:The Long Beach Museum of Art will present "Ruth Duckworth,
Modernist Sculptor," in the first US retrospective of this
acclaimed ceramic artist, from May 5 through July 2.
Internationally known for her hauntingly poetic sculpture,
Duckworth is among the leading figures in the field of ceramic
arts, inspiring generations of artists and designers with the
power of her graceful forms. Organized by co-curators Thea Burger
and Jo Lauria, Long Beach is the only West Coast museum to
present "Modernist Sculptor." The exhibition is accompanied by a
fully illustrated catalog.
Ruth Duckworth, 87, continues to create new and unexpected forms
and objects. "Modernist Sculptor" explores almost 50 years of the
artist's achievements in all media and shows the full range of
Duckworth's remarkably creative life sculpture, many pieces have
never before been exhibited. Duckworth has worked with a wide
range of materials and techniques including porcelain, stoneware,
stone carving and bronze casting. This retrospective, which
showcases more than 80 pieces and surveys her richly productive
career, demonstrates Duckworth's deep connections to nature,
culture and the human figure, and provides an extraordinary
opportunity to explore links between her groundbreaking
minimalist sculptures and major currents in Twentieth Century
modernism.
The Long Beach Museum of Art will feature a new audio tour
program in conjunction with the Duckworth exhibit. This inaugural
audio tour offers additional commentary on the exhibition by the
museum's curatorial and education staff and provides a resource
to further understand the history and complexity of Duckworth's
extraordinary work.
Ruth Duckworth, untitled, 1946, stone, carving, 15 by 11 by 9
inches.
Born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1919, Ruth Duckworth moved with
her family to England in 1936 during the rise of Nazi power. There
she studied art - at Liverpool School of Art, Hammersmith School of
Art and Central School of Arts & Crafts in London - and had her
first exhibitions. In 1964 she accepted a one-year teaching
appointment to the University of Chicago but continued in this
faculty post for 13 years, and has lived in the United States since
that time.
Duckworth's work is represented in the collections of many
esteemed international art museums, including The Metropolitan
Museum of Art; Art Institute of Chicago; Los Angeles County
Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Museum of
Contemporary Art, Chicago; Museum für Modern Keramik, Dudelsheim,
Germany; National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan;
Philadelphia Museum of Art; Smithsonian Institution, Washington,
D.C.; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; and the Victoria and Albert
Museum, London.
She also has received many honors, including a 1993 Lifetime
Achievement Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts
and a 1996 Gold Medal from the National Society of Arts and
Letters. The Museum of Arts & Design named her a "Visionary!"
in 2003. Most recently, she was awarded the 2006 Madigan Prize
for Best Sculpture for a 15-foot bronze sculpture created for
Northeastern Illinois University in 2005.
On a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean, the Long Beach Museum
of Art is at 2300 East Ocean Boulevard. For more information,
call 562-439-2119 or visit www.lbma.org.