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Beach Blog

Tag: Photography

See the new exhibition and join the celebration!

The new installation, Transfigurations: Reanimating the Ancient Art of India by artist and experimental filmmaker David Lebrun, is now open. Part of an ambitious series, Lebrun and his creative team traveled the world to study and capture the beauty of iconic artworks through high resolution photography. In this immersive installation, centuries-old sculptures of the Hindu deities Shiva and Vishnu, as well as attendants to Vishnu, are meticulously sequenced and animated bringing each figure to life. A custom sound score written by composer Yuval Ron enhances the experience by creating a calm, contemplative atmosphere. This unique exhibition is currently on view in the Wefald Gallery where it will remain through May of 2023. For more information on this and other Beach Museum of Art exhibitions, please visit beach.k-state.edu.

On Thursday, October 20th, 2022, the museum will hold a Diwali Celebration from 5:00-7:00p.m. to compliment the Transfigurations exhibition. The event, also known as the “Festival of Lights”, is free and open to the public. Please join us for special activities, music, dance and refreshments.

Flyer promoting a Diwali Celebration

New publication on Gordon Parks announced

black and white photograph of doorway

The Beach Museum of Art is pleased to announce the launch of the exhibition catalog/ebook “Gordon Parks: Homeward to the Prairie I Come.” The New Prairie Press, Kansas State University’s open access digital press, recently published the exhibition catalog/ebook. It was edited by museum curator Aileen June Wang and features new scholarship about Gordon Parks and his activities in Kansas in the late part of his career. Compiled by members of the K-State Gordon Parks Project, the volume was a collaboration between the university’s department of English and the Beach Museum of Art. The project highlights a past gallery exhibition at the Beach and a current virtual exhibition of photographs gifted by Gordon Parks to K-State. The collection was organized by the Beach Museum of Art, and a digital archive was created by K-State English department with materials and oral histories related to Parks’s film “The Learning Tree.” The collaboration was made possible with major support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and additional support from the Gordon Parks Foundation. The exhibition catalog/ebook increases awareness and understanding of Gordon Parks’ artistic practice through photography, poetry, literature, and film. Renowned African American photography scholar and artist Deborah Willis writes that the book “adds wonderfully to [knowledge about] Gordon Parks’ life as it introduces new questions, specifically about sexual abuse in the Learning Tree and the ‘underdiscussed’ activities of Parks’ life.” She adds: “I believe it will have an impact on the genres of memoir, migration, biography, and film studies.”

View or download the e-book 

Photo of performing artist and concert announcement

Attend the debut performance of “Self Portrait: Gordon Parks”
by Nate McClendon, saxophonist & Teaching Artist in Residence

at the Beach Museum of Art at Kansas State University.
Sunday, May 1st, 2022 at 5:00 p.m.
Blue Sage Barn at Prairiewood
1484 Wildcat Creek Road, Manhattan, KS 66503
The presentation is FREE and open to the public.

Best known for his photography, Gordon Parks was also a musician, author, and filmmaker. Born in Fort Scott, Parks remains one of the most prominent and influential artists Kansas has ever produced. His work and philosophies will be shared through music composed and performed by Nate McClendon. “Self Portrait: Gordon Parks” is a traveling exploration of the current exhibition “Gordon Parks: ‘Homeward to the Prairie I Come’” at the Beach Museum of Art.