIEFER, JR.
Exhibition Interprets
City’s Brewing
History
From July 27 - October 5 in the Evansville
Convention and Visitors Bureau Center for
History and Science, BOTTLED AND KEGGED:
A TOAST TO EVANSVILLE’S BREWERIES
recalls an important part of our city’s history.
Since the 1830s, breweries have played a key
role in the story of Evansville. This exhibition
will examine historic breweries of the city and
illustrate the continuation of this tradition in
current Evansville enterprises.
Evansville’s first brewery opened in 1837.
Historically known as the Old Brewery, many
of the other significant breweries in Evansville
trace their origins to this enterprise, including
F. W. Cook and Sterling. The interpretation of
the history of these two breweries is central to
the exhibition.
In 1853, F.W. Cook and Louis Rice, both
second generation Germans, began Cook
and Rice City Brewery in Evansville. The
brewery grew to sell more than 500,000
barrels per year, and it was incorporated
as F. W. Cook Brewing Company in 1885.
Following prohibition, its “Goldblume Beer”
was the top seller in the nation. In 1955, an
unresolved labor dispute led to the plant’s
closing; and in the early 1960s, the Cook
structures were demolished in preparation
for the new Civic Center Complex.
The company that bottled Evansville’s famous
Sterling brand was founded in 1894. It was
located at the northwest corner of what
is now the Lloyd Expressway and Fulton
Avenue. During Prohibition, the company
bottled non-alcoholic drinks under the name
Sterling Products. In 1964, the company
merged with Associated Brewing Company of
Detroit, and it became part of the G. Heilman
Brewing Company of LaCrosse, Wisconsin in
1972. After G. Heilman ceased production in
the city in 1988, the facility reopened as the
Evansville Brewing Company and continued in
operation until 1997.
Today, Evansville’s rich tradition of brewing
is carried on by Tin Man Brewing Company,
Carson’s Brewery and Turoni’s Pizzery &
Brewery. The stories of Evansville’s breweries
are a vital facet of our city’s heritage.
14
In the latter 19th and early 20th centuries, the
F. W. Cook Brewing Company marketed to a
wide audience.
Collection of the Evansville Museum
2012.007.0517
Top BOTTOM
HISTORY
9. Historic
Photographs
Donated to
Evansville
Museum
Photographs depicting Jacob
Hartz & Company were recently
donated by David Sherman to
the Evansville Museum. Owned
by Jacob Hartz, the firm was a
wholesaler and retailer of cigars
and tobacco from the early 1900s
through the mid-1940s. During his
lifetime, Hartz also operated cigar
and news stands in prominent
Evansville hotels, including the
Randall House, the St. George
Hotel, the Vendome Hotel and the
Hotel McCurdy. Hartz died at the
age of 99 in 1975.
In addition to selling cigars
and tobacco, the Jacob Hartz
& Company shop at 301
Main Street also featured a
soda fountain with a marble
countertop.
Gifts of David Sherman
2014.019.0001 – .0002
This is an authentic reproduction of a Wells
Fargo Concord Stagecoach, one of America’s
most legendary vehicles.
Transportation
Day 2014
This photograph depicts Jacob
Hartz & Company at 301 Main
Street—the present site of a
Subway restaurant. Previously
located just across Third Street
at 231 Main Street, the business
moved to the building pictured
here when National City Bank
constructed a building at Hartz’s
earlier location in 1914.
Interior
Wells Fargo Concord Stagecoach
Exterior
On Sunday, October 12 from
Noon - 4 p.m., the Evansville Museum
will be alive with the sights and
sounds of Transportation Day. Visitors
will be immersed in an array of modes
of transportation and will be able to
participate in a variety of activities.
Special exhibits at the ADMISSION-
FREE event will include historic modes
of transportation, safety vehicles,
special demonstrations, and crafts.
As a part of Transportation Day,
visitors are invited to view an
authentic reproduction of a Wells
Fargo Concord Stagecoach, one of
America’s most legendary vehicles.
Once, these beautifully crafted
“cradles on wheels” covered 3,000
miles of American territory, carrying
up to nine passengers in a 4’x6’ space.
Come explore the stagecoach and
imagine what it was like to travel
coast to coast with other adventurers,
mail and goods.
The Wells Fargo Concord Stagecoach
is made possible through the
generosity of Wells Fargo Advisors,
LLC in Evansville, Indiana.
