The Sioux City Art Center: Celebrating 100 Years!
It's Here!

Detail of "Mural" in the Sioux City Art Center Gallery

� University of Iowa

 

Jackson Pollock: Mural
July 12, 2014 - April 1, 2015

Members Only Reception  July 11, 2014   5 - 7 p.m.
Remarks: 6:00 p.m.
 
Open to the Public July 12, 2014 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Remarks and Ribbon Cutting: 10:00 a.m.
  

It is unusual for an exhibition to feature a single work of art. An artwork that deserves this special status is Jackson Pollock's famous large scale painting, Mural. The painting initially commissioned as a mural, thus the name, was commissioned by Peggy Guggenheim in 1943, and donated to the University of Iowa in the early 1950s.

 

Pollock's iconic painting is considered to have opened the door to Abstract Expressionism, the first American art movement that garnered international attention, and can be said to have helped shift the attention of the art world from Europe to America.

 

Guggenheim signed Pollock, whom she was initially unsure of, to her New York City gallery, Art of This Century, and provided him with a monthly stipend against sales, even lending Pollock and his wife, Lee Krasner, funds to purchase a modest house on Long Island with an adjacent barn in which he could work.

While Guggenheim championed many cutting edge artists of her time, Pollock is the most famous, crossing over from the art world into popular culture when he was featured in Life magazine in the 1949. While Pollock died in an automobile accident in 1956, his popular culture celebrity has continued, and added to with a recent mainstream movie on his life titled Pollock.

 

The Jackson Pollock Mural is part of the University of Iowa Art Museum's Legacies for Iowa Collections Sharing Project. As part of the Sharing Project the University does not charge a rental fee for the loan of Mural. But due to the extra costs required by increased security and insurance, as well as facility modifications, shipping and additional expertise, the Art Center Association of Sioux City had to raise $200,000 to make the project possible. The Association accomplished this goal through its Blockbuster Partners, a group of individuals, businesses and foundations whose mission is to underwrite and promote major exhibitions and acquisitions of art for the Art Center's Permanent Collection.