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From our February 22, 2001,
edition.
Canyon
museum opens new Bugbee Gallery
The
Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon opened its newly renovated
art galleries at the Friends of Southwestern Art Annual Meeting on
February 10.
The
renovation created three new galleries and spurred the reinstallation of
all the galleries. One of the galleries has been set aside for a former
Clarendon artist.
The
former Texas Gallery has become the H.D. Bugbee Gallery, named for the man
who called this city home. The first installation in the newly created
gallery features selections from the personal collection of Olive Vandruff
(Mrs. H.D. Bugbee), a renowned Texas artist in her own right.
The
former Eastern American and European Gallery has become the new Texas
Gallery, a space nearly three times its former size, featuring Saltillo
tile. Parts of the entrance vestibule (imported from England) were
formerly in the now razed Herring Mansion. These architectural touches
acknowledge the European roots of Texas and highlight the Society’s
nationally recognized Texas collection.
The
Western American Gallery has become the Southwestern Gallery. The
rough-sawn pine floor and New Mexican architectural details add a new
dimension to the Society’s Taos and Santa Fe collections.
The
wall cases for decorative arts have been reinstalled with Indian arts.
Silver, beadwork, baskets, and pottery comprise the new installation.
Pieces are from the Bill Dee, Anna Wolfram Dove, Susan J. Allen, and
Robert Tansill collections. The Furniture Gallery has also been
reinstated, incorporating paintings into the overall design.
These
changes were made possible by a generous grant from the Amos Molyneaux
Trust. This is part of a three-fold plan for the Arts Wing to keep pace
with the Museum’s $6.1 million renovation project, to emphasize the West
in the Arts Wing and to exhibit more of the permanent collection.
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