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Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
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Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
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Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
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Seattle Art Museum
Date
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1933-present
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Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
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English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
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Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Young, Mrs. A. M. (Edith Thackwell), 1886-1978 | Meals, John E.
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1941
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Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1941
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1940. Report includes text.
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application/pdf
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English
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Seattle Art Museum
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These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
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Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
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Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Thirty-sixth Year, 1941
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum Thirty-sixth Year 1941
Annual Report for the Year 1941
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1941
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Text
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Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Art Department of the Federated Women's Clubs
British-American War Relief Association
Children’s Story Hour
Civilian Defense
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
English Speaking Union
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Margaret E. Fuller Purchase Fund
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Radio KJR
Radio KXA
Seattle Parent-Teacher Association
Seattle Park Department
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The Seattle Star
The Seattle Times
University of Washington
War effort
Washington State Artists Council for Defense
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Text
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
I
ANNUAL REPORT
I939
�ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR
1939
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
�SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
MUSEUM STAFF
1939-1940
EXECUTIVE
EDUCATION AL
OFFICERS
Richard E. Fuller
Director
Mrs. A. M. Young
Educational Director
Kenneth Callahan
Curator
Nannette Tibbals
Librarian
President, Richard E. Fuller
First Vice-President, Raymond G. Wright
Second Vice-President, Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons
Secretary, Horton C. Force
Treasurer, Joseph C. Black
TRUSTEES
Mrs. Coe V. Malone
Secretary to the Director
Membership Secretary
INFORMATION
Aileen Davidson
France! Wilt, Assistant
TERM ENDING 1940
Kenneth Colman
Richard E. Fuller
Mrs. Jesse Charles Johnson
Charles E. Martin
Thomas Pelly
Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson
TERM ENDING 1941
Mrs. Eugene Fuller
Edward W. Allen
George H. Greenwood
Mrs. A. Scott Bullitt
Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons
Horton C. Force
TERM ENDING 1942
Mrs. Cebert Baillargeon
Mrs. D . E . Frederick
Frederick M. Padelford
Joseph C. Black
Nathan Eckstein
Raymond G. Wright
MUSEUM ASSISTANTS
Earl T. Fields
Barney D. Nestor
OFFICERS OF THE STUDY GUILD
Mrs. Ofell Johnson, Chairman
Mrs. Jesse Charles Johnson, Ex-Officio
Mrs. Ambrose Patterson, Program
Mrs. Bayley Willis, Program-Assistant
Miss Catherine Evans, Docent Service
Mrs. Walter Wyckoff, Membership
Mrs. Harvey G. Schwarz, Publicity
EX-OFFICIO
Mayor of the City of Seattle
President of the City Council
President of the Park Board
Comptroller of the City of Seattle
President of the SchoorBoard of Seattle School District No. 1
2
3
I
�REPORT OF THE
PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR
FOR THE YEAR 1939
Now THAT the museums of Europe are closed and their treasures
buried, for how long we dare not guess, the function and mission
of the American museum appears to be emphasized. The purpose
of _th~ museums of Europe is essentially that of preserving the
art1st1c products of a bye-gone age and they accomplish their objective even though it entails subterranean shelters. Here I think that
most museums would consider their .chief function to be that of
education, but since education can be imparted only through the
voluntary interest of the public, the exhibits and programs must be
enjoyable to the average visitor and their message must be relatively
intelligible to the layman.
The purpose of the education is to raise the artistic taste, to
broaden the knowledge and appreciation of the products of both
the past and the present, and to stimulate the creative genius of the
artist. If in so doing the museum renders some of the ideals of other
nations more intelligible to the general public, it, in a small measure,
combats the present spirit of national intolerance that now besets
the world, and brings recognition to our common heritage of creative achievements in the field of art, unprejudiced by the race or
creed of their creators.
Exhibitions
Although the cost of our exhibitions was slightly in excess of that
of the previous year, they were fewer in number and, to a far greater
extent than in the past, they were derived either from the Museum's
own collection or from local sources. The most notable item on the
schedule was the exhibit of the art of India, which accompanied the
current course of the Study Guild. Although confined to sculpture
and miniatures, this exhibit was comprehensive in its scope and aftained great importance when judged by any standards. Our own
collection of material in this field was vastly augmented by a very
generous loan from Mr. H. Kevorkian of New York To give additional background for the appreciation of this subject, we again
showed a selection from Hubert Stowitts' paintings of "Vanishing
India," which are still in our store room, and also photographs of
India by Fritz Henle. Other notable exhibits included selections
from the Annual Exhibition of the San Francisco Art Association
and the work of several artists of national renown, but the most out~
4
.1
standing was the exhibition of Modern Master Drawings assembled
by Dr. Alfred Neumeyer of Mills College under the joint sponsorship of the Seattle Art Museum.
We also had several very creditable exhibits that were derived
from privat~ collections in the Northwest. In the late spring, through
the cooperatto? of the Seattle Branch of the National Early American Glass Society, we had a very attractive and popular exhibit of
glass, while in the autumn, during two consecutive months, the generous loan of material in addition to a few appropriate items in the
Museum collection, permitted us to have an exhibition both of early
European paintings and of antique tapestries. In behalf of the
Museum I wish to express our gratitude to those who so kindly-contributed to the success of these events.
In the autumn, the Twenty-fifth Annual Exhibition of Northwest
Artists was a subject of major interest and brought recognition to
much new talent in the Northwest. This year the Katherine B.
Baker Memorial Purchase Prize of $100.00, which is so generously
presented by the West Seattle Art Club, was awarded to William H.
Givler, while the Museum's First Purchase Prize in Watercolor of
$75.00 was awarded to Hilda Deutsch of Spokane for her "Landscape." The other monetary awards were won by Leon D. Marsh
for his oil painting entitled "White Vase," and by Dudley Pratt for
the First Prize in Sculpture, which was accompanied by $50.00
generously donated by the Music and Art Foundation. For the jury
of the exhibition, David McCosh, Professor of Art at the University
of Oregon, served as chairman, while the other members consisted
of Franz Baum and Mark Tobey, two distinguished Seattle artists,
Worth D. Griffin, head of the Art Department of Washington State
College, and myself in an ex-officio capacity.
In addition to this exhibit and to ten one-man shows which we
sponsored during the course of the year, our local artists had a number of opportunities to have recognition brought to their achievements. Aside from the aforementioned and aside from study gallery
exhibits of the work of schools and various groups, there were the
following: a large architectural exhibit under the sponsorship of
the Washington State Chapter of the American Institute of Architects; the 11th Annual Exhibition of Northwest Printmakers, in
which the local artists meet competition from both national and
internationa! talent; an exhibit of the mural designs submitted for
the Wenatchee Post Office, for which competition the Museum assisted the Treasury Department; the High School exhibit celebrating the Diamond Jubilee ; and our usual group exhibitions during
the summer months of the work of Seattle artists who had been included in the previous Northwest Annual.
In order that our summer visitors may see the most important
5
�The Sung Dynasty was enriched by an accession of great importance in the form of a grey crackle bowl of Ko ware. This was added
to the very distinguished group of Sung ceramics which have been
presented to the Museum by Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson, and whic~
far more than justify her being classed as a patron. The other additions to our Chinese ceramics date from the early part of the 18th
Century. One is a plate of the reign <;>f K'ang Hsi, bearing in _famille
verte decoration an exceptionally vigorous portrayal of a bird and
flower subject. While the other is a large porcelain Yung Cheng
vase decorated with peonies, depicted in underglaze blue and peach
bloom.
The pictorial arts were represented by two large paintings of the
Ming Dynasty showing the decorative portrayal o~ flower and bamboo and two small folio bird and flower paintmgs of the same
period. In addition, we took the opportunity of completing our collection of Chinese wood-block prints of the so-called "Mustard
Seed Garden Series," which was originally published as an art~st's
sketch book. So far as the art of Japan is concen:ed, our accessions
are confined to folio material of less importance and include both
old and contemporary Japanese prints and some twenty vigorous
drawings by unknown artists of the 19th Century.
From the collection of Indian sculpture which Mr. H. Kevorkian
so kindly lent us, we retained a stone panel depicting in high relief
two classic incidents in Buddha's renunciation of the worldly pleasures of the palace. The piece comes from Northern India, w~ere it
was originally carved in the 2nd or 3rd Cen~ury A. D., m the
ancient kingdom of Gandhara. Another access10n f:~m ~he same
collection is of greater importance and shows a sens1t1ve mterpretation of a seated Buddha subtly portrayed in a very hard crystalline rock. This came from Northeastern India and dates fr<;>m
about the 10th Century, when it was one of the final_ creati:ve
expressions of the Buddhistic faith in ~hat ~ountry prior to its
extermination by the first Mohammedan mvas10n.
The art of Persia was also greatly enriched with several items
that reflect the sumptuous decorative quality of some of the greatest
epochs of that country. We had the privilege of ac9uir_ing a stucco
plaque decorated with two rampant gazelles ..This piece was an
architectural ornament of a 6th Century Sassaman palace at Damaghan in Northwestern Ir~n. We also a_cqui:ed two mosaic ti.le
medallions. One of these, m the star design, is from a mo~q~e m
Ispahan which was dedicated in 1482, .W:hile th.e other, dep1c.t mg a
lion attacking a bull, is of unknown origm but it may be attributed
to approximately the same period. We also a~quired ~ large ?ecorative panel composed of twenty rectangular tiles bearing a. umfied
design of birds, deer and flowers on a yel~ow ground. This came
originally from the 17th Century Imperial Palace, Haft Dast
(seven mansions) in Ispahan.
6
7
part of our Museum collection, we adopted a policy last summer of
permitting our Oriental collections to expand into the three central
octagonal galleries in the North wing in order that we could show
our most important items illustrating the early art of Japan, the art
of Persia and the art of India and Indonesia. For the rest of the
year man~ of these various items are confined to our store room fo
await their turn for exhibits in the South wing. In catering to the
tourists, we publicize the achievements both of the Museum and of
our local talent, and incidentally we attain considerable economy
in not scheduling transient exhibits.
Accessions
Once more the Museum was fortunate in receiving noted additions to its collection. Tei say that they are again principally in the
realm of the Orient may sound to some like the proverbial coals to
Newcastle. In this instance, however, some of the most important
pieces were acquired by advantageous exchange of material already
in the Fuller Collection of the Museum. The accessions were selected .
individually to fill gaps either in the historical sequence or in the
representation of various phases of artistic expression. We trust
that each piece attains the high standard of the connoisseur and at
the same time reflects a creative spirit that can be appreciated by any
one interested in art.
A bronze horse ornament, a jade sceptre and a group of small
jades give an additional glimpse of the revered classic art of China
during the Shang Dynasty, which flourished over three millenniums
ago. While the collection representing the subsequent Chou Dynasty
was strengthened with two richly decorated jade discs or symbols
of heaven, a group of small jades, an exquisite bronze mirror and
a sword handle inlaid with silver. This long period prior to the
Christian Era was once classed under the general heading of archaic,
but the recent efforts of archeologists have now permitted it to be
subdivided into art epochs which vie with each other in creative
achievements.
An unglazed tile slab from the tomb of the Han Dynasty, shows
the vigorous portrayal of a horse two thousand years ago. While a
tiger forms the motive for a bronze buckle of similar age. The latter
was the gift of Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson. The refinement of the
prosperous years of the T'ang Dynasty, during the 7th and 8th Century, is shown both in a Buddhistic marble head and in a very graceful bronze incense burner that was once carried in religious ceremonies.
�Our most important accession in the field of Occidental art was
a large French tapestry of the early 18th Century with a very well
conceived and finely executed design of verdure and landscape. We
also have now three additional old masters of considerable merit;
a small painting by the 15th Century Italian artist, Jacopo de!
Sellaio, portraying St. Jerome in prayer, a "Village Festival" painted
by the 17th Century Dutch masters Hendrick and Martin Van
Cleve, and a fine 17th Century Dutch "Landscape" by an unknown
artist. Our American paintings were enriched by "Still Life with
Fish" by William Merrit Chase, a famous artist of the previous
generation.
To our collection of contemporary American paintings was added
a "Mountain Landscape" by Marion Kavanagh Wachtel as a gift
of Alfred Rollo in memory of his wife. While a portrait of Mrs.
Eugene Fuller by Spencer Macky was donated by friends. Our
collection of paintings by local artists was enhanced by the purchase of prizes of the Northwest Annual, and, in addition, by the
accession of Carl Morris's "Woman with Cloth," Vanessa Helder's
"City Gas Works," Kenneth Callahan's "The Storm," and "The
Little Red Barn," as the gift of the artist, Dorothy Dolph Jensen.
Aside from those prints which were entrusted to us as the purchase prizes of the Northwest Printmakers, we also acquired a number of items in etching and lithography by well known contemporary
artists. Some of the most noted names are Andre Derain, Jean Charlot and "Pop" Hart. To our collection of the work of local artists,
we added several drawings and lithographs by Abe Blashko, two of
which were a gift of the artist. In addition, we took the opportunity
of selecting enough plates of John Gould's "Birds of Asia" to form
an excellent exhibition. We also acquired four drawings by Thomas
Rowlandson, the very creative British satirical artist of the early
19th Century.
In reviewing the complete scope of accessions of the past year,
I think that any one must admit that they are impressive. They represent the result of a number of exceptionally favorable opportunities of filling fairly definite needs of the Museum and, unless
otherwise stated, are additions to its Fuller Collection. Do not, however, feel that they establish a precedent that will be maintained.
