Loosely defined as the art of today or the art of our lifetime, the term “contemporary art” is usually used more specifically to describe artworks created since the 1980s or 1990s. For collection purposes, the Frye Art Museum currently delineates the scope as 1990 to the present. In the more general sense, the Frye has collected and exhibited contemporary—or contemporaneous—art since its opening in 1952. This commitment to the art and culture of the present was catalyzed by Museum founders Charles and Emma Frye, who amassed a collection of paintings made within their own lifetimes and often purchased works directly from living artists. Over the last seven decades, directors of the Museum have each brought their own interests and interpretations to bear on the Frye’s engagement with contemporary art and thereby shaped a distinctive collection. Prior to the tenure of Elsa “Midge” Bowman (Director, 2004–09), and often counter to dominant trends in art of the time, the Frye’s leadership focused exclusively on exhibiting and collecting representational art, citing Charles and Emma Frye’s preferences for figurative and landscape painting. Under Bowman’s direction, the exhibitions program at the Frye expanded into areas like video art and performance that questioned and upended the definition of representational art. In 2008, the Museum’s mission was revised to embrace art in its myriad forms. The Frye’s contemporary art collection has grown significantly since that time, reflecting the diversity of the institution’s engagement with local, national, and international artists working today.
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Title | Artist | Medium | Date |
Feast | Webb, Dan | Carved fir | 2006 |
Pickle Jar with Elephants, Bow and Mottled Grey Balls | Mitchell, Jeffry | Glazed earthenware | 2008 |
Fu Dogs | Mitchell, Jeffry | Earthenware with luster glaze | 2005 |
Study for 2x4 with yellow fill | Livingston, Margie | Acrylic with steel wall mount/shelf | 2011 |
We are the Gentle Angry Women and We Are Singing for Our Lives | Lesperance, Ellen | Gouache and graphite on tea-stained paper | 2015 |
Solid Citizen | Jackson Hutchins, Jessica | Glazed ceramic | 2008 |
Sister Totem | Dingus, Marita | Ceramic and mixed media | 2023 |
Venus Jar 4: My Mothers | O’Leary, Hanako | Clay | 2020 |
Gingko biloba | Bennett, Gretchen Frances | Color pencil on paper | 2023 |
The Edith Wharton you can afford | Cerny, Dawn | Wood, plaster tape, textiles, found ephemera from studio of Nancy Shaver, Apoxie Sculpt, paint | 2021 |
Covid March (after unemployment, the park, then home) | Cerny, Dawn | Wood, drawings, textiles, clipboard, Apoxie Sculpt, polymer clay, paint, found ephemera from studio of Nancy Shaver | 2021 |
Frye | Tracy and the Plastics | Performance and video, sound, color | 2006/2014 |
Baby | Ball, Natalie | Cotton cloth, twine, clay, leather, metal jingles, deer legs, and shoes | 2018 |
Single Cabinet | Magor, Liz | Polymerized gypsum, cans of beer | 2001 |
Breathless #6 | Jones, Jennie C. | Audio tape from the 1992 Kenny-G recording “Breathless”, under plexiglass | 2008 |
Silent Clusterfuck (Pyrite –fake gold) | Jones, Jennie C. | Earbuds and acrylic | 2008 |
untitled | Koťátková, Eva | Mixed media collage | 2011 |
untitled | Koťátková, Eva | Mixed media collage | 2011 |
untitled | Koťátková, Eva | Mixed media collage | 2011 |
Becoming Mineral | Tossin, Clarissa | Porcelain | 2021 |
Rising Temperature Casualty (Prunus persica, home garden, Los Angeles) | Tossin, Clarissa | Silicone, black pigment, tree bark | 2022 |
The Unknown | Quaicoe, Otis Kwame Kye | Oil on canvas | 2020 |
Stylite Altarpiece | Seifu, Eden | Acrylic on canvas | 2022 |
Black Face with Wide Chest | Self, Tschabalala | Colored pencil, acrylic paint, gouache, charcoal, graphite on archival inkjet print | 2021 |
Black Face Red Bone with Black Bob | Self, Tschabalala | Colored pencil, acrylic paint, gouache, charcoal, graphite on archival inkjet print | 2021 |
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