I had decided to do my art visit at the Sacramento Crocker Art Museum. It is not the first time that I have been there; in fact I have been there several of times. My husband and I went to the museum on Saturday June 21, 2008 at approximately 2:30 pm. It was mostly quiet with a few other families. The Crocker Art Museum has three floors that are filled with paintings, statutes, conceptual art, china, and era piece.When I walk in, the fist thing that I noticed was the door hinges and the crown molding on the building. I also notice the different colors on the walls and ceiling. The ceiling has gold, blue and red painted in an odd patterns. This house is still set and decorated to the time that it was built, in the 1873. The building itself was the excitement of the visit. The entire time I was there I kept noticing the different aspects of each room. Every room had so many different shapes that my eyes kept shifting from shape to shape and I noticed that it was taking away from the art itself, in my opinion. The lights also fluctuated as you went from room to room which irritated my eye but I know that it was necessary because of the older pieced that were being displayed. The house for me was the largest art piece and my favorite part of the museum.
In 1868, Judge Edwin B. Crocker purchased the property and existing buildings on the corner of Third and O Streets. He then commissioned Seth Babson (1830-1908), a talented local architect, to redesign and renovate the home into a grander, Italianate mansion. In addition, Crocker asked Babson to design an elaborate gallery building that would sit adjacent to the mansion and display the family’s growing art collection.
Babson saw the home and gallery as an integrated complex, unique in design and demanding the finest materials. The gallery building included a bowling alley, skating rink and billiards room on the ground floor; a natural history museum and a library on the first floor; and gallery space on the second floor. Completed in 1872, the Crocker family mansion and art gallery are considered the masterpieces of Babson's career.
Today, the art gallery building retains its original Victorian Italianate design and serves as the main entrance to the Museum. The family mansion went through several uses and reconstructions until a 1989 renovation restored the historic façade and created a modern gallery interior. The original buildings, now connected, as well as the Herold Wing addition of 1969, were renamed the Crocker Art Museum in 1978.
http://www.crockerartmuseum.org/about/history_architecture.htm
During my visit, the museum had a temporary gallery set up call The Language of the Nude. This gallery took most of the ground floor. Most of the drawing was from the 1500’s to the early 1800’s. Most of the pieces were done with ink, black, white and red chalk on tan or some sort of thick grainy parchment paper. The subjects of these painting were of men and women in the nude. The drawings looked as though they were practice pieces to a larger painting, or future subject, just like Leonardo da Vinci did before he stared his master pieces. The paintings were also of gods or religious events. I didn’t feel any emotional attachment to these pieces. I was more amazed at the calk and paper used then I was with the drawings. Some of the drawings used white chalk to resemble a halo or light source, the white chalk blended so well with the paper that the white chalk worked well as a light source.I enjoyed looking at some of the older pieces because you can really see the texture that the
paintings are painted on. A couple of the paintings were completed on planks/wood and I was surprised how it changed the dynamics of the painting. There are a few other aspects that benefits to see art in person rather than in a picture or on-line. One aspect is the textures that pop-out on the canvass as well as the size of a painting that can draw your attention. A photo graph can easily be touched up to enhance the artwork so looking at a piece in person can add to the story or emotions an artwork can bring you.One of my favorite paintings at the Crocker Art Museum is the painting completed by
Kaltenbach, Stephen called Portrait of My Father. It was painted in 1972-1979. This painting is an acrylic on canvas and is 114 in x 170 ¾ in and is located on the top floor in the contemporary gallery. This painting is amazing. It looks like he painted over a photograph. When you get closer to the painting there are so many different layers of texture that you really can’t tell what was painted first or what layer of paint is on top. It almost looks as if it were air brushed. The hair displays painted texture and it is slightly raised from the canvas but all other paint is smoothed even on the face where there is texture from the creases on his face. This painting is of the artist’s father on his death bed taking his last breath and being accepted with love by the spiritual world. When you look at the painting, you can get a since of relief from the expression on the man’s face, almost a calming but intense act. I enjoyed the emotion that this painting was able to get out of me. Everyone knows of someone that has past-on but to view a death I am sure it much harder than someone calling you on the phone and telling you of a person’s death. Having to watch death can bring life in you own heart and a humbleness for what you have. This painting, to me, shows that death is not always sad, your sadness is selfishness, you need to think of the relief that the person dying.I enjoyed my visit like I have in the past but I was not awed by the paintings inside. Many of them were just ok paintings for me. I would have like to see more modern and abstract modern artwork. Again, the building and the story of Mr. Crocker was the best part of this visit. I will visit again when the Buda gallery is set up.
I will send a picture of myself at the gallery once I figure out how to download it from my phone.