15
From Grain to Glass
16
Join us on Friday, September 19
at 5:00 p.m. for the presentation
“From Grain To Glass,” an overview of
the production of craft beer on the
industrial scale. Tin Man Brewhouse
operations manager Keenan Zarling
will discuss the process of craft
brewing from the raw materials to
packaged beer. Different ingredients
and processes are used to craft many
different types of beer, and Zarling
will explain the impact that each
choice has on the beer in your glass.
Keenan Zarling began his brewing
career by studying Brewing
Technology at the Siebel Institute
in Chicago and the Doemens
Academy in Munich. Originally from
Austin, Texas, he was a prominent
member of the brewing team and
resident quality control technician
at Independence Brewing before
moving to Evansville with his wife
to help launch Tin Man Brewing in
2012. As the Brewhouse operations
manager for Tin Man, he is
responsible for development of new
recipes and processes, ensuring the
production of high quality, craft beer.
Prior to working in the brewing
industry, Keenan received his
undergraduate degree from the
University of Texas at Austin
in Theatrical Performance and
Playwriting. In his spare time, he
gardens, cooks, bakes, reads the
occasional good book, and of
course, drinks beer.
10. EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS THE IMPORTANCE OF MAKING GOOD CHOICES FOR DAILY HEALTH see page 18
Exhibition Highlights
the Importance of
Making Good Choices
for Daily Health
Presented in partnership with
ST. MARY’S HEALTH
What is in the food we eat? Are
fruits and vegetables important?
What everyday activities burn the
most calories? EAT WELL, PLAY
WELL answers all these questions
and more by helping children
and families discover that healthy
choices are all around us.
This family friendly interactive
exhibition encourages a healthy
lifestyle by teaching the science of
making the right food choices and
showing children and adults many
exciting ways to stay active. The
October 12, 2014 – January 11, 2015
exhibition will help visitors of all
ages discover what an appropriate
serving size looks like, experience
firsthand what it takes to burn off
calories, test their flexibility and
balance and realize they can reduce
their risk of disease with healthy
choices that are within their reach.
The exhibition includes Balancing
Act; Calories In, Calories Out;
Dinner Theater; Be Flexible;
Supermarket Nutrition; Animal
Motion; Sizing Up Serving; Eat a
Rainbow and Screen Time.
Eat Well, Play Well was produced
and is toured by the Oregon
Museum of Science and Industry.
This exhibition was made possible
by a Science Education Partnership
Award grant from the National
Center for Research Resources,
a component of the National
Institutes of Health.
KOCH IMMERSIVE
THEATER SHOWS
See more. Hear more. Explore space and
rediscover the amazing universe at the Koch
Immersive Theater. Experience giant screen movies
and planetarium shows under the dome of our
giant theater screen where each presentation
is more like flying than watching a movie. Our
wrap-around digital surround sound adds to the
experience, taking you to places you could only
imagine before.
SCIENCE
18
11. Journey 80 million years back in
time to an age when dinosaurs
dominated the land and creatures
swam, hunted and fought for survival
in the prehistoric seas. Stunning
photo-realistic imagery recreates
the underwater world of two
dolphin-sized marine reptiles called
Dolichorhynchops. The film follows
their journey through waters ruled by
some of the most vicious predators
ever to prowl the Earth’s oceans.
Award-winning actor Tim Allen
narrates BACK TO THE MOON FOR
GOOD, an exciting, educational full
dome show. The 25-minute digital film
highlights the history of exploring the
moon and provides an insider’s look
at the teams vying for the $30 million
Google Lunar XPRIZE, the largest
incentivized prize in history.
Back To The Moon For Good begins
with a tour through the history of
lunar exploration. We hear from some
of the teams racing to land a robotic
spacecraft on the moon and win the
Coming Soon To The Koch Immersive Theater
Back to the Moon for Good
Let It Snow
Presented in loving memory of
DR. AND MRS. H.S. DIECKMAN
from their family VIRGINIA DIECKMAN LEZHNEV and ALEXANDER “SASHA” LEZHNEV
Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure
Showtimes: July 13 – December 6 • 1 p.m. Tuesday – Saturday 6:30 p.m. Friday
Showtimes: August 31 –January 4, 2015 • 3 p.m. Wed, Fri, Sat, Sun; 8 p.m. Friday
Showtimes: December 7 – December 28 • 2 p.m. Saturday & Sunday
The Museum celebrates the season
with a brand new holiday music show!
