ReGift is a sculptural installation created specifically for the Toledo Museum of Art and is on view in Gallery 18, from August 12, 2023 to January 5, 2025.
Beth Lipman: ReGift
Exhibition Overview
Motivated by histories Lipman discovered in the archives at the TMA, the project features a three-quarter life-sized recreation of the parlor in Edward and Florence Libbey’s Old West End house. Using the Libbey’s bookplate as a visual guide (the only known image of their home interior) Lipman filled this architectural space with objects found in the image that she fabricated in transparent and opaque white glass.
Some of these original household objects, including furniture, were gifted to the Museum by Florence Scott Libbey upon her death in 1938 and later sold in the 1990s. Lipman’s project symbolically gifts these objects, along with their stories, to the entire Toledo community. By looking closely at an internal aspect of Florence’s life, the project aims to emphasize her deeply personal commitment to the Museum. It emphasizes her involvement in building the Museum’s legacy and, importantly, the impact of the Libbey’s on Toledo.
Glass elements for ReGift were made in the TMA’s hotshop at the Glass Pavilion during a 2022 GAPP residency. A glass press, donated to TMA by Libbey company was also utilized to create components, conceptually triangulating the founder’s business with the Museum and the Libbey’s personal life. Through the GAPP residency, the project fulfills an institutional goal to continue to promote experimentation in the glass studio, connecting past history to present creative practice.
For artist Beth Lipman, the project’s intent is to accentuate the impact of Toledo Museum of Art founders and reaffirm the Museum’s position as a catalyst within community. Lipman states, “Today, our trust in institutions has been undermined; ReGift is an opportunity to strengthen and reinvigorate the Museum’s critical role in our culture.”
A short film will accompany the installation. Commissioned for the project, filmmaker Atesh Atici found inspiration in Florence Scott Libbey’s approach to her community in the early days of the Toledo Museum of Art. Considering current polarization within our society and a growing separation from public spaces, Florence’s desire to, “encourage attendance on the part of all people irrespective of condition of life” is key to refocusing attention on the Museum’s ethos of creating a space for serving the community of Toledo and beyond. The film evokes Florence’s ideas through a dramatization of these ideas.
Beth Lipman: ReGift is sponsored by Presenting Sponsors Susan & Tom Palmer and Season Sponsor the Rita Barbour Kern Foundation. Additional support provided by the Ohio Arts Council, Bill and Pam Davis, Janet C. Rogolsky, Thomas and Janice Gagnet, Diane and Jerome Phillips, Mary E. Galvin, Herbert and Elizabeth Gabehart, Julia A. Mahoney, Terry and Tom Wolfe, Lynne Cusick, and Jan Baker.
Sponsors
- Susan & Tom Palmer
- The Rita Barbour Kern Foundation
- Bill & Pam Davis
- Janet C. Rogolsky
- Thomas & Janice Gagnet
- Diane & Jerome Phillips
- Mary E. Galvin
- Herbert & Elizabeth Gabehart
- Julia A. Mahoney
- Terry & Tom Wolfe
- Lynne Cusick
- Jan Baker
Film
Filmmaker Atesh Atici imagines the unsealing of a letter, written one hundred years in the past by Florence Scott Libbey, addressing the current staff of the Toledo Museum of Art with the aim of passing on the ideals she and her husband believed to be the foundation of their museum as well as their community.
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