The limited size of the building, which I personally consider to be
adequate in space, emphasizes the importance of quality rather than
quantity. As our material is superseded in importance by subsequent
accessions, we intend to continue our policy of trading the material
which no longer is needed for exhibition purposes.
8
Lectures
During the course of the year we, as usual, enjoyed the cooperation of the University in having two lectures for members at Meany
Hall. On May 2nd, the noted art historian, Sheldon Cheney, lectured on "A Primer of Modern Art" under the joint auspices of
the Department of Art. On December 14th, with the cooperation of
the Department of Ethnology, Herbert Knapp spoke on the subject
of Polynesia with his excellent Kodachrome moving pictures on
Tahiti. In our own Auditorium, we enjoyed the privilege of having
four visiting celebrities talk on various subjects. Mr. H. S . Ede,
formerly of the Tate Gallery, lectured on "Pictures Are Like People." "Essentials of Chinese Painting" was the subject for the
famous sinologe, Osvald Siren. Mrs. Helen Appleton Read, in reviewing the results of the art program of the Treasury Department,
spoke on "New Horizons in American Art." While Dr. Paul Ganz,
the world authority on Holbein, addressed us on his favorite subject. Through the generous cooperation of the Walker Ames Foundation, Amedee Ozenfant, the well known art teacher, spoke to us
on "The Need of Art" during the course of his summer instruction
at the University of Washington. For most of these lectures we are
again indebted to Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons for the maintenance of
the Daniel Cogswell Lecture Fund.
Our lecture series was also definitely enriched by the Rev. H . A.
Reinhold on "A Thousand Years of Christian Art." This
series, which Father Reinhold generously contributed, was initially
planned as one of the courses of the Study Guild. Both for the convenience of the speaker and to render it available to a wider audience it was scheduled on Monday evening and made open free
of charge to the general public. We are most grateful for the privilege that we thus had of widening the scope of our education.
Five of the series of eight lectures were delivered in the a:utumn.
In addition, the fifteen Sunday lectures were shared by Mrs.
A. M. Young and myself, while, except for the period of her illness last winter, Mrs. Young also had in the Auditorium on Saturday mornings her Children's Hour which is always a most popular
event. Some of the details of her numerous other educational
activities which do such valuable service in enlarging the scope
of our influence are covered in her own report, which is presented
on subsequent pages.
Study Guild
As usual the Study Guild has been responsible for some of our
major activities during the past year. Two administrations fall
within the scope of the present fiscal year. Since the record of the
organization under the chairmanship of Mrs. John Dallas Reagh
9
�was covered by previous reports, I now have the privilege of reviewing the major activities under the present able incumbent, Mrs.
Ofell Johnson. I have already mentioned the course of "A Thousand Years of Christian Art" by the Rev. H. A. Reinhold. The
initial plan for this series and the selection of titles was a subject
to which a committee, under the chairmanship of Mrs. Almon
Bogardus, contributed. That committee also assisted in publicizing
this important event. The series of historical lectures again reverted
to the art of China. Once more Mrs. Young and myself shared the
responsibility for it as lecturers. The other two lecture series were
confined to the "Art of the Expositions" under the chairmanship
of Mrs. Ford Q. Elvidge, and the "History of Furniture" under
the chairmanship of Mrs. Herbert Brink. The latter series covered
the early epochs in European history, leaving the subsequent centuries to next year. For the initial lecture we had the generous services of Mr. Frank Drake Davison. The other lectures for these
two courses were delivered either by members of the Guild or by
various local authorities who most generously contributed their
services. For these various programs, which entailed in all fortyfour lectures, Mrs. Ambrose Patterson was in charge with the assistance of Mrs. Bayley Willis, while Mrs. Harvey G. Schwarz, as
publicity chairman, aided in obtaining the fine publicity which many
of the events received.
The other major activity of the Study Guild is that of the docent
service. Aside from the duties during such events as the American
Banking Convention, this conscientious committee under the leadership of Miss Catherine Evans, rendered service almost every week
during the school year in conducting children of the Seventh and
Eighth grades through the gallery. These numbered over 4800. In
behalf of the Museum I wish to thank Mrs. Of ell Johnson and her
various assistants for the fine service the Study Guild rendered to
our organization.
technique of taking 35mm. slides with Leica equipment that was
lent to our organization, together with accessories which we purchased. The use of these slides demanded a major investment in a
projector for the Auditorium. The saving that is thus made possible
will shortly compensate us for the expenditure which now permits
us to have Kodachrome slides at a cost that is almost nominal. This
phase of our educational activity plays an increasingly important
part in the educational life of our city.
Probably our most notable Library accession is formed by two
extensive educational exhibits which Miss Nannette Tibbals has
available for lending to schools and various organizations. These
had been prepared in a most scholarly manner by the staff of the
San Francisco Museum of Art under a grant from a philanthropic
foundation. At our request, their director, Dr. Grace L. McCann
Morley, most generously had two sets of the original series of six
duplicated for us at actual cost. One of these is entitled "The Language of Painting" and illustrates a modern professional analysis
of artistic values in reference to established masterpieces. The other
is entitled "Masterpieces of the Past." Both of these exhibitions are
accompanied with very complete descriptive labels, as well as a
lecture which is available for reading. These exhibitions have been
on constant circuit throughout the State and have a wide educational value. Although, at the moment, the main demand for them
comes from schools, it is probable that the expansion of the present
W. P. A. program in developing art centers at various points in the
Northwest will increase the demand for them as well as for other
exhibition material which is available in our store room.
Equipment and Maintenance
The past year, once again, witnessed substantial additions to the
various collections of the Library. We acquired 89 volumes by purchase and received 24 by gift. The principal donor was Mr. Bernard
Freyd who has now presented to the Museum 95 items, which
greatly strengthen our Library in regard to the aesthetic values of
art. We now possess over 2600 books and over twice that many
colored reproductions which are mounted for lending. The latter
were augmented by 17 5 additions. We purchased nearly 700 large
standard size slides to meet the requirements of numerous lectures
and brought the total to 7500. In the autumn, however, to reduce
the cost of slides, our assistant, Mr. Barney Nestor, developed the
Our need for additional exhibit space for cabinet items was met
with the purchase of four cases of our standard design. Although
this entailed a substantial investment, it meets our requirements
for at least years to come. So far as the Auditorium is concerned,
I have already mentioned the purchase of a Leica projector. It also
was greatly improved by the reconstruction of the projection platform by our chief custodian, Mr. A. B. Faris, and his staff. In
addition, the potential service of this room was greatly increased
by the installation of a loud speaker through the generosity of Mrs.
Thomas D. Stimson. For the storeroom, an ultra-violet lamp was
purchased to permit the detection both of forgeries and of the
extent of repairs.
To permit Seattle artists to expand their efforts into the medium
of lithography, an old standard press, together with the stones and
accessory equipment, was presented by the Museum donors for
IO
II
Library
I
�installation in the press room. It has proven to be of immediate
service to some of our local artists and has permitted the development of exceptional talent in this phase of art. To meet the needs
of a life class, which now by tradition sketches in the receiving
room Monday evenings during the winter months, a number of
items of equipment were added. These, however, did not entail any
expense to the Museum. The materials were purchased through the
nominal artist fees, while the construction was done by Mr. Faris.
Under constant vigilance of the efficient engineering staff of the
building, the City's contract for maintenance has been carried out
most satisfactorily, and the normal wear and tear have been effectively combatted. To meet the requirements of the Civil Service,
Mr. C. E. Maxfield, after very satisfactory service for nearly a year,
was replaced by Mr. C. M. Brittain, former junior engineer of the
City Light. At this time I also wish to express my appreciation for
the fine cooperation which we have received from the Park Department. A very extensive and much needed drainage system was installed in our front lawn. To assist in this major improvement, the
Museum met the nominal expense t;ntailed in the purchase of the
tile pipe.
Membership
It is with regret that we note a slight decrease in our membership
in spite of the faithful service of our membership committee under
the direction of Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson and Mrs. Frederick H.
Parks, who devoted their services to a special effort during the
autumn. The achievement which they attained with the valuable
cooperation of the Study Guild is reflected in the fact that the loss
of members during the course of the year occurred in spite of the
addition of nearly 300 new members in various classifications.
At the instigation of the legal members of our Board, we received
the generous cooperation of some members of the State Legislature
in having a bill passed exempting museums from the inheritance
tax. In doing so, our State followed the precedent of not only the
Federal Government, but of most of the States in the Union. This
action gives promise of permitting our organization to accumulate
an endowment in the course of time.
In the late summer, Mrs. Glen Liston resigned the position of
Secretary to the Director but retained the responsibility of being
the Executive Secretary of the Western Association of Art Museum
Directors, with headquarters at the Museum. This organization has
continued to grow under her guidance as an important factor in the
circuiting of exhibitions. F.ortunately, Mrs. Coe V. Malone has most
ably filled her place, and, at the same time, has retained the task of
I2
membership secretary. To fill the position left vacant at the upper
desk, Miss Aileen Davidson was employed at full time, while Miss
Francel Wilt assists.
-»>--»>--»>--»>--»>-«<-«<-«<-«<-«<Last summer, on the death of Winlock Miller, Jr., our Board
shared with many civic organizations the sad loss of one of its
youngest and most valued members. We were fortunate, however,
in having Mr. Thomas M. Pelly accept the position thus left vacant.
-»>--»>-»>--»>--»>-«+«<-«<-«<-«<we probably share with the executives of most museums, the
knowledge that we fail to overcome the inhibition that many of our
fellow citizens feel in considering art to be something beyond their
scope, so foreign to them in fact that it is only with difficulty that
they can be persuaded to make an initial visit to the Museum. Some
may be correct in their self appraisal, but there are many others
who, I am sure, would be astonished at the ease with which they can
enter a new field of interest and of pleasure through exerting the
slight effort of observation and through the absorption of a little
knowledge which we endeavor to present in digestible form. An
art museum permits you not only to visit foreign shores, but to turn
back the pages of history and to become familiar with creative
genius which speaks to you personally in a universal language. The
essential smattering of that language is within the grasp of almost
anyone who has the interest. Although I fully appreciate that the
vital interest in current affairs may divert many from thoughts of
art and that the many demands on crowded lives may cause one to
avoid any additional effort, I am sure many fail to realize the recreation that may so easily be derived and the extent to which their lives
may be enriched.
With the thought that a good wine needs no bush, we undoubtedly
let slip opportunities of publicizing our activities. Every member,
however, and for that matter anyone can be of service in permitting
our organization to pay greater dividends to the community if by
word of mouth they spread news of the continually changing activities which the Museum presents. In this respect, however, we
greatly appreciate the cooperation of the press and the fine missionary work that they assist us in doing in our chosen field, although
we still hope for the day when in Seattle, as in the other great cities
of this country, our citizens will obviously show sufficient interest
in art to place events in that subject definitely in the category of
news.
I cannot close without expressing my warm gratitude to the
members of the staff for their very efficient and faithful service
IJ
1
�which plays an essential part in the success of our organization,
and our sincere appreciation of the cooperation of the Board of
Trustees and of the support of each of our members. I trust that
this report of our progress will strengthen their interest and loyalty
to the Museum in the great civic service that it is rendering and that
it will not give them merely a false impression of affluence and
the comfortable feeling that their assistance is no longer needed.
Although the interest of the general public is still a constant encouragement, we must admit that our membership statistics reflect
our failure in one essential phase of our external relationships in
spite of the achievements of the committee in charge. That is a
point, however, that we hope will be rectified in the future.
E. FULLER,
President and Director.
RICHARD
I4
REPORT OF THE
EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT
•;
JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1939
To THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND MEMBERS OF THE
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM:
It is of interest to study the reports of former years on the activities of the Educational Department for by such comparisons we
can measure the success of our efforts. Since we opened our doors
in June of 1933, we have attempted to carry out the duties laid
down for such departments in every museum, namely, docent to
adults and school children, lectures in the museum and out of it,
and children's story hours. That members of various organizations
have continued to attend these lectures year after year and that the
children who came seven years ago are still interested in the programs sponsored by the Museum is indicative that we are filling a
very real need. That so many come to the Museum is only an indication that they look to us for assistance and have come to respect
this Museum's position in the community. It is with the idea of
serving the people that this work of providing recreation and
aesthetic enjoyment is carried on.
The Docent Group, under the able chairmanship of Mrs. Ofell
Johnson in the spring and Miss Catherine Evans in the fall, has
conducted Seventh and Eighth grade children from the Public
Schools on tours through the galleries. Adult groups and school
children from out of the city have had similar service by special
appointment. This department is grateful to the members of the
Docent Group, for we are mindful that under this volunteer service
the members are constantly on call and have frequently sacrificed
personal pleasures and comforts to come at a moment's notice in
order to conduct a group through the Museum. Their enthusiasm
and wonderful cooperation has been an inspiration to the school
children under their guidance and words cannot convey my personal
gratitude for their generous service in behalf of both the Museum
and the community. The following comprise the committee who
have contributed to the work of the Educational Department: Mrs.
Frank S. Bayley, Jr., Mrs. Edward Strong Campbell, Mrs. Kenneth
Cole, Mrs. Joseph Gandy, Mrs. John Dallas Reagh, Mrs. Wesley
Rennie, Mrs. Willard Skeel, Mrs. Veo Fuller Small, Mrs. Elizabeth
Smithson, Mrs. Harvey G. Schwarz, Mrs. Lewis Turtle, Mrs. Pieter
van Dalen, Mrs. W. D. Vanderbilt, and Mrs. Brian Wattleworth.
