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Portrait of a small Jack Russell Terrier

#MuseumFromHome: Color the Collection!

By News No Comments

San Francisco artist Beth Van Hoesen (American, 1926–2010) began a remarkable career in printmaking in the mid-1940s. Working alongside other Bay Area artists such as Elmer Bischoff, Richard Diebenkorn, Wayne Thiebaud, and her teacher David Park, Van Hoesen was an integral figure among a group of Californians at mid-20th century who rebelled against the prevailing New York-based Abstract Expressionism. Although she remains less well known in the general public than her male colleagues, Van Hoesen’s work has long been admired and collected by fine print connoisseurs and important institutions.

Take a look at some of the works from our permanent collection. She explored these themes throughout her long career: portraits of friends, still life compositions (often treating unorthodox subjects), landscapes, and portraits of animals and pet companions.

Download and enjoy these coloring pages as a way to relax and pass the time (fun for the young or young-at-heart). Snap a picture and tag @JCSMAuburn. Let’s make a #MuseumFromHome.

Oka, 1991
Edition: 24/30
Color etching, aquatint, drypoint, and roulette

Download

Figs, 1977
Edition: 17/50
Color lithograph on Rives BFK paper

Download

Toppy, 1985
Edition: H.C.
Color etching, aquatint, drypoint, and roulette

Download

Drawer, 1961–72
Edition: 16/35
Etching

Download
Director Cynthia Malinick

Welcome to Our New Museum Director, Cynthia Malinick

By News

A new director and chief curator for Auburn University’s Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art will begin in the role starting Feb. 11.

Cynthia B. Malinick brings more than 25 years of experience and leadership to Auburn, including serving as an executive manager of museums and cultural organizations across the arts, nonprofit and higher education sectors. She comes to the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art from the Girl Scouts of the USA, where she has most recently served as the vice president for cultural assets.

Malinick joins the museum at an important time as the university prepares to launch its creative arts district with the opening of the Gogue Performing Arts Center later this year. With an emphasis on centering innovation, creativity, programmatic excellence and increasing operational sustainability, Malinick’s extensive portfolio will advance the museum’s role as a cultural resource for the community and beyond.

“With her commitment to education and innovation, I am confident Cindi will enhance the contributions of the Jule Collins Smith Museum to Auburn’s arts district,” said Christopher Heacox, executive director of the Jay and Susie Gogue Performing Arts Center. “Her knowledge and experiences perfectly align with the museum, and I look forward to supporting her leadership.”

At the Girl Scouts, Malinick oversaw the organization’s cultural resources and managed its curatorial collection, including fine and decorative arts, furnishings, textiles and jewelry. Under her leadership, the Girl Scouts launched multiple facility upgrades and elevated its engagement experiences to include the implementation of the Girls Scouts’ first open-access online resource designed to showcase its digitized collections.

Prior to her tenure at the Girl Scouts, Malinick spent more than 10 years at the National Trust for Historic Preservation, including serving as the deputy and chief of staff in the Historic Sites Department. In this role, Malinick oversaw locations and museums across the U.S. that included specialized collections and promoted on-the-ground conservation, exhibition design and public programming work, and leveraged prominent collections that included pieces from the Tang dynasty, architects Philip Johnson and Frank Lloyd Wright and artist Frank Stella.

“I am thrilled to join the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art, especially at a time when cultural institutions across the nation are increasing their relevance and responding to a fast-changing world that yearns for places of reflection, honesty and inspiration,” said Malinick. “Collaborating with the new Jay and Susie Gogue Performing Arts Center holds tremendous potential to strengthen Auburn’s commitment to the arts and to fostering community while encouraging creativity.”

Malinick holds a bachelor’s degree in education from the College of William and Mary and a master’s degree in history from the University of San Diego. Among her many accolades, Malinick has received the Excellence in Exhibition Award from the American Alliance of Museums in addition to grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

As director and chief curator, Malinick will oversee the Jule Collins Smith Museum’s 40,000 square-foot modernist building, including six galleries, an auditorium, museum shop and café. As part of the university’s southern gateway cultural arts district, the museum offers a wide-ranging collection of works by artists including John Audubon, Elizabeth Catlett, Walker Evans, Diego Rivera, Kara Walker and Andy Warhol; Alabamians Roger Brown, Betty Grisham and John Augustus Walker; and Auburn alumni Jean Woodham and William Baggett. The museum also holds several art brutworks by southern artists such as Thornton Dial, Mary Proctor, Jimmy Lee Sudduth and Mose Tolliver. The original core of the collection — 36 modernist paintings purchased by the university in 1946 from the U.S. Department of State’s “Advancing American Art” collection demonstrating America’s artistic freedom — includes works by Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence and Georgia O’Keeffe.

Source: Office of Communications and Marketing, Auburn University