Students are heading back to campus in full. Be sure to check out the latest maps, including closures and detours here.
In preparation for an exciting fall semester and Kansas State University’s improved Manhattan campus, the campus community is asked to remember the five B’s when factoring in campus construction on your daily commute:
• Be patient while traveling through campus.
• Be aware of your surroundings. Safety is a top priority at K-State.
• Be considerate of your fellow Wildcats going to work and classes. We’re all in this together.
• Be helpful if you see someone looking lost. It’s the Wildcat Way. Also, if you help a fellow Wildcat, tweet us with the hashtag #BuildKState so we can share what it means to be part of the K-State family.
Described by KSBN as “a historical account of the terrifying outbreak of cholera in the summer of 1854 in London and how a pair of interdisciplinary thinkers work to find a solution to the deadly problem”, The Ghost Map is also a stark reminder that even in our so-called “modern” world, people still struggle with the deadly ramifications of the lack of basic sanitation services. This year, the Beach Museum of Art will again select a Common Work of Art and create programming in support of the campus-wide Common Book program.
With the 2014 Common Book announcement, it seemed fitting to reflect on last year’s experience. The inaugural Common Work of Art was presented in 2013 in conjunction with the K-State Common Book, Ready Player Oneby Ernest Cline. When the book selection was announced, the Beach Museum of Art staff collectively agreed that the museum should get involved. It was decided that one art object that reflected the themes and issues presented in the Common Book would be chosen for installation in a gallery.
Beach Museum of Art staff developed a list of objects from the permanent collection and invited the 2013 KSBN selection committee to view them. This was extremely valuable as it gave us insight into the reasoning behind the Common Book selection and helped us see visitors’ initial impressions of the objects.
Based on that feedback, Gordon Parks’ Flavio Amuses Smaller Brothers and Sisters (Holding Up Torn Paper) was selected as the inaugural Common Work of Art. Parks not only has connections to the State of Kansas (a Fort Scott native) and the Manhattan community, his photograph depicting a young man in a Brazilian favela, or slum, mirrored the living conditions of Ready Player One’s young male protagonist Wade. It was a pleasant surprise to learn that author Ernest Cline envisioned favelas when writing about the overpopulated and dilapidated “stacks” environment where Wade lived.
The 2013 KSBN Common Book experience also included an award-winning campus-wide interactive Ready Player One game. Game interactions at the Beach Museum of Art included:
Clues embedded in science writer and physicist Margaret Wertheim’s talk “Making Space.”
Clues hidden in the K-State 150 commemorative exhibition “Museum of Wonder.”
Earning points by submitting to The Mosaic, an artistic response to the Common Work of Art.
Part of the daily campus clue featuring a sculpture search.
Part of the daily campus clue featuring Willie the Wildcat.
Earning points by viewing the Common Work of Art.
Earning points by joining the Beach Museum Gunter Clan.
Collaborating with other campus units in developing programs and activities in conjunction with the 2013 K-State Common Book was extremely gratifying. Students visited the Beach Museum of Art for the first time, interacted with their peers and our staff (including our enthusiastic student employees), created art, and discovered new ways to view themselves and their place in the world. We couldn’t hope for better outcomes.
Featuring a small selection of the approximately 900 Curry works in the Beach Museum’s collection, this exhibition presents a range of images depicting the Great Plains including pioneer settlement, American Indian movement, and the struggles between Civil War-era abolitionists and pro-slavery forces.
Parish, a Manhattan, Kansas-based artist and K-State graduate, spent two years documenting native stone cellars in the Flint Hills. This multi-media installation, funded in part by the Kansas Humanities Council, includes 360-degree large scale photographs of the cellars, maps, audio recordings, and written text.
Jorge Luis Borges is one of Latin America’s most celebrated literary figures. Philosophy and visual art intersect in this exhibition as twelve of Borges’ most famous stories about identity and memory, faith and divinity, and freedom and destiny are represented by Cuban and Argentinean artists. And don’t miss the reading room adjacent to the exhibition featuring books and other unique materials related to Borges’ work, presented in partnership with K-State Libraries.
Be sure to check out ourcalendar for upcoming programs and events related to these exhibitions. We hope to see you soon!
About Us
The Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art furthers the teaching, research, and service missions of Kansas State University by collecting, studying, caring for, and presenting the visual art of Kansas and the region.