From
The Director
For the past
three years the Walter Anderson Museum of Art has been
involved in an exciting undertaking funded by the Coastal
Impact Assistance Program. This project focused on Horn
Island, the work of Walter Inglis Anderson, and its connections
with the rich natural environment of the Mississippi Gulf
Coast. An educational initiative developed to enrich the
lives of students across the state, this project has had
many successes and included many components and many collaborators.
It has been a journey for
everyone involved, a journey that is culminating in this
remarkable exhibition. There are many to acknowledge and
thank. First the Mississippi Department of Environmental
Quality and the Jackson County Board of Supervisors for
selecting the museum’s CIAP project for a grant.
Elizabeth Barber who is the CIAP coordinator of DEQ has
provided support and guidance for more than three years.
From late 2003 into early 2005 Connie Moran served as
the project consultant. Beverly Alexander has developed
and written an outstanding curriculum which is being provided
to all Mississippi school libraries that serve students
in grades 3 through 6.
There have been many collaborators
and advisors but we wish to especially thank those who
worked with us on this exhibition: NASA/NOAA staff at
Stennis Space Center, the National Park Service/Gulf Islands
National Seashore, USM J.L. Scott Marine Education Center/Gulf
Coast Research Lab, and our colleagues at the Mississippi
Natural Science Museum. This exhibit contains the work
of Walter Inglis Anderson from the museum’s permanent
collection, and on loan to the Museum from Dr. & Mrs.
Christopher Hogan (The Hogan Collection) and from the
family of Walter Anderson. We also wish to thank the artists
who have added their work to Walter’s: Donald Bradburn,
Stig Marcussen, Chris Stebly, and Steve White.
Gayle Petty-Johnson
Executive Director
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Revisit the Island as it Was
Revisit the island
as it was in the mid-20th century through Walter Anderson’s
watercolors and Donald Bradburn’s photographs. Much of the
island scenery and wildlife has a timeless quality to it that
is still seen in the more recent work of Stig Marcussen, Chris
Stebly, and Steve White, whose work round out this exhibit of
watercolors, oils, journals, and photography.
Pelicans, raccoons and egrets peer out from the corners of the
galleries having made their way from the Mississippi Museum of
Natural Science in Jackson, and satellite images of Horn Island
before and after Katrina from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration take their place in the galleria. Information from
the Gulf Islands National Seashore and the Gulf Coast Research
Lab further illustrate the views of other scientists and naturalists.
In many ways, this is exactly the kind of exhibition that Walter
Anderson would have liked. It presents many moments of “realization,”
and showcases the myriad “ways of seeing” that he
used. Being a naturalist himself, Anderson professed to being
an artist “who prefers nature to art.” His endless
lists of birds, and drawings of cloud formations, and attention
to the details of life on the island seem to bring dual emphasis
to his work. His love of the island and its rich resource for
discovery never seemed to be exhausted and continues through all
these artists. They continue to find Horn Island a theatrical
stage on which the comedies and tragedies of its actor inhabitants
are played out in endless seasonal acts.
Featuring: Walter Inglis Anderson & Donald Bradburn, Stig
Marcussen,Chris Stebly & Steve White
Walter
Anderson & Horn Island
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Walter Anderson
loved water. He felt that it was the primal element of feeling
and that he became one with all things when his senses were
blended with water.
During the last 15 years of
his life, he went to Horn Island often finding the solitude
he so needed. We don’t know how many trips he made
rowing approximately 10 miles from shore to island, crossing
the Mississippi Sound in both fair and foul weather. But
it was here, in this still, wilderness area that he did
his clearest thinking, had his greatest insights on the
relationship between man and nature, and reveled in the
emotions of courage and love the have “united to make
me happy and alive in this place.”
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He usually camped just west of the
center of the island using his boat turned upside down for shelter
from rain, gnats and mosquitoes. He described the flora and fauna
as “an embarrassment of riches” where he was “to
be the servant and slave of all the elements.”
He shared his food with the creatures and
particular animals became his friends with names like “Reddy”
and “Inky.” He put up with any inconvenience to get
close to birds or animals to paint them – wading into murky
pools, crawling through paths made by wild pigs and meeting moccasin
or alligator, balancing on the limb of a tree to see into a nest,
walking neck deep in water to join the pelicans, or crouching
in bulrushes to find the ducks.
The island became the stage, the creatures
were the actors and he, also an actor, did “dramatic paintings”of
the tragicomedy of life. He recorded the events in 90 logbooks
documenting these remarkable encounters. The images were potent,
intense – perhaps meant only for the one who was there to
grasp them in the fleeting moment. Sharing such insights was questionable,
he said, others might not grasp their singularity. He noted, though,
that these images appeared with surprising regularity on Horn
Island.
To celebrate our newest exhibition,
Horn Island: World of Space and Form, WAMA takes you to the
island for an exciting expedition. For the kids, we have a very
special program–we bring the island to them!
Schooner Trip to Horn Island
Leaves Saturday, October 14, for
a 7-hour sail departing from Ocean Springs Harbor at 8 a.m.
Cost is $55 for WAMA members and $75 for non-members and includes
a delicious box lunch from Bayview Gourmet, along with other
snacks and drinks. We’ll meet 7 a.m. at the museum for
a shuttle to the Ocean Springs harbor and arrive back at 3 p.m.
(Note to teachers: scholarships available, plus CEU credits–
call for details.)
Horn Island for Kids
Sunday,November 19 at 2p.m.
Activities include story telling
with nature puppets and Gulf Islands National Seashore Park
Wildlife Discovery
(free with price of admission).To make reservations for either
of these amazing events,
call the museum at (228)
872-3164.
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