Let it Snow features a new variety
of festive classics from Frank Sinatra,
Chuck Berry, Burl Ives, Brenda Lee
and the Trans Siberian Orchestra. The
soundtrack is visually enhanced with
thematic animation, laser imagery,
special effects and all-dome scenery.
The 32-minute program is a fun,
family-friendly experience for all ages.
16
Google Lunar XPRIZE. The audience
is taken on a successful launch,
landing and tour of the lunar surface.
The stunning visuals and narrative
explain the importance of the Google
Lunar XPRIZE in building a new space
economy and inspiring the next
generation to shoot for the moon.
Back to the Moon For Good includes
a brief live presentation featuring a
three-dimensional trip to the Moon
using our Digistar® computer graphics
simulation system and panoramic
photography of the lunar surface.
Interweaving groundbreaking
fossil finds from around the globe
with cutting-edge computer-
generated re-creations, National
Geographic’s powerful storytelling
immerses the viewer in the life-
or-death drama of the prehistoric
age. With original music by Peter
Gabriel and The Footnote, SEA
MONSTERS: A PREHISTORIC
ADVENTURE is an unforgettable
prehistoric journey.
Continuing Programs: Entertainment for All Audiences
Extended Through July 13
FORCES OF NATURE gets up close and
personal with nature’s most powerful
forces. The National Geographic film
captures erupting volcanoes, devastating
earthquakes and powerful tornadoes in
an attempt to determine what causes
extreme weather conditions. This
program is presented in a truncated
format to fit our domed screen.
Our live program uses a state-of-the-art
computer graphics display system to
illustrate the visible constellations and
planets of the night sky. In addition to
being treated to views of the stars above
Earth, guests will experience a three-
dimensional trip through space using
our Digistar® computer graphics display
system. The program includes interaction
with the presenter, and those attending
are encouraged to ask questions.
FRAGILE PLANET gives audiences an
astronaut’s view of Earth, highlighting
our planet’s unique regions. The journey
continues to the Moon, Mars, and
beyond the Milky Way to search for
habitats that might host extraterrestrial
life. This program includes a live star-
identification program that uses our
Digistar® computer graphics display
system to view the summer night sky.
Produced by Sesame Workshop,
ONE WORLD, ONE SKY: BIG BIRD’S
ADVENTURE is a cross-cultural
planetarium show geared toward
children ages 4-6. Through the lens
of astronomy, children join Elmo, Big
Bird and a Muppet from China named
Hu Hu Zhu to explore the night sky.
FORCES OF NATURE SKIES OVER EVANSVILLE
FRAGILE PLANET ONE WORLD ONE SKY
PERFECT LITTLE PLANET
PERFECT LITTLE PLANET, a program
for children 7 and up, follows the antics
of an alien family from another star
system seeking the ultimate space
vacation spot. Fly over the surface of
Pluto, dive over the ice cliffs of Miranda,
sail through the rings of Saturn and feel
the lightning storms of Jupiter with the
charming family of aliens.
Admission to the Koch
Immersive Theater is $5 for
matinee presentations and $7
for evening shows. Museum
members receive a discounted
admission of $3 for all shows
with the presentation of a valid
Museum membership card.
Planetarium name goes here
123 456 7890
1111 Main Street
Earth, our only known haven for life, inhabits a special place in
the cosmos. But how special? Develop a renewed appreciation
for our fragile planet through the lens of astronomy.
Narrated by Academy Award Nominee Sigourney Weaver
Joinusforatouroftheeveningsky
Showtimes: Through July 12
1 p.m. Tuesday – Saturday • 6:30 p.m. Friday
Showtimes: Through August 30
3 p.m. Tuesday – Sunday • 8 p.m. Friday
Showtimes: Through Dec. 28
11:30 Friday & Saturday
Showtimes: Through August 16 4 p.m. Friday,
Saturday, Sunday • August 22 – December 28
4 p.m. Saturday & Sunday
Showtimes: Through – August 17 • 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday • August 23 –
December 28 • 2 p.m. Saturday & Sunday
19 20
Presented in partnership with JIM & CAROL HAVENS
12. See acclaimed animated feature films at the Koch Immersive Theater. Family
Movie Night presentations are shown on the giant screen of the Koch
Immersive Theater and are presented in movie theater format. Admission to
Family Movie Nights is $7 per person and $3 for members.
