—The Daily Collegian Friday, September 29, 1972 New art The museum located next rnuseurn to the Forum, will be the major exhibition hall for artwork on campus. It con tains three separate galleries made to facilitate all types of exhibitions and, for this reason, the museum staff plans to present some very unusual shows in the coming to open W- QMK• QUICK 11A010•RI/olosty-simm STUDENT/SF FILMS PRESENTS JAMES GARNER in "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF" FRI. & SAT. HUB 7 & 9 P.M. 50' Call: Robert J. Angelo Director of Acad, Affai 237-8863 rOTEREWITH FOLLOWETH HE DRAGONNE'S TALE KNOWING THE RULING OF THE FATES... =YeiritC MN& NM THAW OWL By JIM BAKER Collegian Junior Reporter The University will take a large step forward in the arts with the opening of the long planned Museum of Art Oct. 10. Together with the HUB gallery, which comes under As close to you as Right Now YOUTH,I WOULD HAVE SNATCHED YON SCHAEFER BEERE FORTHWITH... WHENCE THE BOOK SAYETH IN ITS WISPONI the directorship of the museum staff, four different programs can be run at the same time. Each show will probably last a month to six weeks. Featured for the opening will be "Masterworks By Pennsylvania Painters From Pennsylvania Collections," on the third floor of the museum. This show was organized by Harold E. Dickson, professor emeritus of Art History. Dickson had prepared a similar exhibition in the mid 50's which showed the art work of famed Pennsylvania artists in the Mineral In- ention, the Academic I soon begin work on a Information Guide" ps a scholarship if you t the big whigs of your experience with the Schaefer Breweries, New York and Albany, N Y , Baltimore, Aid , Lehigh Valle/ dustries exhibition gallery Included in the Master works show are 30 paintings ranging from a primitive by Edward Hicks of the 18th century to a work by the abstract expressionist Franz Kline. The show is ac companied by a full color catalogue with a text prepared by Dickson and reproductions of the pain tings. On the second floor will be "Selections From The Per manent Collection." The University has for some time been building an art collec tion of its own and has taken a greater interest in the task with the advent of the new museum. It has become the responsibility of the museum staff to continue adding to the collection. The collection is built by private donations, grants and funds. Though the collection does not contain highly noted works, one important thing the staff tries to do is pur chase artwork by artists who show great promise, ex plained William Hull, Director of Exhibitions, who heads the museum staff. Shandygaff Friday Happy Hours FAMILY & STUDENT HOUSING ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS BEAVER HILL APARTMENTS 340 E. Beaver Avenue Rent Includes All Utilities - Central heat - - Central air conditioning - - Wall to wall carpeting - - Laundry and trash chutes on each floor - - Best security system - - Color Hotpoint appliances - - Balconies - Model apartment open: Mon thru Fri. 9-8 Sat. 10-4 For further information call 237-0363 BUT THEN I LEARNEDTHE WISDOM OF THE EAST.„ "WHEN THE CLOUDS ARE LOW IN THE EAST AND THE MOON SHINES GOSSAMER UPON WATERS ... Among the acquisitions the museum will show are works by Peter DeWint, Fernado Botero, Claudio Bravo and Antonio Frasconi. On the first floor will be an exhibit of the "Penn State University Art Department Faculty." Each faculty member will show one piece of work. Three of the works shown will be added to the permanent collection. These . include a bronze relief by John Cook, a drawing by Stuart Frost and an acrylic painting by Linda Plotkin. The museum also houses a shop with such items as art boRkS, Christmas and note cads,l jewelry and posters on sale. Running concurrently with the opening shows at the museum will be "Showcase: Inaugural Exhibitions, Penn State Museum Of Art," at the HUB gallery. The show will present a display of museum floor plans, reproductions of the current shows and other information concerning the new museum's opening. Asked about the history behind the planning for this museum Hull emphasized, "We're very new. Our history begins on the 10th." He said much of his time since he took the office of directing the museum exhibit halls was planning the opening shows and all the arrangements involved in presenting a new museum. Shows by unusual and obscure artists and collec tions of interesting styles, the type of exhibit not usually handled by bigger museums, are among the sort of programs Hull plans. 3 - 6 AND NOW MUST TOSS MY COINS TO THE WIND... TAKE THE BEERE, g nun WILLIAM HULL, left, Director of Exhibitions at the University, looks at a painting by Colombian artist Fernando Botero. The painting is a recent acquisition for the new Museum of Art opening Oct. 10. BEAVER TERRACE Dishwasher UNIV TOWERS Ove rig -r a n g e referator FOSTER AVE. APTS. a lo i r c c h o a n n d n i e t i l 0 T n a V d carpeting OFFICE OPEN draperies r 1:00 - 4:00 P.M. furnitu laundries e 456 East Beaver Ave. parking elevators 237-0977 238-0534 9 month lease 12 month lease The Commons Place Coffeehouse presents Cy Anderson Bob Doyle in concert at Kern - The Graduate Commons Friday 8:00 no admission charge sponsored by The Folklore Society and G.S.A. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Friday - Sunday , September 29 - October 1, 1972 SPECIAL EVENTS Friday, Sept. 29 Soccer, vs. George Washington, 7 p.m , Jeffrey Field (west of Beaver Stadium). Friday, Sept. 29 Commonsplace Coffeehouse, 8 p.m., Room 102 Kern. Cy Anderson and Bob Doyle concert. Saturday, Sept. 30 Football, vs. lowa, 1:30 p.m., Beaver Stadium. Saturday, Sept. 30 Artists Series production of "Sleuth," prize-winning mystery play, 3 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., Schwab. Sunday, Oct. 1— Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Music Building recital hall. John H. Snow, Episcopal Theological Seminary, Cambridge, Mass. Sunday, Oct. 1— Annual College of the Liberal Arts faculty tea, 3-5 p.m., HUB main lounge. LECTURE Saturday, Sept. 29 John H. Snow, Episcopal Theological Seminary, Cambridge, Mass., on "The Effects of Women's Lib on Marriage and the Family," 8 p.m., Chapel Memorial Lounge. FILMS Friday-Satruday, Sept. 29-30 Student SF Film, "Support Your Local Sheriff," 7 and 9 p.m., HUB assembly room. Sunday, Oct. 1— Nickleodeon Nights, 7:30 and 9 p.m., HUB assembly room. Charlie Chaplin, in "The Gold Rush," "The Rink" and "The Cure." INTEREST GROUPS Karate Club organizational meeting, Friday, Sept. 29, 7 p.m., HUB ballroom. EXHIBITS Chambers Gallery Serigraphs and prints by Ray Dunlevy. Recent- ceramic sculpture and ceramic babies by Chloe Ann Dellaport. HUB Gallery Photos of Berber architecture conclude Oct. 1. Kern Graudate Building Photos and prints by Wendy Snetsinger conclude Oct. 1. Sculpture by Mary Cady Rubinstein. Photo by Jon Fortuna
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