IS
�In addition to lectures given, I have written a weekly art column
for the Sunday Post-Intelligencer and have given two radio broadcasts a week. Once a month, from October through May, a lecture
is given to Parent-Teacher Associations. This has become a tradition
with that organization and there are many members who have not
missed a single meeting since the Museum opened. The Auditorium
is usually filled at these meetings and often with members standing.
I give a lecture on some phase of art and follow it with a tour of the
galleries. These Parent-Teacher members report to their school
associations on the lecture and current exhibits, and so the influence
of the Museum is taken into the homes.
The Children's Story Hour, held each Saturday morning at 10
o'clock from October through May, continues to attract children
and their parents. While the audience changes from time to time
there are many who have been attending for several years.
During my absence in the spring, Dr. Richard Fuller gave the
Study Guild lectures that I was scheduled to make and wrote three
of my Sunday articles, while Mrs. William Harrison and Mr. R.
Bruce Inverarity lectured to the Parent-Teacher Association, and
Mr. Dick Rarig brought educational talking films to the Children's
Story Hour.
Last summer I attended the State Convention of Federated
Women's Clubs at Be1Iingham, where I addressed the convention
and took a collection of Washington artists' work for an exhibit.
I also addressed the Publicity Department of the Museum Directors'
Association at their annual convention in San Francisco. In summing up the lectures for this past year, 125 lectures were given out
of the Museum, of which 40 were out of the city and 56 in various
schools, while 54 talks were given over the radio and 68 lectures
delivered in the Museum, making a total of 240 for the year.
I wish to express my personal gratitude for the enthusiastic and
generous support given me by the Docent Committee and fellow
members of the staff and to make especial mention of the generous
assistance of Mrs. Coe Malone, Miss Aileen Davidson, Miss Nannette Tibbals and Mr. Barney Nestor without which this program
could not have been carried on.
LECTURES
·~
J
Respectfully submitted,
MRS. A. M. YouNG,
Educational Director.
\
l
I6
January 8 ... "Egypt, Her Past and Present." Excavations by the Metropolitan Museum, by Mrs. A . M. Young
January 15 ... "Some Brilliant Modern German Painters," by Mrs. A. M.
Young
January 22 ... "The World's Greatest Frescoes," by Mrs. A. M. Young
January29 .. . "Michelangelo, His Life and His Works," by Mrs. A. M.
Young
February 6 .. "India Today," by Mrs. A. M. Young
February 12 .. "The Art and History of Early India," by Richard E. Fuller
February 19 .. "The Classic Temples of India," by Richard E. Fuller
February 20 .. "Pictures Are Like People," by H. S. Ede
February 26 .. "The Art of the Great M oghuls," by Richard E. Fuller
February 27 .. "Essentials of Chinese Painting," by Osvald Siren
March 6 . . . . "New Horizons in American Art," by Helen Appleton Read
April 3 .. . .. "Holbein," by Dr. Paul Ganz
April 17 . . . . "The Need of Art-What Is Be111Uty in Terms of Modern
Art," by Amedee Ozenfant
May 2 . . . . . '"A Primer of Modern Art," by Sheldon Cheney
November 5 .. "The Classic Art of the Shang Dynasty (1766-II22 B. C.)," by
Richard E. Fuller
November 12 . "Daumier, the Interpreter Through Painting," by Mrs. A. M.
Young
November 19 . "The Varied Artistic Trends of the Chou Dynasty (II22 B. C.220 A. D.) ,"by Richard E. Fuller
November 26 . "The American Wing of fhe Metropolitan Museum," by Mrs.
A. M. Young
December 3 .. "The 4rt of the Han Dynasty (206 B . C.-220 A. D.)," by
Richard E. Fuller
December 10 .. "How Tapestries Are Made," by Mrs. A. M. Young
December 14 . . "Polynesia," by Herbert Knapp
December 17 . . "Madonnas," by Mrs. A. M. Young
�FINANCIAL REPORT
AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATE
I have examined the accounts of the
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
for the calendar year 1939, and in my opinion the attached statement
of Receipts and Disbursements and General Fund Balance Sheet
correctly sets forth the operations of the Museum during the year
and its financial condition December 31, 1939.
JOHN E. MEALS,
Certified Public Accountant.
Seattle, Washington
February 6, 1940.
I9
�SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND
DISBURSEMENTS
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
GENERAL FUND BALANCE SHEET
December 31, 1939
Calendar Year 1939
Assets
Receipts
Cash on hand and in banks, subject to check ........................................... $ 861.08
Deposits in savings accounts...................................................................... 9,570.71
Total... ............................................................................................. $10,431.79
Furniture and Fixtures :
~ ::'II~~
~~K
Classes .................................................................................
:
1~~:~
::::::::::::::::::::::::::
U~:~
Total memberships .................................................. $ 9,880.00
Interest earned -···-·····························-·····-···········-············354.44
g~~~f~:i~~~-·:::::-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ll,~11:!~
103.55
Library .......................................................................................................... .
Exhibition material -······-······-····-··-····················--·-·-·····-·····-·······················-Slides ...............................................................................................................
Press Room ·-·······-····-·--·-············-············-------····-····--·-····--·-··········--············-··
Balance on hand January 1, 1939................................................................ $ 5,340.65
Operating Receipts :
Memberships-$ 5.00 .................................................... $ 2,755.00
29,615.21
5,592.10
10,449.13
3,511.46
12.25
Sundry book sales, etc.......................................................
168.67
Total operating receipts ............................................ $22,507.14
Proceeds of sale of U. S. Bonds............................................ 5,039.85
Increase in Lecture Fund.........................................................
153.11
27,700.10
Total assets .................................................................................... $59,611.94
Total receipts ................................................................................ $33,040.75
Liabilities and Surplus
Founders' Endowment Fund...................................................................... $ 8,500.00
Lecture and Slide Fund................................................................................
360.92
General Fund:
Balance, January 1, 1939.................................................. $46,486.79
Excess of operating receipts ..........................$22,507.14
Over operating expenses ................................ 18,242.91
4,264.23
50,751.02
Total Liabilities and Surplus ...................................................... $59,611.94
Disbursements
Operatin&' ~xpei;-ses :
Admm1stratlon .................................................. $4,975.62
[~W;~;• • • ·• • • •·• • • • • • •
:-
i:lli~
Total operating disbursements ................................ $18,242.91
Additions to Equipment:
g~~e:~. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::$1,~ci~Jg
Library-·······--·-······-·-································-·········Lecture -······························-·················-···-·····-···Storage -···········-·····-·············-····················-·····-··Kitchen -·-······································-···-·-··············-
29.71
676.77
26.52
12.34
Library .......................................................................................
Exhibition material -··········-···········-·········-·-······························
Slides ...........................................................................................
Press room ................................................................................
2,960.00
396.23
282.39
715.18
12.25
Total Disbursements ................................................................... 22,608.96
Balance on hand December 31, 1939.......................................................... $10,431.79
20
2I
�SCHEDULE OF EXHIBITIONS
FOR THE YEAR 1939
IN ADDITION TO THE PERMANENT
ORIENT AL COLLECTION
January II-February 5
Architectural Exhibition (Washington State Chapter A.I.A.)
Memorial Exhibition of Work by Helen Rhodes
Twentieth Century American Artists (originals and reproductions )t
Work by Students of the California School of Fine Arts*
February 8-March 5
Art of India (lent by H. Kevorkian, of New York)
Paintings and Drawings by Federico Castellon (A.F.A.)
National Scholastic High School Exhibition
Drawings for Walt Disney's "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs"
(W.A.A.M.D.)
Paintings by Worth D. Griffin and Clyfford Still*
Photographs of India by Fritz Henle*
Drawings and Prints by Helen Loggie*
March 8-April 2
Eleventh Annual Exhibition of Northwest Printmakers*
Paintings by Bear Newman (Sara M. Strauss)
Art of India (lent by H. Kevorkian, of New York)
"Vanishing India," by Hubert Stowitts*
Paintings and Drawings by Holbein (facsimiles) t
Work by Students of St. Nicholas School*
April5-MaJ7
Modern Master Drawings (sponsored by Mills College and Seattle Art
Museum)
Annual Exhibition of the San Francisco Art Association (W.A.A.M.D.)
Egyptian Photographs by Prof. Hamann (A.F.A.)
Portrait of Mr. Reginald H . Parsons, by Spencer Macky
National Exhibition of Representative Buildings of the Post-War Period
(part one) (A.F.A.)
Paintings by Esther Webster*
May IO-!une 4
California Ceramics (W.A.A.M.D.)
Mural Designs for the Wenatchee Postoffice*
National Exhibition of Representative Buildings of the Post-War Period
(part two) (A.F.A.)
Clarence A. Black Memorial Collection of American Paintingst
Watercolors by Z. Vanessa Helder*
Women Painters of Washington Craft Exhibit*
June 7-July 9
Paintings by Shiro Miyazaki*
"Elizabethan England" (Boston Museum of Fine Arts)
June 7-0ctober l
Graphic Arts (a series of four exhibits) t
June 18-0ctober l
Persian Artt
Art of India, Siam, Cambodia and Koreat
Late Japanese Artt
American and European Painting and Sculpturet
July 12-0ctober l
Paintings by Seattle Artists*
October 5-N ovember 5
Twenty-fifth Annual Exhibition of Northwest Artists*
Women Painters of Washington*
Northwest Printmakers' Permanent Collectiont
November 8-December 3
Phillips Memorial Exhibition, lent by the Phillips Memorial Gallery of
Washington, D. C. (A.F.A.)
P~intings and Prints by Frederic Taubes (W.A.A.M.D.)
Lithographs and Facsimiles of Paintings by Daumiert
Paintings by Thelma Gerstman*
Oriental Photographs by Edward Mason*
Asiatic Birds Prints by John Gouldt
Work by Members of Grapha Techna*
Chinese Art, including Archaic Bronzes lent by Mr. and Mrs. A. Bassett,
of Shanghait
Japanese Landscape Paintings, Drawings and Printst
December 6-January 7
Early Tapestries from Local Sources
Gothic Tapestries (facsimiles)
Paintings of Religious Subject Matter (from local sources and Museum
Collection, including originals and facsimiles)
Ear.ly. Religious .Sculpture (from local sources)
Reltg1ous Drawmgs by the Masters (facsimiles) t
Paintings by Francis Drexel Smith*
Paintings by Raymond Hill*
Clarence A. Black Memorial Collection of American Paintingst
Paintings by Kenneth Callahan*
British Engravings of the 18th Century
A .F .A .-Circulated by the American Federation of Arts.
W .A.A.M.D. -Circulated by the Western Association of Art Museum Directors.
*Lent by the artist.
tMuseum Collection.
June 7-June 18
Diamond Jubilee High School Exhibit*
Early American Glass and American Coverlets (lent by Seattle Branch of
the National Early American Glass Society and Museum's McDonald
Collection)
22
23
�CLASSES OF MEMBERSHIP
BENEFACTORS are those who have paid in dues or contributions a total of at least Fifty Thousand Dollars.
MEMBERS OF THE
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
BENEFACTORS
ASSOCIATE BENEFACTORS are those who have paid in dues
or contributions a total of at least Twenty-five Thousand Dollars.
FULLER, MRS. EUGENE
PATRONS are those who have paid in dues or contributions a
total of at least Five Thousand Dollars.
BACKUS*, M.
ENDOWMENT MEMBERS are those who have contributed to
the endowment fund of the Museum at least One Thousand Dollars.
LIFE MEMBERS are those who have paid in dues or contributions
a total of Five Hundred Dollars.
HONORARY MEMBERS are those whose services, position or
gifts have merited election by the Board of Trustees.
FOR THE SUPPORT OF ITS VARIED ACTIVITIES, THE
MUSEUM DEPENDS CHIEFLY ON THE FAITHFUL
ANNUAL MEMBERS.
SUSTAINING MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of
One Hundred Dollars.
CONTRIBUTING MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of
Twenty-five Dollars.
ACTIVE MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of Ten
Dollars.
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of Five
Dollars.
Now that bequests to the Museum are exempt from inheritance
tax, the Trustees earnestly solicit all those wishing to assist in building up the limited resources of the Museum to bequeath to it money
or works of art worthy of the high standard for which it strives.
SUGGESTED FORM OF BEQUEST
I give and bequeath $--------------------------------to the Seattle
Art Museum.
FULLER, RICHARD E.
ASSOCIATE BENEFACTORS
F.
BLACK*, CLARENCE A.
PATRONS
ATWOOD, MRS. J.C., JR.
MORRISON, MRS. ROBERT
STIMSON, MRS. THOMAS D.
D.
ENDOWMENT MEMBERS
ANDERSON, MRS. A.H.
HENRY*, H. C.
McEwAN, MRS. A. F.
PARSONS, REGINALD H.
PARSONS, MRS. REGINALD H .
STIMSON, MRS. THOMAS D.
HONORARY MEMBERS
FIELD, HEMAN
GOULD*, CARL F.
McDONALD, MRs. AGNES
MIYA, MATAICHI
MOORE, ROLAND
TANAKA, KICHIJIRO
LIFE MEMBERS
BAILLARGEON, CEBERT
BLACK, J.
BLACK, MRS. J.
BLACK, MRS. NETTIE G.
CAMPBELL, Roy E.
GODWIN, MRS. J.
c.
c.
w.
w.
MCEWAN, MRS.
H.
MERRILL, R. D.
RHODES, MRS. ALBERT J.
STIMSON*, MRS.
D.
VAN WINTER, MRS. H.
WRIGHT, RAYMOND G.
c.
ARTIST LIFE MEMBERS
EAKINS, MAX
FISCHER, GEORGE
NOMURA, KENJIRO
NORLING, ERNEST
TOKITA, KAMEKICHI
WicKs, REN
ZIEGLER, EUSTACE P.