On Saturday, August 30 at 6:30 p.m.,
the Museum will present a free
screening of two short films and host
a speaker to address a disease that is
affecting the regional bat population.
The first documentary to be shown
is entitled Blue River, Indiana. It is an
11-minute film produced for the Nature
Conservancy, and it highlights exotic
Indiana animals and the Blue River’s
flora and fauna. The second film will
be Battle For Bats: Surviving White
Nose Syndrome. Both documentaries
were produced by Ravenswood Media
of Chicago.
Following the screenings, Dr. Diana
Barber, education curator of
Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic
Garden will discuss White Nose
Syndrome and how it is affecting
the local bat population. Scott Hein
from the Flying Fox Conservation
Fund will have three live bats for the
audience to see.
Animated Feature.
Voices by: Danny Elfman, Chris Sarandon, Catherine
O’Hara, William Hickey, Paul Reubens
Touchstone Pictures 1993: Directed by Henry Selick
75 minutes, Rated PG
Dave McGowan of Ravenswood
Media at Buda Cave.
Presented in partnership with RED SPOT PAINT AND VARNISH
Celebrate Science on Chemistry Day
Family Movie Nights Offer
Cinema Fun for Everyone
Film Screening and Speaker Highlight
Disease Affecting Local Bats
Presented in partnership with THE INDIANA CHAPTER OF THE NATURE
CONSERVANCY, THE US FOREST SERVICE, THE FLYING FOX
CONSERVATION FUND, and RAVENSWOOD STUDIOS
From simple to complex, chemical
reactions play an important role in
everyone’s daily lives. Come to the
Museum on Sunday, October 19
for CHEMISTRY DAY, presented in
cooperation with the University of
Southern Indiana and the University
of Evansville.
At 1:00 p.m., faculty members of
area universities will conduct exciting
experiments such as Exploding
Balloons, Elephant Toothpaste, Genie
in a Bottle, and Burning Water.
Following the show, students from
the University of Southern Indiana will
offer hands-on children’s activities at
stations throughout the Old Gallery
until 3:00 p.m.
Photo by Ken Redeker
Despicable Me 2
On Saturday, October 25 at 6:45 p.m.,
the Koch Immersive Theater presents
the sequel to the successful 2010
animated picture Despicable Me.
The film features Gru, the evil villain-
turned-parental figure and his
adorable minions.
The film was produced by Universal Studios and
Illumination Entertainment.
Voices by: Steve Carell, Al Pacino, Kristen Wiig
Universal Pictures 2013: Directed by Pierre Coffin
and Chris Renaud
98 minutes, Rated PG
The Nightmare Before Christmas
This quirky and charming musical
directed by Tim Burton creates a
magical realm that will be brought
to the Koch Immersive Theater on
Saturday, November 22 at 6:45
p.m. Jack Skellington, the Halloween
Pumpkin King, kidnaps Santa and
delivers ghoulish Christmas presents
to all the little boys and girls.
Presented in Partnership with??
In cooperation with WABX
EVANSVILLE’S CLASSIC ROCK
Laser Light
Shows Bigger
Than Ever!
For three weeks, from July 29 –
August 16, laser light shows return.
Evening and matinee programs
are scheduled, including the just-
for-children show Perseus and
Andromeda. Our laser light shows
include music from artists such as the
Beatles, LED Zeppelin, Metallica and
Pink Floyd, and there are also three
compilation shows called Laser Magic,
Laser Retro and Laser Mania.
Tickets are $7, and $5 for museum
members.
