NORMAN, OK.- Art appreciation takes many forms, but for Rennard Strickland, collecting art has become a lifelong legacy. Over five decades, he has acquired more than 100 paintings, baskets, pottery, textiles and sculpture, representing some of the most acclaimed artists of the 20th century.
Highlights from his collection, which he recently gave to the
Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art at the University of Oklahoma, will go on display in a new exhibition June 4.
Spirit Red: Visions of Native American Artists from the Rennard Strickland Collection opens with a free, public reception at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, June 3, in conjunction with the annual Oklahoma City-based Red Earth Native American Cultural Festival.
Strickland, who is of Osage and Cherokee heritage, served as curator of Native American art at OUs art museum in the early 1990s. In 2007, he announced that he wished to give his remarkable collection to the museum in memory of his mother, Adell Tucker Strickland.
Out of all of the university art museums in the country, the University of Oklahoma has arguably the most outstanding collection of Native American and Western art, including the Eugene B. Adkins Collection, Strickland said. It also has the most attentive curators, art historians and publications, not to mention a unique and rich history dating back to Oscar Jacobsen, the Kiowas and the early Master of Fine Arts graduates, including Oscar Howe and Dick West.
Rennard Stricklands vision and knowledge about Native arts makes this one of the more remarkable contemporary collections to be donated to the museum, said OU President David L. Boren. The addition of major contemporary Native American pieces to our permanent collection, as well as the Eugene B. Adkins Collection, will escalate our institution to the level of leading museums in this field and also will give our students a unique opportunity to better understand and appreciate Native American art, Boren said.
The addition of Stricklands gift enhances the museums Native collections, said Ghislain dHumières, director of the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art.
I would like to express my gratitude to Rennard Strickland for his amazing gift to the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and the University of Oklahoma, said dHumières.
Growing up in Muskogee, Okla., Strickland purchased his first piece of art as a young boy from Creek/Pawnee painter and educator Acee Blue Eagle. Today, Stricklands collection spans 20th- and 21st-century Native artists, from Julian and Maria Martinez and Tonita Pena to Fritz Scholder, Cecil Dick and Harry Fonseca.
Stricklands adventures as an art collector are reflected in many of the themes of his collected works, from the humorous approaches of Richard Glazer-Danay and Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, to a recent acquisition of a painted gourd by Joseph Erb reflecting a traditionally dressed Cherokee warrior listening to an iPod.
While at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, Strickland curated such exhibitions as Sharing the Heritage: American Indian Art from Oklahoma Private Collections in the summer of 1994.
Mary Jo Watson, Regents Professor and director of the OU School of Art and Art History and curator of Native American art at the museum, recognized the global impact of Stricklands collection.
For Oklahoma and national Native American art history, Rennard Strickland is a touchstone, an example and source of energy and knowledge, Watson said. He has shared this energy and knowledge through numerous books, exhibitions, lectures and articles, and now he shares his inspired collection of Native American art with the university, the people of Oklahoma and visitors from around the world.
In addition to his passion for Native artwork, Strickland is an internationally noted law professor and legal historian, especially for his introduction of Indian law as a subject of study at major universities. He currently is Senior Scholar in Residence in the OU College of Law and Philip H. Knight Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus at the University of Oregon School of Law.