SUSTAINING MEMBERS
AGEN, MRS. JOHN B.
FREDERICK, MRS. D. E.
ATWOOD, MRS. J.C., JR.
JOHNSON, PHILIP
BAILLARGEON, MRS. CEBERT
KREIELSHEIMER, LEO T.
BLACK, MR. AND MRS. LEO S.
OSTRANDER, MRS . HARRY F.
BULLITT, MRS. A. SCOTT
SKINNER, MRS. D. E.
DUFFY, MRS. GILBERT L.
STRONG, MR. AND MRS. HENRY
WRIGHT, RAYMOND G.
*DECEASED
c.
�ACTIVE MEMBERS
CONTRIBUTING MEMBERS
BAILLARGEON, JOHN
BALLARD, MR. AND MRS.
RoY PAGE
BALLINGER, MRS. J. H.
BAYLEY, MRS. FRANKS., JR.
BLACK, MRS. FRANK DEWITT
BLACK, MRS. HAROLD
BURDON, DR. MINNIE B.
CALVERT, MRS. WILLIAM, SR.
CARLISLE, MRS. WILLIAM A.
CARMAN, MRS. N. M.
CLAPP, MRS. JAMES N.
CLARKE, CASPAR
COLMAN, MRS. LAURENCE J.
CRON, HANS
DAY, MRS. LEW
DONWORTH, JUDGE GEORGE
ECKSTEIN, MISS JOANNA
ECKSTEIN, NATHAN
ECKSTEIN, MRS. NATHAN
EDDY, J. FRANKLIN
EDRIS, WILLIAM
FERRIER, DR.
I.
FISHER, MRS. 0 . D.
FREDERICK, Miss FAY
FRYE, LOUISA C., INC.
GALLAGHER, MR. AND MRS.
JAMES 0.
GARDNER, MRS. FRANK P.
GARRETT, E. I.
GARRETT, MRS. E. I.
GOWEN, DR. H. H.
GREEN, H. L.
GREEN, MR. AND MRS. JOSHUA
GRUNBAUM BRos. FURNITURE Co.
HAMILTON, Miss HENRIETTA
HENRY, MRS. LANGDON
HOLMAN, FRANKE.
IGoE, Miss HELEN
IMPERIAL CANDY COMPANY
INNIS, MR. AND MRS.
CLARENCE R.
JUDSON, MR. AND MRS. HENRY H.
KAHLE, W.J.
c.
w.
v.
w.
c.
LANGDON, MRS. A. H.
LAWRIE, MR. AND MRS.
WALTERH.
LYLE, MR. AND MRS. STANLEY D.
McEwAN, MRS. A. F.
McLAUGHLIN, FRANK
MCWHIRTER, MRS. E. J.
MEADOWCROFT, DR. AND
MRS. A.H.
MEALS, JOHN E.
MEISNEST, DARWIN
MEISNEST, MRS. DARWIN
MILLER, MR. AND MRS.
WINLOCKW.
NORTHWEST MoTOR Co., INC.
PARKER, SHIRLEY D.
PEACOCK, DR. ALEXANDER
PECK, MRS. CLARENCE I.
PETERSON, Miss EvA MARION
PIGOTT, MRS. PAUL
PRATT, FRANK J., JR.
REED, MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM G
REITZE, MR. AND MRS.
N.
RUPP, MR. AND MRS. 0. B.
SHAW, MRS.
N.
SHEMANSKI, MRS. ALFRED
SICK, MR. AND MRS. EMIL
SMITH, DR. EDw ARD LINCOLN
SMITH, MRS. EDw ARD LINCOLN
SOROPTIMIST CLUB OF SEATTLE
SPENCER, OLIVER
ST. CLAIR, W. H.
STIMSON,
STIMSON, MRS.
STIMSON, DOUGLAS
STIMSON, Miss ELEANOR
STIMSON, T. DAVID
STUART, MRS. CHARLES E.
TAYLOR, Miss DOROTHEA
TAYLOR, PROF. EDw. AYERS '
TAYLOR, MRS. F. M. P.
VILAS, MRS. L. M.
WETHERILL, MRS. A. M.
WHITE, MRS. F. H.
c.
J.
c.
c. w.
c. w.
Adams, Miss Henrietta M. Bogle, Mrs. Lawrence
Agen, Stuart
Bordeaux, Mrs. Thomas
Bourassa, Mrs. D. F.
Alexander, Mrs.
Brady, Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick W.
Hugh
Allen, Mr. and Mrs.
:!:Brandt, Miss Dorothy
Edward W.
Bremer, Mrs. William
Allen, Mr. and Mrs.
WilliamM.
Brennen, James J.
Allsop, Mr. and Mrs.
Bridge, Mrs. James L.
Broderick, Henry
John
Ambler, John
Brown, Mrs. Oswald
Ames, Mr. and Mrs.
Brownell, Mrs. Francis
Edgar
H.,Jr.
Arnold, Mr. and Mrs.
Bucey, Mr. and Mrs. G. H.
Lawrence M.
Burnaby, Mrs. Fred
Ashley, Mr. and Mrs.
Burroughs, Mrs.Benjamin
Paul P.
Buschmann, Mrs. August
Austin, Mrs. F. Clinton
Butterbaugh, Mrs.
Backus, LeRoy M.
Grant I.
Bailey, James M.
Cameron, Mr. and Mrs.
Bain, Mr. and Mrs.
W.P.
William].
Camfferman, Mr. and
Ballard, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Peter
Campbell, Mrs. H. Erskine
Carl
Campbell, Mrs. Roy
Banks, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry P.
Cannon, Mrs. John E.
Barnes, Miss Barbara
Carey, Mr. and Mrs.
Barnes, Mrs. Samuel L.
Hugh
Barto, Mr. and Mrs.
Carkeek, Mrs. Vivian
Joseph
Carlson, Mrs. Lawrence
Bass, Mrs. D. W.
Carlson, Mr. and Mrs.
Baxter, Miss Janette H.
Maxwell
Bayley, Mr. and Mrs.
Casey, George W.
E.P.
Chadwick, Mrs. Emma P.
Bayley, Mr. and Mrs.
Child, Miss Vera
Frank S.
Chism, Mrs. M. M.
Bedle, Mr. and Mrs.
Christoffersen, Mrs.
O.H.
.
Ira W.
Bell, Dr. and Mrs. Will
Clark, Mrs. Archie G., Jr.
Otto
Clark, Mr. and Mrs.
Bentley, Mrs. Frederick
Ernest D.
Berge, Dr. and Mrs.
Clarke, C. H.
James Ballard
Clein, Mrs. N. W.
Billingsley, Mrs.
Clise, Mr. and Mrs.
Harriet B.
Charles F.
Black, Miss Brownie
Clise, Mr. and Mrs.
. Ann
James W., Jr.
Black, Mr. and Mrs.
Coe, Dr. and Mrs.
Charles H.
Herbert E.
Black, Mrs. Clarence A.
Coffey, Mrs. Bertrum C.
Black, Mr. and Mrs.
Collins, Mrs. John
LymanH.
Collins, Mrs. Josiah
Blethen, Mrs. C. B.
Collins, Josiah, Jr.
Colman, Kenneth B.
Blethen, Mrs. Genevieve
Colman, Mrs. Susan L.
Boeing, Mrs. William E.
Condon, Mrs. H. T.
Cook, Mrs. Edward A.
Corbet, Mr. and Mrs.
Darrah
Coterie Club
Cragin, Mrs. Louis S.
Crounse, Miss Bertha
Lee
Danner, Mrs. Clayton
Davidson, Mrs. C. F.
Davis, Frederick E.
Davis, Geo. L. Interior
Decorating Co.
Denny, Mrs. Rolland H.
Dent, Mrs. Hawthorne K.
de Steiguer, Mrs.
George E.
Dobie, Miss Edith
Donahoe, Mrs. Walter A.
Donworth, Charles T.
Draham, Mrs. M. H.
Drumheller, Mrs. R. M.
Durand, Dr. and Mrs.
J.1.
Eddy, James G.
Edwards, Mrs. J. H.
Eggers, Mrs. August
Eldridge, Mrs. Arthur S.
Eldridge, Mrs. Eugene S.
Elementary Art
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30
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32
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Stedman, Mrs. L. B.
Steers, Andrew
Stern, Mrs. Harold G.
Stevens, Mrs. Edwin B.
Stewart, Mrs. Donald Dey
Stillman, Mrs. Allyn P.
Stoddard, Mrs. G. W.
Stone, Mrs. Anna B.
Storm, Mrs. J. R.
Streets, Miss Mary Lou
Strong, Miss Peggy
Sully, Mrs. Charles D.
Sumbardo, Mrs.
Martha K.
Swalwell, Mrs. W. H.
Swift, Miss Edith D.
Swift, Miss Lucy M.
Swift, Mrs. Paul K
Taber, Miss Josephine
Taliaferro, John
Taylor, Mrs. Frank G.
Tell wright, Mrs. F. D.
Tennant, Edmund G., Jr.
Terrell, Mrs. Mabel P.
Therrien, Mrs. Z. W .
Thomas, Mrs. Christy
Thomas, Harlan
Thompson, Mrs.
Charles W.
Thompson, Mrs.
Howard G.
Thompson, Mrs. Thomas
West
Thomson, Mrs. David
Thomson, Miss Marian
Thurber, Mrs. Philip L.
Timm, Mrs. H. L.
Titcomb, Mrs. F. R.
Titus, Mrs. J. Harvey
Tolmie, J. R.
Tompkins, Mrs. W.R.
Tongue, Mrs. Gordon
Towler, Mrs. H. H.
Truax, Mrs. Anna IC.
Turner, Miss Anna C.
Turtle, Mrs. Lewis
Tymstra, Mrs. Sybren R.
\Tan Arsdel, Mrs. Paul
van Dalen, Mrs. Pieter
33
Van Ogle, Mrs. Louise
Vaupel!, Mrs. L. J.
Vinal, Mrs. E. L.
vonBrevern, Dr. Maxim
Walker, Mrs. Cyrus
Walker, Miss Ruth
Walker, R. S.
Walsh, Mrs. Stuart P.
Warhanik, Mrs. C. A .
Warren, Mrs. Willard
Watkins, Mrs. H. M.
Watt, Mrs. Robert Denny
Webb, Mrs. Nell
Webber, Mrs. Carl
Weber, Mrs. R. P.
Webster, Mrs. Donald H.
W einzirl, Mrs. John
Wells, Mrs. Edward C.
Wells, Miss Mary Ann
Wells, Mrs. Max
Wheelon, Dr. Homer
Whitney, Mrs. W . T.
Wiestling, Mrs. Frank
Beecher
Wiggins, Mrs.
Myra Albert
Wightman, Mrs. Robert
Williams, Mrs. Clayton
Williams, Mrs. Frank P.
Williams, Mrs. R. T.
Willis, Mrs. Park Weed
Wills, Mrs. Charles S.
Wilson, Mrs. Worrall
Wilt, Mrs. F . T.
Wilton, Mrs. Aubrey
Winquist, Mrs. Eric H.
Witherspoon, Mrs.
Herbert
Withuhn, Mrs. \T. L.
Women Painters of
Washington
Women's Century Club,
Art Department,
Yakima, Wash.
Woods, Miss Eva J.
Woods, Mrs. Harvey J.
Woodward, Mrs. W. C.
Worman, Mrs.
Eugenie A.
Worth, Mrs. Harry I.
Wright, Mrs. L. R.
Wyckoff, Walter L.
Wyckoff, Mrs. Walter L.
Wynn, Mrs. H. Watkin
Yuile, Mrs. H. W.
�CLUB MEMBERS
Beta Chapter of Delta Gamma Sorority-One associate membership
Canadian Women's Club---One associate membership
Classic Culture Club-One associate membership
Coterie Club-One active membership
Elementary Art Teachers' Club-One active membership
Fairview P.-T. A.-One associate membership
John Marshall P.-T. A.-One associate membership
Junior League of Seattle-One active, one associate membership
Lambda Rho Art Honorary Alumni-One active membership
McDonald P.-T. A.-One associate membership
Montlake P.-T. A.-One associate membership
Pi Lambda Theta, Washington Alumni Chapter-One associate membership
Seattle Altrusa Club-One associate membership
Seattle Federation of Women's Clubs-One active membership
Seattle Sorosis Club, Art Department-One associate membership
Soroptimist Club of Seattle-One contributing membership
West Seattle Art Club---One active membership
West Side Women's Improvement Club-One active membership
Women Painters of Washington-Two associate memberships
Women's Century Club, Art Department, of YakimaOne associate membership
Women's City Club---One active membership
DONATIONS
Mrs. A. H. Anderson
Carnation Company
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Clise, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Claire Egtvedt
Frederick and Nelson
Metropolitan Building Company
Standard Oil Company of California
Elbridge Amos Stuart
34
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
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Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
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English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
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Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Young, Mrs. A. M. (Edith Thackwell), 1886-1978 | Meals, John E.
Coverage
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1939
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1939
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1939. Report includes text.