TUESDAY, JULY 29
2:00 p.m. Laser Magic
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
THURSDAY, JULY 31
2:00 p.m. Laser Magic
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1
2:00 p.m. Laser Magic
9:30 p.m. Laser Zeppelin
11:00 p.m. The Wall
SATURDAY, AUGUST 2
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
9:30 p.m. Laser Zeppelin
11:00 p.m. The Wall
21 22
TUESDAY, AUGUST 5
2:00 p.m. Laser Beatles
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Beatles
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Beatles
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
THURSDAY, AUGUST 7
2:00 p.m. Laser Beatles
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Beatles
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
FRIDAY, AUGUST 8
2:00 p.m. Laser Beatles
9:30 p.m. Laser Retro
11:00 p.m. Laser Metallica
SATURDAY, AUGUST 9
6:30 p.m. Laser Beatles
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
9:30 p.m. Laser Retro
11:00 p.m. Laser Metallica
TUESDAY, AUGUST 12
2:00 p.m. Laser Magic
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
THURSDAY, AUGUST 14
2:00 p.m. Laser Magic
4:00 p.m. Perseus and Andromeda
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15
2:00 p.m. Laser Magic
9:30 p.m. Laser Zeppelin
11:00 p.m. The Wall
SATURDAY, AUGUST 16
6:30 p.m. Laser Mania
8:00 p.m. Pink Floyd:
Darkside of the Moon
9:30 p.m. Laser Zeppelin
11:00 p.m. The Wall
SHOW SCHEDULE
13. EARLY SUMMER 2014 EDUCATION CLASSES see page 24 – 25
Beginning Drawing
with Graphite
DATE: Thursday, July 10, 17, 24, 31
TIME: 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
AGES: 15 years old to Adults
COST: $80 Members/$95 Not-
Yet Members. Supplies
can be purchased from the
instructor.
Drawing is the first step for
artists before creating paintings,
sculptures, jewelry design or any
other work of art, and drawings also
can be finished pieces. Joycelyn
Todisco will teach participants the
techniques of using graphite on
paper to create fine art drawings.
This workshop will guide beginners
through the different types of
drawings and terminology. Students
will learn how to choose the right
pencil density, use blending stumps
and how different paper types
affect the finished drawing. The
workshop will feature drawing from
staged still lifes, and the supplies
will be provided.
Photographic Composition
DATE: Saturdays, August 2, 9,
16, 23, 30
TIME: 10 a.m. – Noon
AGES: 15 years old to Adults
COST: $95 Member/$115 Not-Yet
Members
For anyone who wants to take
dynamic photographs, Joycelyn
Todisco will present the rules of
composition for photography.
This presentation will cover the
techniques used to control the
viewer’s eye, create balance and
asymmetry at the same time, as
well as allowing the image to speak
for itself. To participate, all that is
needed is a digital camera.
Marvelous Marionettes
DATE: Saturday, July 19
TIME: 1:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
AGES: $35 Member/$45 Not-Yet
Member
Joycelyn Todisco will lead students
on a fun afternoon making
marionettes. Using found objects
either provided by the instructor
or brought in by the participant,
students are invited to create their
very own string operated puppets.
This class is great for children, teens
and adults.
Early Summer
2014 Education
Classes
SHILO
Joycelyn Todisco, graphite
To register for a class, call the
Evansville Museum at
(812) 425-2406. Make checks
payable to The Evansville
Museum. Payment must
be received on or before
the registration deadline.
Registration is guaranteed
when payment is received.
If a class is cancelled by the Museum,
registration fees will be refunded. In
the event a student must cancel the
registration, he/she must do so before
the registration deadline in order to
receive a refund.
EDUCATION
24
Kids and
Grandparents
Day 2014
Get ready for Kids & Grandparents
Day! On Sunday, September 7, join
us at the Museum to celebrate the
diverse generations in our families!
The Noon - 4 p.m. event will include
performances, activities and crafts
and MORE that are enjoyable for
the whole family! Not a parent or
grandparent? Join us anyway for an
afternoon of fun! All event activities
are included with Museum admission.
Presented in
partnership with
BUNNY BREAD
14. Any business, corporation or non-
profit looking for a fun and creative
teambuilding event should consider
the Evansville Museum’s brand new
teambuilding experiences. These
enjoyable, energetic and enlightening
workshops situated in the unique
setting of the Museum will encourage
personal and collective creativity and
problem-solving. Participants will
leave with increased focus, less stress
and a great appreciation for art, peers
and co-workers.
In pre-consultation with the teaching
artist Julie Struck, the activity
will be customized to the specific
organization and the participants’
needs, which could include branding,
logo and mission, or core values.
23
Summer Painting Workshop
with Connie Bell
DATE: July 9 & 10 or August 6 & 7
TIME: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
COST: $85 Members/$95 Not-yet
members
*Supplies not included
Paint with Connie Bell for two days.
