PARRISH ART MUSEUM RECEIVES A $50,000 GRANT

FROM HELEN FRANKENTHALER FOUNDATION

AS PART OF ITS COVID-19 RELIEF EFFORT 

Abstract Climates: Helen Frankenthaler in Provincetown
at the Parrish Art Museum, 2019. Photo: Gary Mamay

The Parrish Art Museum received a $50,000 grant from Helen Frankenthaler Foundation as part of its three-year COVID-19 Relief Effort, launched earlier this spring in response to the devastating and long-term impact of the pandemic. The Parrish was one of seven cultural institutions to be selected to receive a one-time relief payment of $50,000 to offset the financial strain endured as a result of the pandemic.

“We are ​deeply grateful to the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation ​for this generous relief grant. The funding provides vital support during this critical time,” said Chris Siefert, Interim Director, Parrish Art Museum. “We were privileged to present a full exhibition of Frankenthaler’s work at the Museum last year, making this funding particularly meaningful to us.”    

Helen Frankenthaler Foundation Executive Director Elizabeth Smith said, “Support for cultural institutions is ever more critical in the face of current crises. The Foundation has a long history of supporting initiatives at the Parrish, and we felt this donation from our COVID-19 Relief Effort was essential to helping the museum persevere through the unprecedented financial impact of this epidemic.”

Each institution selected by the Foundation has been a recent partner in presenting exhibitions to advance Frankenthaler’s (1928–2011) legacy or developing scholarship to further the understanding of the broader context of modern and contemporary art. In 2019, the Parrish Art Museum presented Abstract Climates: Helen Frankenthaler in Provincetown, a critically acclaimed exhibition that highlighted the artist’s exploration of the relationship between landscape and abstraction through key examples of work that was produced in or referenced Provincetown, MA. Through 30 paintings and works on paper dating from 1950 to 1969, Abstract Climates illustrated Frankenthaler’s transition from Abstract Expressionism to a more allusive form of abstraction. The exhibition was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with a foreword by Christine McCarthy, Director, Provincetown Art Association and Museum, and essays by the artist’s step-daughter Lise Motherwell and Helen Frankenthaler Foundation Executive Director Elizabeth Smith; art historian Daniel Belasco; Alicia G. Longwell, Ph.D., The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief Curator, and Terrie Sultan, Director, Parrish Art Museum.

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THE HELEN FRANKENTHALER FOUNDATION

Established and endowed by Helen Frankenthaler during her lifetime, the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation advances the artist’s legacy and inspires a new generation of practitioners through a range of philanthropic, educational, and research initiatives. Since becoming active in 2013, the Foundation has continued to strategically expand its program, which includes organizing and supporting significant exhibitions of the artist’s work, fostering new research and publications, and advancing educational initiatives in partnership with arts organizations around the world. As a primary resource on the artist, and a steward of her collection and archive, the Foundation holds an extensive selection of Frankenthaler’s work in a variety of mediums, her collection of works by other artists, and original papers and materials pertaining to her life and work.

Frankenthaler (1928–2011) is recognized among the most important American abstract painters of the 20th century, widely credited for her pivotal role in the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting. Best known for her invention of the soak stain technique, Frankenthaler experimented tirelessly throughout her six-decade-long career, producing a large body of work with a profound impact on contemporary art and artist practices to this day.

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Parrish Art Museum

Inspired by the natural setting and artistic life of Long Island’s East End, the Parrish Art Museum illuminates the creative process and how art and artists transform our experiences and understanding of the world and how we live in it. The Museum fosters connections among individuals, art, and artists through care and interpretation of the collection, presentation of exhibitions, publications, educational initiatives, programs, and artists-in-residence. The Parrish is a center for cultural engagement, an inspiration and destination for the region, the nation, and the world.

www.parrishart.org

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AAQ / Resource: Riverhead Buick | GMC

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