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application/pdf
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English
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Seattle Art Museum
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These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
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Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
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Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Thirty-fourth Year, 1939
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1939
Annual Report for the Year 1939
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1939
Type
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Text
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Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Children’s Story Hour
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Seattle Parent-Teacher Association
Seattle Park Department
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Study Guild
University of Washington
University of Washington - Department of Art
University of Washington - Department of Ethnology
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/18833/archive/files/2b55636bbf8fcb39f0dca43b28eca8c9.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=m3mxheLKuouQ9IrA8hKf31LPAMU-88ecnhSF29fqu1Ndyi-88xmy2-LCXurl3ry%7EcWdhn%7EdwjCtvGkkZxtJfGxZZ-uPofpvXEq62gsNXafAhSfVsZwFFi8ZNWWjs53MFsRygm93SnDVlXg9k60efajMdTYoMm9yauRBlnMuxU1TXWB7OV3ZIn8KiENpLS7MFHA-sdoUMaYBe-zEw1tWXcG0WsMDSgbAyrbBDV74a78cvVxrqRPpQYHgAMNiCfnCmbpZkmIR4cVDm-udphZUqZQ0lHSbmv5HTkdZVGd%7EY5DlyLHRl0KJYR-29w2vMJLESpik1RfzdMmeuPWvSBxZrPw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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PDF Text
Text
�nnnUHL REPORT
OF THE
. SEATTLE ART musEum
THIRTY-SEGono YEAR
193 7
I
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
�SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
1937-1938
MUSEUM STAFF
EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS
President, Richard E. Fuller
First Vice-President, Raymond G. Wright
Second Vice-President, Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons
Secretary, Horton C. Force
Treasurer, Joseph C. Black
EDUCATIONAL
Richard E. Fuller
Director
Mrs. A. M. Young
Educational Director
Kenneth Callahan
Curator
Nannette Tibbals
Librarian
Mrs. J. G. Liston
Secretary to the Director
INFORMATION AND MEMBERSHIP
TRUSTEES
Mrs. Coe V. Malone
Aileen Davidson, Assistant
TERM ENDING 19 3 8
Carl F. Gould
Mrs. F. H. Parks
Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons
Edward W. Allen
Horton C. Force
Mrs. Eugene Fuller
TERM ENDING 19 3 9
Mrs. A. S. Kerry
Frederick M. Padelford
Raymond G. Wright
Mrs. Cebert Baillargeon
J.C. Black
Nathan Eckstein
TERM ENDING 1940
Kenneth Colman
Richard E. Fuller
Mrs. Jesse Chas. Johnson
Charles E. Martin
Winlock Miller, Jr.
Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson
MUSEUM ASSISTANTS
Earl T. Fields
Barney D. Nestor
OFFICERS OF THE STUDY GUILD
Mrs. Lyman Tondel, Chairman
Mrs. Jesse Charles Johnson, Ex-Officio
Mrs. Bayley Willis, Program Chairman
Mrs. John Dallas Reagh, Docent Service
Mrs. Douglas Shelor, Membership
Mrs. Walter Wyckoff, Publicity
Mrs. Horace Winslow McCurdy, Secretary
EX-OFFICIO
Mayor of the City of Seattle
President of the City Council
President of the Park Board
Comptroller of the City of Seattle
President of the School Board of Seattle School District No. I
2
J
�REPORT OF THE
PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR
FOR THE YEAR 1937
THE PR.OGRESS and welfare of an art museum depends not only
on the standard and scope of its collections and on the extent to
which this material is made available for the enjoyment and
education of the public, but also on the success which the organization attains in creating and in holding both the interest and the
support of those whom it serves. In each of these three main
objectives, we can safely claim very definite achievements, even
though the word "support" bears financial implications. In fact ,
it is in this latter phase of our activity that the past year has been
most notable, thanks to the initiative and faithful services of the
Membership Committee, which made marked progress towards
the relief of this constant burden.
Civic Relations
There is no major change to report in regard either to the
building or to its equipment. In like manner , our routine relationship with the municipal authorities has been uneventful, and has
been marked only by increasing smoothness in our daily operation, thanks 'to the splendid cooperation of the Park Department.
We have also continued to have the faithful service of the Police
Department, although a change in the detail caused Officer Osborn to take the place of Officer Forlefer. On the other hand .
however, the electrical service for which our organization pays the
American District Telegraph Company to protect the building
and the collections at night against both fire and theft, has been
made more positive by improvements which were installed at
our expense. Although wear and tear are unavoidable with the
passage of years, the building and its equipment have been excellently maintained by our loyal and efficient engineering staff.
We are, however, planning for two major physical improvements in the coming summer. In the first place, we expect to have
the surface of the building treated with a waterproofing preservative, which for years has been used to protect most of the stone
public buildings of Great Britain. In doing so, we will, without
doubt, greatly increase the potential life of the building. The
other change is due to ~he need of additional movable racks on
which paintings are hung in our storeroom. These two projects
will not be noticeable in their ultimate effect, so far as the qdi
4
nary v1s1tor is concerned, although they will cause either some
temporary disfigurement of the building or some noise while they
are taking place. The fact , however, that is possibly most important to the city is that the expense will be borne by the donors
1
of the building.
Exhibitions
Realizing that it is quite impossible to have exhibitions that
would invariably please all tastes , we have continued to be extremely catholic in our selection. We have made a point of interspersing in our schedule each month material that is sufficiently
literal in its appeal to be enjoyed by the uninitiated.
I want you to realize that we consider many exhibits to be
worthy of interest as showing the progress of contemporary art,
even though the included items may fail to attain the rigorous
standard for which we strive in our permanent accessions. In spite
of our purpose of encouraging an appreciation of the best in art
without prejudice to any school, we have occasionally met the
criticism of those who have become incensed by the fact that we
did not confine our activities to the narrow scope of their own
interests.
Since transient exhibitions play such an important part in our
activities, I feel that our membership should have some knowledge
of the mechanism by which they are obtained. In the past, we
have often shown exhibitions that were sponsored by national
organizations, of which the College Art Association and the
American Federation of Arts were the most prominent. The individual galleries participating in a circuit were responsible for
transportation one way and insurance, in addition to a fee to
cover the cost of assembly. This year, the former of these national
organizations has ceased to function in that capacity, while the
latter has altered the scope of its activities to a marked extent.
This change has emphasized the importance of the Western Association of Art Museum Directors, so far as the museums and
galleries west of the Rocky Mountains are concerned.
For the past three years, the responsibility for that organization
has rested on the Seattle Art Museum. For two years, I was the
President. Now, Dr. Grace L. McCann Morley, of the San Francisco Museum of Art, has that office, but Mrs. J. G. Liston, my
secretary, remains as the Executive Secretary of the Association.
Previously this organization has endeavored to circuit exhibits
in competition with the various national organizations, but now
5
�it has developed into a clearing house for arranging exhibition
circuits with the specific purpose of planning the most efficient
itinerary. In doing so, the exhibition schedules of the various
organizations must be accommodated, and the material must
finally be delivered to its source, which may be a museum, a private collection, the studio of an artist, or a commercial gallery.
In each case, the expense of each move is recorded, and the final
figure is prorated among the organizations participating, so that
each gallery is responsible for an equal charge, while the Association is entitled to a small handling fee for the service. Thanks to
the conscientious service and the efficiency of Mrs. Liston, the
activities of this organization have grown from a single exhibition
to a point where they are almost national in scope, with over
seventy-five exhibitions in circuit, serving about fifty museums
and smaller galleries.
than the technical ability of an artist to attain a photographic
likeness. Since the renown of an artist depends on his ability to
achieve an individual quality in his painting, the originality recognized in a painting may, at times, be over-estimated, in the hope
that it will encourage some budding genius.
In our own exhibition schedule, we again had to depend largely
on our very extensive collection of facsimiles to represent the
classic art of the Occident, while many of our current exhibitions
stressed the work of some of the most noted of our contemporary
painters, both here and abroad. For three of these exhibitions, we
are indebted to commercial galleries. I wish to take this opportu nity of acknowledging our gratitude to the Walker Galleries of
New York for the paintings by Joe Jones; the Hatfield Galleries
of the same city for those of Russell Cowles, and the Courvoisier
Galleries of San Francisco for the lithographs of Stow Wengenroth.
As usual, the jury for the selection of this exhibition and for
the awards was chosen from professional ranks, and consisted of
Mr. Carl F. Gould, Chairman; Mr. Walter F. Isaacs, Professor of
Art at the University of Washington; Mrs. Halley Savery, Curator of the Henry Gallery on the campus of the University; Mr.
Frederick A. Sweet, Director of the Portland Art Museum; and
myself as ex-officio member.
Once again, we are indebted to the West Seattle Art Club for
their purchase prize of $100, in memory of Katherine B. Baker.
This prize was awarded to Angela S. Ryan, of Pullman, Washington, for her "Still Life." The second award in oil, of $50,
donated by our organization, was won by Earl Fields, for his
"Study Hour," while our first prize in watercolor, of $75, was
won by Pauline Johnson, of Ellensburg, for "The Red Apple."
The first award in sculpture, of $50, for which we must again
thank the Music and Art Foundation, was won by Mary
Erckenbrack Hennessy for "Strife."
Accessions
In the autumn, the Twenty-third Annual Exhibition of
Northwest Artists, as usual, emphasized the creative talent of our
local artists. The five galleries in the north wing, which we devoted to this exhibit, permitted the hanging of only about a
quarter of the items which were submitted. It is unavoidable that
the results should, therefore, bring disappointment to many.
Although the jury always endeavors to be catholic in its choice, it
unquestionably values the relationship of color and form more
Our most notable accession of the past year introduced the
Museum collection to a field which we, in the past, have been
forced to neglect, so far as original material is concerned. Through
the generosity of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, we received a
painting by Marco D'Oggiono, a pupil of Leonardo da Vinci. In
subject, it depicts the Madonna and Child with Infant St. John,
but what is most notable is the exceptional beauty attained in
the color and design of this Milanese painting, which has survived in most perfect condition since the beginning of the 16th
Century.
In Occidental art, we have also received a landscape by Derain,
the great French contemporary artist, done in a sketchy style in
oil; and two watercolor landscapes by Pechstein, the noted contemporary German expressionist. These items were added to the
Fuller Collection, as were also four paintings and two sculptures
which were purchased from local artists. In addition, we received
as a gift from Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons, a painting of a "Factory
Village," by Horace Brown. The Fuller Collection of prints was
augmented by eight items by contemporary artists.
6
7
We again enjoyed the annual exhibition of Northwest Printmakers, for whom we act as custodian for their purchase awards.
The competitive exhibition of arts and crafts, which was inaugurated in the previous year, did not bring forth sufficient material
to justify us in making it an annual event. Through the cooperation of the Seattle Branch of the National Early American Glass
Society, we had the privilege last spring of showing an excellent
collection of early American glass, which was generously lent by
local collectors.
�The Oriental collection was again strengthened by a number of
items of importance. Numerically, the most. extensive group consisted of Chinese jade, which ranged in age from near the close of
the Chou Dynasty (5th-3rd Century, B.C.) to the days of the
Imperial Court in the 18th Century. The individual pieces are
principally small items of exceptional quality, workmanship and
design. Possibly the most outstanding of those of later origin are
a pair of Imperial plates of grey-green jade, cut to incredible
thinness, and a pair of white jade bracelets, each carved as three
loosely twisted strands, that were intended to grace the hand of
an Empress. Of the earlier pieces, the largest and possibly the most
important is a strongly sculptured camel, of grey to brownish
stone, potentially justifying an attribution to the 8th Century,
although it may be considerably later.
Our pottery from the tombs of the T'ang Dynasty had some
additions of world importance. One of these was a large bullock
cart, glazed in color, showing how the foreign trader of the
8th or 9th Century brought his wares to China. Of about
the same period, a prancing horse, with the finest of trappings,
and a man with a brilliant blue coat, are both additions which I
consider unequalled in their respective classes.
Two other items from China deserve mention this year, and
each is alone in its class. We were fortunate in acquiring a large
fragment of bone decoration from a vessel of the Shang-Yin
Dynasty (18th-12th Century, B.C.). In low relief, this shows
the familiar motif of the so-called ogre's head. The other piece
represents our only accession of the year in Oriental sculpture,
outside of the realm of pottery. This graceful sandstone Bodhisattva, with its strong influence of India, is typical of one of the
finest phases of sculpture found in the 8th Century rock-hewn
cave temples of north central China. Since that isolated region is
extremely arid, the remarkable freshness of the piece is not incongruous. Although its origin may be difficult to prove, its authenticity has been fully accepted by some of the greatest authorities,
who consider it to be one of the most important known examples
of its class.
Additional Oriental accessions may seem pointless to some, and
to my mind, they would be, if they did not either fill historical
gaps in our collection or excel in quality. Although an appreciation of their message can rarely be attained by a casual glance, I
am sure that with prolonged familiarity, they will gradually
permit more and more of our visitors to grasp the scope of at least
some phases of the artistic heritage of the world.
We also acquired a few additional examples of antique Chinese
ceramics. From the viewpoint of the present-day connoisseur, the
most important item is a Sung Dynasty bowl of Honan ware, of
about the 12th Century, showing both the so-called tortoise shell
and hare's fur glaze of supreme quality. This piece was presented
by Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson. We were fortunate in being able
to continue the practice of exchanging items in our collection
when they were superseded in importance. With the very generous
cooperation of Yamanaka and Company of New York, we thus
acquired an exceptionally fine large painted pottery jar, dating
approximately from the end of the Han Dynasty, 2nd or 3rd
Century A.D., and an equally important bronze mirror of about
the same age. In addition, from other sources, we acquired several
early bronze mirrors and one exceptional circular bronze box
cover, showing in silver inlay, an elaborate and complex design
of the latter centuries of the Chou Dynasty (5th-3rd Century,
B.C.).
Our only two Oriental paintings consisted of a large Chinese
landscape, dating from about the beginning of the Ming Dynasty
in the 14th Century; and a Japanese painting of a hawk that can
be attributed with fair assurance to Oguri Sotan, a master of the
15th Century. Japan is also represented by a screen decorated with
an ink drawing of a tiger and bamboo.