Beginners to advanced painters can
paint with oil or acrylics during this
class. Bring three to five any size
canvases, additional supplies and a
sack lunch. A supply list is available
at Blick Art Materials.
Holiday Painting Workshop
with Connie Bell
DATE: December 10 & 11
TIME: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
COST: $85 Members/$95
Not-yet members
*Supplies not included
Celebrate the holiday season with
the joys of painting. This two-day
class for beginners to advanced
painters will have you painting
three to five canvases with acrylics
or oil paint. Bring canvases,
additional supplies and a sack
lunch. A supply list is available at
Blick Art Materials.
TIME: 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Extended aftercare
available
(7:30am – 5pm), extra
COST: $30 Members/$45
Not-yet members
AGES: 6 – 12 years
Geology Camp
DATE: July 18
Rocks, fossils, volcanoes, oh my!
In this class, budding geologists
will make earthquakes, touch
fossils that are millions of years
old, learn about dinosaurs and
explore what geology is like on
other planets!
Unlocking the Secrets
of Ancient Egypt Camp
DATE: July 25
Walk like an Egyptian!
Participants will explore
the myths and truths about
mummification through the
Museum’s own replica teaching
mummy – EMASHOTEP, an
Egyptian Royal. Participants
will plan a traditional Egyptian
funeral, write their names in
hieroglyphics and sample
Egyptian snacks.
Who Needs a
Paintbrush Camp
DATE: August 1
Things are about to get squishy!
In this workshop, participants
will explore the many ways to
paint without using a paintbrush.
Fingers, feet, cars, household
objects, and maybe even light
will be used instead!
Fun Fridays
Summer Day
Camps at the
Evansville Museum
Suzanne Scherer and
Pavel Ouporov Present
Egg Tempera Painting
and Gilding Workshops
Renowned for its luminosity, egg
tempera is an ideal medium for
rendering portraits, the human figure,
still-lifes, and landscapes. In great
demand today, this ancient method
has the unique ability to create fine
detail, countless textures, and glazes
in a single session. All aspects of the
medium will be covered including the
mixing of paints with dry pigments,
under painting, glazing with warm and
cool tones, water gilding, stamping
and embellishment. This hands-on
class will include in-depth instruction
and demonstrations throughout.
Workshop A:
DATE: Sunday, August 10
TIME: Noon – 5 p.m.
COST: `$225 Members/
$275 Not-Yet Members
$50 fee payable to
Museum for supplies
Workshop B:
DATE: Monday, August 11 and
TIME: Tuesday, August 12
11 a.m. – 2 p.m. (both days)
COST: $250 Members/
$300 Not-Yet Members
$50 fee payable to
Museum for supplies
Teambuilding Art Experiences
Volunteer with the Evansville
Museum Docent Association
The Docent Association is looking for volunteers to join the organization
this fall. Members of the Evansville Museum Docent Association lead
children and adults on education adventures that are designed to
complement the classroom experience and bring science, art, history and
anthropology to life. Enthusiastic individuals who are willing to volunteer
their time are encouraged to help enhance our tour program.
For more information about becoming a Museum Docent, please plan
to attend the Docent Welcome Coffee on Monday, August 18 from 9:30
a.m. – Noon at the Museum. The morning will include social time and
refreshments along with an overview of the Docent program. Docent
training takes place on Mondays, beginning in September and ending
in February, 2015. The necessary skills are taught to give tours for both
children and adults. Additional and ongoing training allows participants
to expand their knowledge in their specific areas of interest.
Please contact Karen Malone, Curator of Education, at
(812) 425-2406, ext. 226 or at karen@emuseum.org to sign up today.
Presented in partnership with the
EVANSVILLE MUSEUM
CONTEMPORARIES
Super Saturday
Offers a New Way
to Get Involved at
the Museum
The fourth Saturday of every
month is designated as SUPER
SATURDAY at the Evansville
Museum. Visit the Museum for fun
new activities, crafts, games and
more. All Super Saturday activities
are free with Museum admission
and take place from 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Anyone who is interested in the
Museum’s collections, exhibitions,
and programs and is passionate
about life-long learning is
encouraged to become an
Evansville Museum Superhero.
Superheroes are volunteers
who assist staff with a variety
of educational activities such as
facilitating craft tables, leading
inventor’s activities and prepping
craft materials.
