Yellowstone Art Museum
I’m back in Montana, and you know what that means! Time for
some Montana adventures. The weather has been kind of crappy lately. It’s
colder and wetter than last year, so there have been a few indoor adventures
rather than outdoor.
This past weekend, my sister and I stopped by the
Yellowstone Art Museum. I’m pretty sure that you can take photos, as long as it
isn’t with flash, but I didn’t ask, so don’t get irate with me.
I’m not the most artistically aware person in the world, but
I like to think that I have a certain amount of appreciation. I’ve been
watching The Art Assignment on YouTube,
which I strongly recommend, especially the most recent episode on how to visit
an art museum. Inspired to go take in some art, off we went. The Yellowstone
Art Museum is a contemporary art museum, so some of the stuff is…out there. I
thought that I would share a couple of my more favorite pieces.
The museum is divided across two storeys, the first has the
permanent collection, and the second floor has the more transient pieces.
On the first floor there’s a lot of western-themed art. Native
Americans and cowboys and stuff. That is not really my scene. I know that I do
live in this place that is firmly ensconced in the western culture of cowboys
and Indians and all that comes with it, but I’m not terrible connected with it.
On the first floor, there is one piece that always really stood out to me. It’s
a horse sculpture made out of old iron sign pieces. It’s named Ferdinand, by
the artist Deborah Butterfield.
Upstairs was the cool stuff. There was a transient exhibit
called Face to Face that I thought
was really cool. It focused on hyperrealism and emotion. If you follow me on
Instagram (which you should) you will have seen this statue. It’s a security
guard, and it was so realistic that it was hard to stop thinking that someone
was disapprovingly watching me snap cell phone photos.
I also enjoyed Self
Portrait as Ernest Shackleton as well, mostly because of how ridiculous the
idea of that is.
Hmmm…what else was there?
There was a sketch on paper that spanned an entire wall
called Elephants. It was of…elephants.
It was really cool and I liked it at first, but when you look closely, it’s
really dark. The elephants have mouths that are sewn shut, and there’s drowning
ducks and things like that.
There was also this Sonic the Hedgehog looking thing made
out of packing blankets and drywall nails. I liked the colors. It is also huge.
It was considerably taller than me.
Finally, this image of a face that was perforations in the
canvas. It gave me a headache walking past because it changes as you move past
it.
Those were the highlights of my trip to the YAM. Obviously
there was a load more stuff, but these were my favorites.
Do you go to art
museums frequently? What kind of art do you like the best?