During the past year, we have brought several lecturers of
national and international prominence to Seattle. The University
of Washington cooperated with us in granting us the use of
Meany Hall for a lecture by Rockwell Kent on "Art Is For Everybody," and also for one on "The Royal River," by Captain John
B. Noel. In the fall, the University also cooperated with us in
bringing to our city Dr. Alfred Salmony, the noted Orientalist.
Dr. Salmony gave the five initial lectures to our Study Guild in
their course on Persian Art, tracing the development of art motives
from pre-historic times to the days of Darius the Great. Dr. Salmony gave two Monday evening lectures and two on Sunday
afternoon on various phases of early Oriental Art. We also had
lectures by Dr. A . Philip McMahon, on "The Fundamentals of
Art Criticism," and by John Butler ort "Federal Participation in
8
9
The responsibility for the cataloguing which these accessions
demand, and the care of the collection fall s on the shoulders of
my Assistant Director, Mr. Kenneth Callahan. To confirm this
duty, in addition to his executive and literary services, Mr. Callahan now bears the appropriate title of Curator.
Lectures
I
�the Arts." The honorariums for these outside lecturers were
largely made possible by the Lecture Fund, which Mrs. Reginald
H. Parsons has so generously augmented from year to year. The
expenses for Dr. Salmony, however, were in part borne by
Museum funds.
The remaining eighteen public lectures at the Museum, aside
from those of the Study Guild, were shared by Mrs. A. M.
Young and myself. I am glad to say that our attendance was, for
the most part, most encouraging, although the Monday evening
lectures did not always have the full response for which we hoped.
Library
Last year, I mentioned that our Librarian, Miss Jean P. Black,
had left for a six months' leave of absence at the Hoover War
Memorial Library at Leland Stanford University. The further
extension of her research work caused us to confirm the appointment of Miss Nannette Tibbals as her successor. During the past
year, we have acquired by purchase and gift, nearly all the outstanding current publications on art, while our slides have been
augmented by over a thousand, most of which met the needs of
the various courses of the Study Guild. Our continually growing
collection of mounted reproductions is serving an even larger
number of schools and art organizations, who turn to us for
assistance. This service is not confined to Seattle, but has been
enjoyed by many communities throughout the state.
Education
Study Guild
Since the fiscal year of the Study Guild closes each spring at the
end of their program, it is my custom to review in my report
their current activities, even though the period covered does not
coincide with that of the year. Under the able and conscientious
chairmanship of Mrs. Lyman Tondel, the Guild has succeeded
in even excelling the fine standard which, in the past, has done
so much to extend the interest and influence of the Museum.
This year, the Program Committee, under the talented leadership of Mrs. Bayley Willis, presented five courses of study, offering in all, sixty-nine lectures, which were held in the Auditorium.
The Museum assumed the responsibility for the Survey of Persian
Art. The five initial lectures in this course were delivered, as
previously mentioned, by Dr. Alfred Salmony, while Mrs. Young
' and I are presenting the others. The other courses of the year, on
Gothic Art, Japanese Prints, Glass and American Paintings are
respectively under the guidance of Mrs. Donald Cornu, Mrs.
Benjamin Reed, Mrs. Walter Johnson and Mrs. Perry Johanson.
Although some of the lectures for these courses are delivered by
gifted members of the Guild, most of them are generously contributed by some of Seattle's leading authorities on various subjects.
I wish to express our appreciation, not only of the speakers,
but especially of the faithful services of the officers and the committee leaders of these courses. The increasing popularity which
the lectures have encountered this year testifies to the success of
the administration. The Study Guild, through these courses and
through the Docent Committee, render invaluable assistance in
making the Museum a vital factor.
The accompanying report of the Educational Department testifies to accomplishments of which an extensive staff could well
be proud. The results are almost superhuman, when one realizes
that they have been attained almost single-handed by Mrs. Young.
Her initiative and ability in this pioneer work have permitted her
to open a new vista to many of the schools and cultural organizations throughout the Northwest. In her fine eaucational work,
she is able to bring to the public a physical picture of many phases
of art and history through slides and moving pictures. The constant demands for her time speak eloquently of her success in
delivering her message and in increasing the interest in our work.
To coincide more nearly with the scope of her duties and with
popular usage, Mrs. Young's title has been changed from that of
Supervisor of Education to Educational Director.
In the spring, our membership committee, under the chairmanship of Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson, organized a quiet campaign to
increase our membership. With the assistance of Miss Margaret
Prosser, they were successful in raising our membership during
the course of the year from 7 00 to 115 9. One change in the policy
had a bearing on this success; namely, that we decided to abandon
our previous policy of demanding a scholastic qualification for the
Associate membership. In spite of that change, however, our
Active membership list was increased by nearly fifty per cent. I
wish to take this opportunity of thanking those members who so
generously contributed of their time and energy in the success of
JO
II
Membership
�this campaign. I especially wish to give my thanks to Mrs.
Thomas D. Stimson and to Mr. J. C. Black for bearing the
financial expenses incurred by this activity. To popularize an
interest in the Museum and its activities, the Membership Committee published three copies of the "Membership News," under
the experienced editorial guidance of Miss Prosser, with Mrs. Jesse
Charles Johnson and Mrs. Harvey Lantz as Associate Editors. I
am confident that this fine effort on the part of our friends did
much to acquaint the city with our work, and that it attained
a result which will be permanently reflected in the support and
interest which our organization receives from the community.
The gratifying success of our organization during the past year
has depended, as it always will, on a community of effort. Aside
from the invaluable assistance of the Study Guild and the Membership Committee, I wish to acknowledge my deep gratitude to
my fellow members of the staff for their initiative and loyalty.
Thanks are also due to our faithful friends of the local press for
their cooperation, which plays an essential part in assisting our
organization to pay dividends in terms of service to Seattle.
Although I hope that many of our members feel themselves to be
amply repaid, I wish to express my appreciation of the publicspirited generosity that has caused them to put their shoulders to
the wheel in behalf of the Museum. In spite of the clouds which
beset the world, I trust that we may count on their continued
support.
In closing, I wish to express both personally and in behalf of
the Board of Trustees, our deep regret at the death of two of our
esteemed members, Mr. A . S. Downey and Mr. D. E. Frederick.
The place of these faithful friends has been taken by Mrs. Cebert
Baillargeon and Mr. Kenneth B. Colman.
REPORT OF THE
EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT
JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1937
To THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND MEMBERS OF THE
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM:
In bringing this report before the Annual Meeting, I feel that
it is necessary to outline the work that this department is attempting. There are certain duties that are the functions of all educational departments in every museum--docent or gallery tours to
adults and to school children, lectures in the museum and children's story hours. Through the very valuable assistance of the
Docent Group of the Study Guild, under the chairmanship of
Mrs. John Dallas Reagh, school children have been taken through
the Museum on an average of four afternoons a week. Frequently,
two or more guides have been on duty at a time, conducting
· Seventh and Eighth Grade children, who this year have numbered
over 3300. I am glad to express my most grateful acknowledgment to the Docent Group, which consisted of Mrs. Donald
Cornu, Mrs. Everett E . Crane, Miss Catherine Evans, Mrs. A .
E. Hennessy, Mrs. Ofell Johnson, Mrs. Charles E . Martin, Mrs.
Charles R. Matthews, Mrs. Freeman C. Scharr, Mrs. Willard E .
Skeel, Mrs. Elizabeth Smithson, Mrs. Norma Stuchell, Mrs.
Pieter van Dalen, Mrs. W. D . Vanderbilt and Mrs. Girvin B.
Wait. The enthusiasm and willingness which t.hese members of
the Stuay Guild have shown in their service has been an inspiration to all who have come in contact with them. Too much
emphasis cannot be put on the value of these tours to the school
system, for children and parents alike share the benefit. One has
only to be reminded that five years ago there was no such service,
and the thousands of children had little or no contact with the
art education that is now so beautifully presented to them.
The winter schedule of Sunday lectures was shared with Dr.
Richard E. Fuller in the early part of the year, and with Dr.
Alfred Salmony in November and December. The Children's
Story Hour begins in October and continues through May for the
entire school year. It is held every Saturday morning from 10: 00
to 11 :00. The attendance varies with the weather, from sixty to
one hundred and fifty children. Moving pictures and slides illustrating the fine arts are used, stories are told, and this fall we
introduced drawing. On some mornings, colored crayons and
paper are given each child to draw some object in the galleries or
illustrate a story told. No instruction is given; it is purely creative
12
13
�work. We hope some day to have an exhibition of these drawings.
On the second Tllursday of the month, members from the
many Parent-Teacher Associations meet for an hour's lecture
followed by a gallery tour, when the current monthly exhibit is
discussed. We have broken all records this year by having every
seat filled and people standing. It is always free and open to the
public. The Museum has been giving prizes of framed reproductions to those schools who have had the largest number of parents
present. This last year, Gatewood School, on the South Side, won
first prize; with Bryant, Ballard High, Roosevelt High, James
Madison Junior High and John Marshall Junior High following.
Last spring, Radio talks were given every week over KXA, and,
since October, they have been given over KJR. Many phases of
art are discussed from the current exhibits, arts and crafts, hobbies
in art and the lives of famous artists.
museums and art galleries in San Francisco, Los Angeles and San
Diego, to Kansas City, St. Louis, Detroit, Cleveland, Boston,
New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Williamsburg, whe.re I
visited the work of reconstruction by the Rockefeller Foundation;
Pittsburgh, Toledo, Chicago and Minneapolis. I talked with the
Directors of Education in the museums where they have such
departments, and with the Directors of the Museums regarding
their work with the public, such as membership, lectures and
docent. It has been a source of extreme gratification to find that
only the museums having a large staff and ample appropriations
are attempting the volume of educational work that this Museum
sponsors.
Respectfully submitted,
MRS. A. M. YOUNG,
Educational Director.
As State Chairman of Art for the Federation of Women's
Clubs, I have arranged a number of exhibitions of Washington
artists' work throughout the state. This work promises to be
most worthwhile and reaches many districts that have no other
opportunity to see exhibits or to visit the Museum. In conjunction
with this office, I was asked to take charge of National Art Week
for the State and had many exhibits placed in stores and schools.
Art programs have been prepared for clubs, and such assistance
given as was possible to make their courses of study worth while.
I attended the Annual Convention in Wenatchee, where I was
one of the speakers, and took an exhibit of Seattle school children's work and paintings by the Women Painters of Washington, which were on display all that week.
In summing up the various lectures given this past year, one
· hundred seventy-six were given outside of the Museum, and
thirty-eight of these were out of the city, nineteen were in the
evening, and eighty-six in schools. Twenty-four radio talks were
given, eleven Study Guild lectures, thirty-four Story Hours for
children, nine Sunday lectures, three Monday evening lectures and
eight Parent-Teacher lectures, with forty-eight special talks in the
Museum to clubs·; making a total of three hundred and thirteen.
Most of these talks were illustrated with slides or moving pictures
from the Museum collection.
Under the auspices of the Museum, I took a seven weeks' tour,
visiting most of the lar~e museums in the country. I went south
through California to the Portland Art Museum, the different
14
15
�FINANCIAL
LECTURES
January 17
January H
January 29
January 31
February 7
February 14
February 21
February 28
March 7
March 14 .
March 19 .
March 21 .
March 28 .
April 5
April 9
April 12
April 19
April 26
May 3
.
May 10
June 7 •
July 26
November 8 •
·November 14
"
November 21
November 28
November 29
December 5 •
December 1 2
"Jade," by Richard E. Fuller
"Ancient Arms and Armor,'' by Mrs. A. M. Young
"Art of Siberia and Its Influence on the East and West," by Dr. Alfred
Salmony
"Recent Oriental Accessions of the Museum,u by Richard E. Fuller
"Colonial Spinning and Weaving,, b M
A M y
{ "The Art o~ the Silversmith"
Y rs . ·
· oung
"A Trip to Japan," by Richard E. Fuller
"The Art of Glass Blowing," by Mrs. A. M. Young
"Paintings of the Italian Renaissance," by Richard E. Fuller
"Paul Gauguin, the Calm Madman," by Mrs. A. M. Young
"The Ideals of Chinese Painting," by Richard E. Fuller
"Art Is For Everybody," by Rockwell Kent
"How a Medal Is Made," by Mrs. A. M. Young
"The Ideals of Japanese Painting," by Richard E. Fuller
"The Classic Art of the Great Feudal Period of China, I Bth to 3rd Centurv.
B. C.," by Richard E. Fuller
"The Royal River," by Captain John B. Noel
"Frescoes; The Technf9ue of Mural Pa intings and Its Masterpieces of the Past
and Present.'' by Mrs. A. M. Young
"The Imperial and Spiritual Growth of China as Reflected in Its Art-3rd
Century B.C. to I 0th Century A .D.," by Richard E. Fuller
"The Graphic Arts-Lithographs. Etchings, Block Prints-How They Ar. .
