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GATHERINGS


Exhibition Dates: July 9 - September 20, 2020

Gathering: An assembly or meeting, especially a social or festive one or one held for a specific purpose. -Oxford English Dictionary

In the midst of this pandemic, when the Museum had to close its doors and cancel or postpone all the planned exhibitions and programs, Benton Jones, The Museum's Director of Art decided to curate a show titled Gatherings. The time of social distancing and isolation became the right time to search through the breadth and depth of the Museum's permanent collection, which provided the majority of the works Benton selected for this show. It seems that during the lock downs and quarantining, what we missed the most was getting physically together. Yes, there are Zoom meetings, Skype and FaceTime calls, which became a new way of gathering and keeping us together, but it seems that these ways of communicating can feel like a Waterless Fountain, which is the title of Roy Freed's sculpture that Benton decided to incorporate into the Gatherings exhibition.

It has become evident, now more than ever before, that we human beings, are very social creatures and we simply thrive on being together, in small or big groups, even if for a short time, so that we can share a common theme, purpose or some kind of experience. There is a unique power in gatherings that unite us in times of celebration, but also in difficult times. Other works in the show are the examples of various ways people used to gather before Covid 19 consumed the world. These gatherings were fundamental and unquestioned ways of living.

Gatherings can take on many forms as the showcased artists help us remember. It can be expresses in a typical Cape Cod crowded scene of parades and garden parties as in Wellfleet, Fourth of July by Karol B. Wyckoff and CMFA (Art in the Garden) by Ruth Hogan or The Garden Party by Ric Howard, as well as through images of summer time beaches captured by Vernon Smith in his oil painting Beach at Nauset or Arnold Geissbuhler's Girls on Beach.

Gatherings is also expressed through a group of people living a shared experience of music and dance in Dancing Figures by Howard Gibbs, Jazz Rhythms by Virginia Goldman, and Dancers by Xavier Gonzalez or people enjoying meals together as in What's for Dinner and Sharing Recipes by Eleanor Ferri Jones. It can be a city scene like The Boston Crowd by Howard Gibbs or 1930's New York in Bread Line, No One Has Starved by Reginald Marsh, where people line up closely together to receive food during the tough times of the Great Depression. Gatherings can also be very intimate, which is beautifully captured in the sculpture Family Group by Dorothy Polansky; one can feel the delicate yet powerful bond of a family.

Perhaps the most notorious gathering is represented by a large wooden panel painted on both sides and suspended in the middle of the Hope / McClennen Gallery, depicting two comical renditions of the historically acclaimed Provincetown Beachcomber’s Ball, once held in the Provincetown Town Hall.

Gatherings is a celebration of our humanity, the fundamental shared experience that unites us in good and bad times. Maybe we social animals can allow ourselves to be inspired by Eugene Jackson's woodblock print, also in the exhibition, Animals of the World Unite (For the Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness).

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