All Superheroes must successfully
complete a criminal background
check, undergo training, and
donate at least two hours a
month. For more information
or to request a Superhero
application, please contact the
Curator of Education, Karen
Malone at karen@emuseum.org or
call (812) 425-2406, ext. 226.
On Friday, December 5, Saturday,
December 6, Friday, December 12
or Saturday, December 13 from 6 –
7:30 p.m., families are invited to the
Evansville Museum’s Transportation
Center for a holiday evening of
magical memories! Guests will enjoy a
special reading of The Polar Express in
the train’s club car and will be treated
to hot cocoa and cookies in the train’s
dining car. A special gift and a visit
with Santa will make this an evening to
cherish for years to come.
Pajamas are welcome, and “Golden
Tickets” are required for the event. The
cost is $20 per person for Members
and $25 per person for Not-Yet
Members. Children under age 2 may
sit on the lap of a ticket-holding adult.
Tickets will be received the evening of
the event.
Reservations may be made by calling
the Museum at (812) 425-2406, ext.
226. Please make your reservation
early, as seating is limited.
EMTRAC Express 2014
DOCENT OUTREACH
Bonnie Noe leads a program about pioneer days.
2625
Groups will work together to
create a concept based on a
theme or mission statement and
then implement it by creating
a collaborative piece of art.
Important parts of the experience
are participants’ reflections and
discussions about the activity. The
teams take the projects with them
to display at their business. The
exercise is a four-hour experience
for groups of 20 or less, and the
price is $50 per person. Groups
may choose a mixed media or
canvas painting.
For more information and availability,
please call the Curator of Education
at (812) 425-2406, ext. 226 or e-mail
at karen@emuseum.org.
15. JOIN THE DOCENTS ON A TRIP TO SEE THE TERRA COTTA WARRIORS see page 28
28
AFFILIATED
Join the Docents on a
Trip to See the Terra
Cotta Warriors
All are welcome to join the Docents
on a trip to the Children’s Museum of
Indianapolis on September 17 to view
Terra Cotta Warriors: The Emperor’s
Painted Army. The exhibition is
located in the museum’s newest
gallery, Take Me There: China. This
exclusive exhibition tells the story
of the tomb complex of China’s first
emperor. Don’t miss the opportunity
to see these artifacts up close
because the army is set to march
back to China in November.
The trip will be hosted by the
Evansville Museum Docents. For
reservations or more information,
contact Lifestyle Tours at
812-682-4477 or visit their website
at www.lifestyletoursonline.com.
Cheryl Marshall with school children on an outreach tour. Marshall has accepted the office of
Docent Association President for the 2014-2015 term, along with Susan Woods as Vice-President
and Ann Wallis as Secretary/Treasurer. These officers lead the Docent Planning Council.
Docents having lunch on one of
their educational trips
Cindy Warren, past Docent
Association President, Becky
Zimmermann, Docent, and
Cheryl Marshall, Docent
Association President recognizing
Zimmermann’s 25 years of service.
Docents visiting Toyota Motor
Manufacturing Indiana
Terra cotta warriors
Photo by Romain Guy
16. 30
Evansville Museum
Contemporaries Host
Annual Brew Ha Ha
The Evansville Museum
Contemporaries are proud to
present their annual event BREW
HA HA for the 17th
consecutive
year. This year, Brew Ha Ha will be
held on September 27 from 6 – 10
p.m. Brew Ha Ha is an excellent
opportunity to try a wide variety
of micro, specialty, homemade,
and imported beers, as well as hors
d’oeuvres. Live entertainment will
also be featured.
Everyone 21 years of age and older
is invited to attend. Reservations
are $25 for EMC members, $30 for
not-yet EMC members in advance
and $35 at the door.
Museum Guild Presents Sixth
Annual 5K Run/Walk
Building An Art Collection
with the Begley Art Source
(top) TRANQUILITY, textile, Karen & Larry Hampton
(lower right) Carrie McGee’s tile windows
(lower right) Tom Bippus & Yvette Kaiser Smith hanging Smith’s crocheted fiberglass artwork.
BEGLEY ART SOURCE INSTALLATIONS AT ST. MARY’S EPWORTH CROSSING
The 5K is an exciting, family
friendly event along Evansville’s
beautiful Pigeon Creek Greenway
Passage. Everyone is welcome to
attend, whether as a runner, walker,
or to cheer on the participants.