Both Made and Recognized," by Mrs. A. M. Young
"The Idealism of the Sung Dynasty and I ts Influence on the Subsequent Decorative Arts, 10th to 19th Century," by Richard E. Fuller
"How the Sculptor Works in Wax, Bronze and Stone," by Mrs. A. M. Young
"The Fundamentafs of Art Criticism," by Dr. A. Philip McMahon
°Federal Participation in the Arts," by John Butler
"Early Art of the Near East," by Dr. Alfred Salmony
uAmerican Sculpture: Bronze and Stone," by Mrs. A. M. Young
"Th• Beginnings of the Art of India," by Dr. Alfred Salmony
"History of Wood Engraving," by Mrs . A. M . Young
"Carved Jades of Ancient China," by Dr. Alfred Salmony
''Early Chinese Bronze," by Dr. Alfred Salmony
"Madonna Pafotings of the Italian Renaissance, 0 by Mrs. A. M. Young:
I
REPORT
I
AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATE
I have examined the accounts of the
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
for the calendar year 19 3 7, and in my opinion the attached State~
ment of Cash Receipts and Disbursements and General Fund
Balance Sheet correctly. set forth the operations of the Museum
d-1:1ring the year and its financial condition December 3 1. 19 3 7.
JOHN E. MEALS,
Certified Public Accountant.
1·
'
l
16
17
�SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
ST A TEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND
DISBURSEMENTS
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
GENERAL FUND BALANCE SHEET
December 31, 1937
Calendar Year 19 3 7
Assets
Receipts
Cash on hand and in banks, subject to check________
_____________
_______
Deposits in savings accounts ----------------------------------------------------
$
633 .80
4,321.85
Total --------------------------------------------------------------------
4 ,9 55 .65
Investment, U. S. Treasury notes-3 ~s 1940, at cost ___________ _
5,039 .85
337.50
Interest receivable ----------------------------------"--------------------------------Furniture and fixtures :
Classes ----------------------------------------------------------
2 , 312. 61
4 , 23 7. 71
5, 3 20 . 7 6
103. 5 5
21.045 . 10
23,683.07
4,770.59
Slides ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2, 4 1 2. 9 3
Exhibition material ----------------------------------------------------------------
8, 9 8 9. 94
Total Assets ----------------------------------------------------------
$ 5 0, l 8 9. 5 3
Liabilities and Surplus
Lecture and Slide Fund ----------------------------------------------------------
$ 8 ,5 0 0 . 00
428.75
Over operating expenses
Total Receipts
26,794 .10
18,848 .7 8
Permanent additions, equipment :
Office ----------------------------------------
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
15 9.48
132.00
456.48
Library _________ --------------------------------------------S1id es -------------------------------------------------------E xh ibi ti on material ------------------------------------
$21.3 82 .60
18,848 .78
2 ,533.82
1.000.00
128 . 17
Disbursements
Operating expenses:
Administration __________________________ $5, 5 5 9. 3 0
Education ---------------------------------- 2, 9 72 . 7 0
Library --------------------------------- ____ l, 5 2 9. 0 6
Memberships ------------------------------ 2, 5 2 6. 7 0
Exhibition -------------------------------- 6 ,261 .02
t:~;~~:
General Fund :
Balance, January I. 193 7 _ ____________________________ $3 8, 726. 9 6
_
Excess of receipts, accruals
Memberships$ 5. 0 0 __
_____________________________________________ $ 3 , 110.0 0
_
$ 1 0. 0 0 ------------------------------------------------ 4 ,620.00
1.862.50
$ 2 5. 00 -----------------------------------------------$1 0 0. 0 0 ------------------------------------------------ 2,000.00
Additions to funds:
Founders' Fund -------------------------------------------------------------Lecture fund ------------------------------------------------------------------
Library -------------------------------------------------------------,------------------
F ounders' Endowment Fund -------------------------------------------------
$ 4 , 6 20 . 8 3
11.592.50
Gifts Total ___ _ ___
_______memberships ------------------------------_ 8,225.00
_ __________________________________________
902.00
Gate receipts ----------------------------------------------Int erest ----------_____________________________________________ _
107. 18
218.42
Miscellaneous ----------------------------------------------
Gallery -------------------------------------------------------- $1 0, 8 3 4. 5 5
Off ice --------------------------------··----------------------8 73 .8 9
Library -------------------------------------------------------Lecture -------------------------------------------------------Storage --------------------------------------------------------
Balance on hand January I. 19 3 7 -----------------------------------------Operating Receipts:
747.96
592 .75
702.75
946.21
41.260 .78
Total Liabilities and Surplus ----------------------------------
18
Total Disbursements __________ ------------------------------------
21.838.45
$50.189.53
Balance on hand December 3 I. 193 7 ___________________
___________________
$ 4,95 5 .65
19
�SCHEDULE OF EXHIBITIONS
FOR THE YEAR 1937
IN ADDITION TO THE PERMANENT
ORIENTAL COLLECTION
January 13-February 7
Recent Accessions to the Oriental Collection t
Paintings by Joe Jones (Walker Galleries)
Paintings by James Couper Wright*
Prints "From Cezanne" (C.A.A.)
Living American Art (facsimiles)
Paintings by Andrew McD. Vincent*
Drawings and Paintings by Degas (facsimiles) t
Art Work by Students of the California School of Fine Arts*
February 10-March 7
Presentation of "Madonna and Child with Infant St. John," by Marco
D'Oggiono (Gift of Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York)
"Impressions of Iceland," paintings by Emile Walters*
Paintings by Russell Cowles (Hatfield Galleries)
Sketches of Early American Architecture by Milton S. Osborne*
French Posters (M.M.A.)
Clarence A. Black Memorial Collection of American Paintingst
Paintings by William Fortune Ryan*
Drawings by Italian Masters (facsimiles) t
Sculpture and Painting by Students of Alexander Archipenko*
March 10-April 4
"Genre Painting-16th to 20th Century" (C.A.A.)
Ninth Annual Exhibition pf Northwest Printmakers*
Paintings by David McCosh*
English Paintings from the 17th to the 20th Century (facsimiles) t
Living American Art (facsimiles)
Bush School Designs*
April 7-May 9
Japanese Hair Ornaments and Toilet Accessories, from the Collection of
Baron lno Dan
Crastsmen of India, from the paintings of "Vanishing India," by Hubert
J. Stowitts*
Exhibition of Arts and Crafts*
Etchings and Lithographs by James McNeill Whistler (C.A.A.)
Exhibition of Typographical Art (Lent by Frank McCaffrey)
Prints by Stow Wengenroth (Courvoisier Galleries)
Paintings by Lorna Lowry*
Lesser French P_ainters of the 19th and 20th Century (facsimiles) t
May 12-June 6
"A Decade in American Watercolors" (C.A.A.)
"The Mask Makers" (C.A.A.)
Wood Engravings by Winslow Homer (Blanche Byerley)
Paintings by William Givler*
Paintings by Washington and Oregon Artists, from the American Artists'
Congress Regional Exhibition*
Paintings by Emil Rizek*
Work by Art Students of Whitman College•
20
June 9-July 11
"The Trend in Easel Painting" (C.A.A.)
Watercolors by Five Denver Artists (W.A.A.M.D.)
American Coverlets, from the Collection of Mrs. Agnes McDonaldt
Early American Glass (Lent by local collectors)
Manson F. Backus Memorial Collection of Etchings by Masters (First of
a series of three) t
Group Show of Seattle Artists (First of a series of three) t
Contemporary American Prints (First of a series of three) t
Paintings by Dutch Masters (facsimiles) t
J uly 14-August 15
Fifth Annual Exhibition of American Ceramics (Robineau Memorial)
(W.A.A.M.D.)
Watercolors by Eliot O'Hara (W.A.A.M.D.)
Modern Hungarian Painting (C.A.A.)
Prints by John Butler*
Manson F. Backus Memorial Collection of Etchings by Masters (Second
of a series of three) t
Group Show of Seattle Artists (Second of a series of three) t
Contemporary American Prints (Second of a series of three) t
Paintings by Modern German Artists (facsimiles) t
August 18-September 2 6
Paintings from the Pennsylvania Academy Exhibition (A.F.A.)
Contemporary Watercolors (Lent largely by Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons)
Contemporary American Paintingst
Photographs by Fritz Henle*
Manson F. Backus Memorial Collection of Etchings by Masters (Last of
a series of three) t
Group Show of Seattle Artists (Last of a series of three) t
Contemporary American Prints (Last of a series of three) t
Work by Students of the Department of Art. University of Washington*
September 29-0ctober 31
Twenty-third Annual Exhibition of Northwest Artists*
Prints from the Permanent Collection of the Northwest Printmakerst
Women Painters of Washington*
November 3-December 5
Paintings by Lyonel Feininger (W.A.A.M.D.)
Sawkill Painters (W.A.A.M.D.)
Sculpture by Virginia and Dudley Pratt*
Portraits in Classic Style (facsimiles) t
Portrait of Dr. Mark A. Matthews, by Neale Ordayne*
Paintings by Students of Seattle Grade Schools*
Three Art Notebooks by Students of St. Nicholas School*
December 8-January 9, 1938
"Artists West of the Mississippi" (W.A.A.M.D.)
Madonna Paintings of the Renaissance (facsimiles) t
The Masters as Humanitarians (prints) t
Viennese School Children's Art Work (W.A.A.M.D.)
Sculpture by Seattle School Children*
Paintings by Walter F. Isaacs*
A.F.A.-Circulated by the America~ Federation of Arts
C.A.A.-Circulated by the College Art Association
W.A.A.M.D.-Circulated by the Western Association of Art Museum Directors
*-Lent by the artist
t-Museum Collection
21
�CLASSES OF MEMBERSHIP
MEMBERS OF THE
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
BENEFACTORS are those who have paid in dues or contributions a total of at least Fifty Thousand Dollars.
BENEFACTORS
ASSOCIATE BENEFACTORS are those who have paid in
dues or contributions a total of at least Twenty-five Thousand
Dollars.
PATRONS are those who have paid in dues or contributions a
total of at least Five Thousand Dollars.
BACKUS, * M. F.
ENDOWMENT MEMBERS are those who have contributed to
the endowment fund of the Museum at least One Thousand
Dollars.
ATWOOD, MRS. J.C .. JR.
LIFE MEMBERS are those who have paid in dues or contributions a total of Five Hundred Dollars.
FULLER, RICHARD E.
FULLER, MRS. EUGENE
ANDERSON, MRS. A. H .
HENRY,* H. C.
MCEWAN, MRS. A. F.
HONORARY MEMBERS are those whose services, position or
gifts have merited election by the Board of Trustees.
FOR THE SUPPORT OF ITS VARIED ACTIVITIES,
THE MUSEUM DEPENDS CHIEFLY ON THE FAITHFUL ANNUAL MEMBERS.
SUSTAINING MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of
One Hundred Dollars.
CONTRIBUTING MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues
of Twenty-five Dollars.
ACTIVE MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of Ten
Dollars.
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS are those who pay annual dues of
Five Dollars.
ASSOCIATE BENEFACTORS
BLACK,* CLARENCE A .
PATRONS
MORRISON, MRS. ROBERT D.
ENDOWMENT MEMBERS
PARSONS, REGINALD H.
PARSONS, MRS . REGINALD H .
STIMSON, MRS. THOMAS D .
HONORARY MEMBERS
FIELD, HEMAN
GOULD, CARL F.
McDONALD, MRS. AGNES
MIYA, MATAICHI
MOORE, ROLAND
TANAKA, KICHIJIRO
LIFE MEMBERS
BAILLARGEON, CEBERT
MERRILL, R. D.
BLACK, J . C.
RHODES, MRS. ALBERT J.
CAMPBELL, Roy E.
STIMSON,* MRS. C. D.
MCEWAN, MRS. W. H.
VAN WINTER, MRS. H.
WRIGHT, RAYMOND G.
ARTIST LIFE MEMBERS
EAKINS, MAX
FISCHER, GEORGE
NOMURA, KENJIRO
NORLING, ERNEST
TOKITA, KAMEKICHI
WICKS, REN
ZIEGLER, EUSTACE P.
SUSTAINING MEMBERS
AGEN, MRS . JOHN B.
22
ATWOOD, MRS. J . C., JR.
23
�GARRETT, MR. AND MRS. E . I.
JOHNSON, PHILIP
KREIELSHEIMER, LEO T .
OSTRANDER, MRS. HARRY F.
SKINNER, MRS. D. E.
STIMSON, MISS FRANCES ANN
STRONG, MR. AND MRS.
HENRYC.
WRIGHT, RAYMOND G .
BAILLARGEON, MRS. CEBERT
BLACK, MRS. J. C.
BLACK, MR. AND MRS . LEO S.
BLACK, MRS. NETTIE G.
BULLITT, MRS. A. SCOTT
DUFFY, MRS. GILBERT L.
FREDERICK, MRS. D. E.
FREDERICK AND NELSON
*Deceased
CONTRIBUTING MEMBERS
AGEN, MRS. JOHN B.
BALLARD, MR. AND MRS. Roy
PAGE
BALLINGER, J. H .
BALLINGER, MRS. J. H .
BAILLARGEON, JOHN
BLACK, MRS. FRANK DEWITT
BLACK, MRS. HAROLD C.
BURDON, DR. MINNIE B.
CALVERT, MRS . WILLIAM
CLAPP, M RS. JAMES N.
CLARK, MRS. ERNEST D.
CLARKE, CASPER W .
COLMAN, MRS . LAURENCE J.
CORBET, MR. AND MRS.
DARRAH
CRON, HANS
DICKEY, MR. AND MRS . U. M.
DONWORTH, JUDGE GEORGE
ECKSTEIN, MISS JOANNA
ECKSTEIN, NATHAN
ECKSTEIN, MRS. NATHAN
EDRIS, WILLIAM
FERRIER, DR. W. I.
FISHER, MRS. 0. D.
FRYE, LOUISA C., INC.
GALLAGHER, MR. AND MRS.
JAMES 0.
GARDNER, MRS. FRANK P .
GOWEN, DR. H . H .
GREEN, H. L.
