The Human Condition: The Stephen and Pamela Hootkin Collection Sept. 2014 | Page 7

Entering Stephen and Pamela Hootkins’ loft today, to states. The current exhibition entitled The Human borrow a term from a younger generation, is truly an Condition: The Stephen and Pamela Hootkin Collection awesome experience. Art is everywhere. One walks of Contemporary Ceramic Sculpture does just that. carefully. On my first visit, I was guided from room to room by my gracious and enthusiastic hosts who were eager to share how and why each piece had been acquired. The passion for the work was palpable. Also Ever since the 1960s when Robert Arneson rejected the idea that ceramic artists should only produce utilitarian or decorative objects, the field of ceramic sculpture has proliferated. Clay is a wonderfully malleable material that it quickly became apparent that each piece had been unlike stone or metal readily surrenders itself to the artist’s thoughtfully placed, with serious consideration given to handling, whether this making is disciplined or emotional relationships to other pieces in the immediate vicinity. and uncontrolled. Hence it can be an excellent vehicle Also interesting is the location of several pieces in specific for self-expression and for the conveyance of emotions living spaces. I am not sure how comfortable I would through formal means. Also as clay had for decades feel sleeping in a bed that is flanked by Michael Lucero’s been deprecated as a craft medium by the proponents of imposing Jesus on one side and Devil on the other, not modernism, there were few critical constraints. The creative to mention Judy Moonelis’ dismembered torsos hanging freedom of clay was—and still is—exhilara ting. It is no on the wall over the headboard. And although I have wonder then that so many ceramic sculptors revel in the been to the loft often since that first visit, each time I creation of work that is expressionistic, primeval, irreverent, am still struck by Judy Fox’s Saturn’s Son, a realistically satirical, and, sometimes, even comically grotesque. rendered baby boy, falling down from the stair rail leading from the Hootkins’ kitchen to the terrace above. Although I had met the Hootkins several years earlier it was in 2001 when they offered to underwrite a The Chazen Museum of Art’s mission is to provide direct retrospective of Peter Gourfain’s work that I was organizing access to original and quality visual art from around that we realized that we shared a common interest in the world, spanning from ancient to modern times. In the visual arts, i.e., contemporary ceramic sculpture. This addition to displays drawn from the museum’s permanent collection, which today encompasses over 20,000 works, the Chazen presents ten temporary exhibitions each year with works of art borrowed from other museums, private collectors, and artists. The purpose of these exhibitions is to introduce our audiences to art that is thought provoking and not typically accessible in the midwestern realization launched a long-term friendship that has lasted to this day. It did not hurt that Stephen was an alumnus of the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a deep affection for his alma mater. After graduating in 1964 with a BS in Political Science, he moved to New York City where he began a long and fruitful career as a financial advisor with Bear Stearns and until his recent retirement, Judy Fox, Saturn’s Son, 1991. 5