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EXHIBITIONS
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CURRENT EXHIBITIONS
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Highlights of the American Collection
Now Open
Free
Visit the exhibition site.
This exhibition showcases a selection of the finest American paintings from the Museum’s American Collection, which has been off view since June 2007. The approximately 20 paintings will be arranged thematically, allowing for interesting and surprising conversations among works by different artists from different generations.
The star of the exhibition is the stunning portrait of Sir William Pepperrell and His Family, one of the true masterpieces of John Singleton Copley, America’s first great artist. The Museum’s conservators have recently completed the first extensive cleaning of this paintingtaken off view in July 2005in 40 years. Cleaning has revealed new details of the composition and restored much of the 18th-century luster to this celebrated portrayal of an American Tory gentleman and his young family.
Presented by:

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John Singleton Copley, Sir William Pepperrell and His Family, 1778, oil on canvas, 90 x 108 in., Purchased with funds from the State of North Carolina
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Modern American Paintings
from the Bequest of Fannie and Alan Leslie
Ongoing
Free
Fannie and Alan Leslie visited the North Carolina Museum of Art only once, but the visit began a long-distance, friendship between the Museum and the California couple. Eventually that friendship led to the bequest of 30 paintings from the Leslies’ esteemed collection of modern American art. Modern American Paintings showcases 13 paintings including major works by leading Southern California modernists Stanton Macdonald-Wright, Hans Burkhardt, and Lee Mullican.
The rarest jewel of the collection is Richard Pousette-Dart’s ethereal Golden Dawn from 1952. Pousette-Dart insisted that art can reveal “the significant life . . . it uplifts, transforms [life] into the exalted realm of reality wherein its pure contemplative poetic being takes placewherein art’s transcendental language of form, spirit, harmony means one universal eternal presence.” That almost prayerful sentiment was shared by the Leslies, whose art collection reflected an unshakable faith in the transformative power of the painted image. Organized by the North Carolina Museum of Art.
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Richard Pousette-Dart, Golden Dawn, 1952, oil and graphite on linen, 93 1/2 x 51 1/2 in., Bequest of Fannie and Alan Leslie, © 2007 Estate of Richard Pousette-Dart/ Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York |
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