There will also be a kids fun run,
where all participants twelve and
under will receive medals.
Assembling an art collection is a
complex process. The Evansville
Museum’s Begley Art Source is
a professional full-service art
consultation provider working with
corporate and private collectors.
With wide access to contemporary
artists, the Begley Art Source can
offer proposals for both large and
small projects to integrate corporate
branding, architectural style and
the client’s aesthetics. From the
proposal process to working with
specific art commissions, arranging
for shipping, custom framing and
installation, the Begley Art Source
is adept at collaborating with
architects, designers and artists.
To view the gallery or to arrange
a consultation, call Begley Art
Source Director Chris Jackson
at (812) 402-2180 or email
chris@emuseum.org. Proceeds
from the Begley Art Source
benefit the Evansville Museum.
29
This year’s 5K will take place on
Saturday, November 8.
Custom designed t-shirts will be given
to participants. Registration forms
will be mailed to members; may be
picked up at the front desk; or can
be downloaded from the website at
www.emuseum.org.
Museum Guild
Presents Back
to the Museum
On Saturday, July 19 from
6 – 9 p.m., the Evansville
Museum Guild presents BACK
TO THE MUSEUM hosted by
Gretchin Irons. Back to the
Museum is a great opportunity
to explore all the new
attractions at the Museum and
enjoy some 1980s style fun.
Participants may take a picture
with a DeLorean and watch live
performances by the Sweet
Adelines and breakdancers.
There will also be pizza from
around the city, a cash bar for
those 21 years of age and older,
an opportunity to bid on a Jail
House Cake and so much more.
Tickets are $20 per person or
$30 per couple and may be
purchased at the door. For
more information or to reserve
tickets, please call (812) 604-
9295 or check out the Evansville
Museum Guild on Facebook.
17. MAIN GALLERY
Painting Indiana III: Heritage of Place
July 27 – September 21
Jean-Jacques du Plessis: New Directions
October 5 – November 30
On Nature’s Terms: The Wilderness
Paintings of Thomas Paquette
December 14, 2014 – March 8, 2015
OLD GALLERY
Working Together
July 13 – August 24
Through the Eye of the Needle – Fabric of Survival
September 7 – November 30
57th
Mid-States Art
December 14, 2014 – January 25, 2015
EVANSVILLE CONVENTION &
VISITORS BUREAU CENTER
FOR HISTORY & SCIENCE
Bottled and Kegged:
A Toast to Evansville’s Breweries
July 27 – October 5
Eat Well, Play Well
October 12, 2014 – January 11, 2015
JOHN STREETMAN ALCOVE
Les Miley Retrospective
September 14 – December 28
KOCH IMMERSIVE THEATER
Forces of Nature
Through July 13
Fragile Planet
Through August 30
Skies Over Evansville
Through December 28
One World, One Sky: Big Bird’s Adventure
Through December 28
Perfect Little Planet
Through December 28
Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure
July 13 – December 6
Back to the Moon For Good
August 31 – January 4, 2015
Let it Snow
December 7 – December 28
Non-Profit
Organization
U.S. Postage
PAID
Evansville, IN
Permit No. 1013
P. O . B O X 3 4 3 5 | E v a n s v i l l e , IN D IANA 4 7 7 3 3 - 1 0 9 8
Adults: $7 • Children (4-17): $5
Museum Members and children
up to 3 years of age are free.
Tuesday – Saturday 11:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Sunday 12:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Museum Closed Each Monday
MUSEUM ADMISSION MUSEUM HOURS
For a calendar of events, please visit emuseum.org
CALENDAR
Evansville Museum
Membership: The
Perfect Holiday Gift
Exploration, Enlightenment,
Amazement
An annual membership to the
Evansville Museum is the perfect gift
that keeps giving throughout the year.
With the opening of the newly
expanded Museum and the Koch
Immersive Theater in February 2014,
membership now offers even more
to your friends and family. Members
have unlimited free admission to
the Museum and EMTRAC as well
as discounted Immersive Theater
tickets. A gift of Evansville Museum
membership not only gives your
friends and family free admission to
the Museum, but also free or reduced
admission to over 275 museums
worldwide through the Association of
Science & Technology Centers.
Call the Museum at (812) 425-2406 to
purchase a gift Membership today! All
Membership gifts are tax deductible.