GREEN, MR. AND MRS . JOSHUA
HENRY, MRS. LANGDON C.
HENRY, MRS . PAUL
HOLMAN, FRANKE.
IGOE, MISS HELEN
IMPERIAL CANDY COMPANY
INNIS, MR. AND MRS.
CLARENCE R.
JUDSON, MR. AND MRS .
HENRY H.
KAHLE, W. J .
KENT, MRS. H. W.
KERRY, MRS , A. S .
LAMSON, DR. AND MRS. OTIS
FLOYD
LANGDON, MRS. A. H .
LYLE, MR. AND MRS . STANLEY
D.
I. MAGNIN AND COMPANY
MCEWAN, MRS. A. F .
McLAUGHLIN, FRANK
24
MCWHIRTER, MRS. E . J .
REITZE, MR. AND MRS. C. N.
MEADOWCROFT, DR. AND
RUPP, MR. AND MRS. 0 . B .
MRS . A.H.
SHAW, MRS. J. N.
MEALS, JOHN E .
SHEMANSKI, MRS. ALFRED
MEISNEST, DARWIN
SICK, MR. AND MRS. EMIL
MEISNEST, MRS. DARWIN
SMITH, DR. EDWARD LINCOLN
MERRILL, MRS. R. D.
SMITH, MRS. EDWARD LINCOLN
MILLER, MR. AND MRS .
SPENCER, OLIVER C.
WINLOCKW.
ST. CLAIR, W . H.
NOR.GORE, DR. AND MRS .
STIMSON, C. W .
MARTIN
STIMSON, MRS. C. W .
PAUL , MRS. CHARLES ALLEN STRUVE, FREDERIC K.
PEACOCK, DR. ALEXANDER
STRUVE, MRS. FREDERIC K .
PECK, MRS. CLARENCE I.
STUART, MRS . CHARLES E .
PRATT, FRANK J., JR.
TAYLOR, PROF . EDW. AYERS
PRICE, MRS. ANDREW
TAYLOR, MRS. F. M . P.
REED, MR. AND MRS.
VILAS, MRS. L. M .
WILLIAM G .
WETHERILL, MRS. A . M.
WHITE, MRS. F . H.
ACTIVE MEMBERS
Adams, Miss Henrietta M .
Agen, Stuart
Akers, Mr. and Mrs.
A . W.,Jr.
A lexander, Mrs .
Frederick W.
A llen, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward W .
Allen, Mr. and Mrs.
Will iam M .
Allsop, Mr. and Mrs. John
Altnow, Mrs. G. G .
Ames, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
A ndreassen, Mrs. Margaret
Argue, Mrs. J.E.
Ashley, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul P.
Barnes, Miss Barbara
Barnes , Mrs. Samuel L.
Barr, Mrs. Eric
Barto, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Bass, Mrs. D. W .
Baxter, Miss Janette H .
Bayless, Mr. and Mrs.
Owen G.
Bayley, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank S.
Bayly, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Beal. Miss Eleanor
Becket, Mr. an:d Mrs.
Hugh M.
Bedle, Mr. and Mrs. Ira W .
Bell , Dr. and Mrs. Will
Otto
Belt, Mrs. H. C .
Backus, LeRoy M .
Bentley, Mrs. Frederick
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs.
Berge, Dr. and Mrs. James
Arthur
Ballard
Baker, Mrs. F . W.
Billingsley, Mrs.
Ball, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Harriet B.
Banks, Mr. and Mrs.
Birch, Col. and Mrs . J .
Harry P.
Vinton
25
Black, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H .
Black, Mrs. Clarence A.
Black, Mr. and Mrs.
LymanH.
Blanc, Charles J. E .
Blethen, Mrs. C. B.
Blethen, M rs. Genevieve
Boeing, Mrs. William E .
Bogle, Mrs . Lawrence
Bordeaux, Mrs. Thomas
Bourassa, Mrs. D . F .
Bowen, Mrs. David
Braddy, Lt . and Mrs.
R . E ., Jr.
Bradford, Mrs. A . H .
Bradner, Mrs. C. G .
Brady, Mr. and Mrs . Hugh
tBrandt, M iss Dorothy
Bremer, Mrs. William
Brennan, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward
Bridge, Mrs. James L.
Brookbank, Dr. and M rs .
E . B.
I'
!
�:j:Flood, Miss Catherine
-Forbes, Dr. and Mrs. R . D .
Force, Horton C.
Force, Mrs. Horton C .
Ford, Mr. and M rs.
SherwoodD.
Forkner, Mrs. Joseph R .
Forkner, Mrs. Willard E.
Forsyth, Mrs. Lydia E .
David, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
Davidson, Mrs. C. F.
James E.
Davis, Frederick E.
Frazier, C. R.
Denny, Mr. and Mrs.
Frazier, Raymond G .
Rolland H .
Frein, Mr. and Mrs. P. J .
Cameron, Basil
Dent, Mrs. Hawthorne K. Friele, Mrs. Haakon B.
Cameron, Mrs. Francis
Depue, Morgan ~Co ., Inc. Frye, Charles H.
Cameron, Mr. and Mrs.
de Steiguer, Mrs. George E. Fukuda, Mr. and Mrs. S.
W.P.
Dix, I. F.
Camfferman, Peter
Dobie, Miss Edith
Gaither, Mrs. W. N.
Campbell, Mrs. H. Erskine Donahoe, Mrs. Walter A. Gates, Cassius E .
Carey, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Donworth, Charles T.
Gilman, Mrs. Eva Stinson
Carkeek, Mrs. Vivian
Douglas, Mr. and Mrs.
Gleed, Mr. and Mrs.
Carlisle, Mrs. William
J. F.
ThomasF.
Armitage
Draham, Mrs. M. H.
Glen, Mr. and Mrs.
Carlson, Miss June
Drumheller, Mrs. R. M.
Harold V .
Carlson, Mrs. Lawrence
Durand, Dr. and Mrs. J. I. Godsave, Mr. and Mrs. A. V .
Carlson, Mr. and Mrs.
Earle, Dr. Frances M.
Gould, Carl F., Jr.
Maxwell
Gould, Mrs. Carl F.
Carman, Mrs. N . M.
Earling, Mrs. Herman B.
M
H H
Eddy, James G .
Gowen, rs. · ·
Casey, George W.
Grammer, Mrs. E. S.
Caverno, Miss Cora
Ed ward s, M rs. J · H ·
Greathouse, Mrs. Walser S.
Chadwick, Mrs. Emma P . Eldridge, Mrs. Arthur S.
Green, Mrs. Thomas M .
Child, Miss Vera
Elementary Art Teachers' Greene, Mrs. Fred
Chism, Mrs. M. M.
Club
Remington
Christoffersen, Mrs. 0 . H. Elliott, Mrs. Esther C.
Elmer, M iss Maud
Greene, William Kimball
Clark, Mrs. Archibald
•
Greenwood, George H .
Guthrie, Jr.
El v1'd ge, M rs. F ord Q .
G
d M G
H
E 1 M
dM All B
reenwoo , rs. eorge .
Clarke, C. H.
ng ~· r. an
rs.
en · Greer, Robert P .
Clein, Mrs. N. W .
Erskme, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Greer, Mrs. Robert P.
Clemen, Dr. and Mrs.
Griffin, Prof. and Mrs.
Fales, Mr. and Mrs.
Rudolf A.
Eldon
Gilbert R .
Clemen, Mrs. V. A.
Griggs, Mrs. Herbert S.
Fay. Mrs. George Frances
Clise, Mr. and Mrs.
and Miss Ida May Meserve Gustison, Mr. and Mrs .
Charles F.
V.E.
Fetter, Mrs. Harvey J.
Clise, Mr. and Mrs.
Fick, Mrs. Edward P.
James W., Jr.
Hamlin, Mrs. W. G.
Fiedler, Hugh B.
Coats, Mrs. Emma W.
Handley, Miss Agnes G.
Finch, Col. and Mrs.
Coffey, Mrs. B. C.
Handley, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry A .
Collins, Mrs. John
George N., Jr.
Fischer, Mr. and Mrs.
Collins, Mrs. Josiah
Hansen, Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick T.
Collins, Josiah, Jr.
Frederic A.
Fisher, D.R.
Colman, Mr. and Mrs.
Hardgrove, George P.
Fisher, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth B.
Harley, Mr. and Mrs. C. S.
Frederick V.
Colwell, Mrs. J. I.
Fisher, Mrs. 0. W.
Harper, Paul C.
Coman, Mrs. W. E .
Fisher, Mrs. Will P.
Harrah, Mr. and Mrs
Comstock, George K.
Flint, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Edward
Condon, Mrs. H. T.
Broderick, Henry
Brown, Miss S. Elizabeth
Brownell, Mrs. Francis H.,
Jr.
Bucey, Mr. and Mrs. G . H .
Burnaby, Mrs. Fred
Burnett, Mrs. Charles P.,
Jr.
Burns, Mrs. Frank
:j:Buselle, E. R.
Butler, Mr. and Mrs.
PaulB.
Butterbaugh, Mrs. Grant I.
Conover, Mr. and Mrs.
C. T.
Cook, Mrs. Edward A.
Cornish, Miss Nellie C .
Coterie Club
Cragin, Mrs. Louis S.
Crawford, Mrs. Bryce L.
Crounse, Miss Bertha Lee
26
Martin, Dr. Charles E.
Martin, Mrs. Charles E.
Matthews, Mrs. Charles R .
Matthews, Dr. and Mrs.
Mark A.
Mayol, Mr. and Mrs. F. E .
McCaffrey, Frank
McComb, E. J.
McConaughy, Mrs. G .
Edward
McConaughy, Miss
MarieE.
McCreery, Mr. and M rs.
Hugh Edison
McEwan, A. F .
McEwan, Mrs. W. H.
La Bow, Mrs. Louis
McFee, Miss Annie G.
Lagen, Mrs. Marc A .
Mcintosh, Mrs. A.E.
Lambuth, Mr. and Mrs.
McKay, Mr. and Mrs.
B. L.
William 0.
Lang, Mrs. Julius C.
McKinnell. Mrs. J. F .
Lang, Mrs. J.M.
Mesdag, Mrs. Tom
Langdon, Mr. and Mrs.
Mickelwait, Mrs. Lowell
LewisE .
Milburn, Mrs. Anna
Langley, Mrs. Wallace
Thomsen
Latimer, Mrs. N. H .
Milburn, Moritz
Laube, Frank J.
Miller, Dr. and Mrs.
Laucks, Mr. and Mrs.
George C.
Irving F.
Miller, Mrs. Luther L.
Lea, Mrs. William F.
Miller, Winlock, Jr.
Lear, Harry B.
Moore, Mrs. Ben L.
Lear, Mrs. Harry B.
Moore, Dr. Walter A .
:j:LeBallister, Mrs. Lillian Morgan, D. B.
Irwin, Dr. and Mrs. P. C.
Keen
Morgan, Mrs. D. B.
Isaacs, Prof. and Mrs.
Lee, Mrs. George Waith
Morgan, Reginald E .
Walter F.
Leede, Dr. and Mrs.
Morrill, Mr. and Mrs.
Isaacson, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl S.
G. Crawford
Henry
Leonard, Mr. and Mrs.
Morris, Mrs. Arthur S.
A.W.
Morrissey, Mrs. R. M.
Jackson, G. R.
Lewis, Mrs. Louise Baker Mosiman, Mrs. Roscoe E .
Jackson, Maurice
Lindeman, Mr. and Mrs.
Mulder, Mr. and Mrs.
J amison, Mrs. John J.
Charles
Joseph
J arvis, Mrs. David H.
Link, Mrs. Will iam Hazel
Jenkins, Mrs. E. L.
Littler, Mr. and Mrs. A . A. Murphy, Mr. and Mrs.
ThomasF.
Lovich, Ivan
Johanson, Mrs. Daniel
Johanson, Dr. and Mrs.
Lowman, Mrs. J. D.
Lowry, Miss Lorna
N . A.
Naramore, Floyd A.
Lundin, Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
J ohnson, Dr. Hannah
Alfred H .
George 0.
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Nettleton, Mr. and Mrs .
Jesse Charles
Walter B.
Mackie, Mrs. William H .
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
:j:Newberger, Mrs.
Macklem, Mrs. Clair
Ofell H.
Jos.eph H.
Mander, Mr. and Mrs. L.A.
Johnson, Mrs. Philip G.
Johnson, Mrs. Sydney Lee Mann, Miss Virginia Mary Newell, Mrs. Daniel B.
Nichols, Mr. and Mrs.
Marple, Mr. and Mrs.
Jordan, Mrs. C. T .
P. K .. Jr.
Lucius E.
Junior League of Seattle
Harrington, Mrs.
EdwardM.
Harris, Mrs. P . E .
Hart, Mr. and Mrs. H . A .
Hartman, Harry
:j:Harvison, Robert J.
Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph S.
H eliker, Mrs. Florence D .
Hemphill, Mr. and Mrs.
Wylie
H enry, Paul M.
Hepler, Dr. and Mrs. A.B.
H eussy, Mrs. William C.
Hickey, Mr. and Mrs. Yates
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Harry C.
H iltner, Mrs. Walter G .
H inton, Mr. and Mrs. E. R .
H isken, Mrs. P . C.
Hoffman, Mrs. C. B.
Hoffmann, Miss Frances M .
Hofrichter, Dr ..and Mrs.
C.H.
Holman, Mrs. Frank E .
Horiuchi, S.
H oward, Mrs. R . 0.
H udson , Mr. and Mrs.
Cyrus
H ughbanks, Mrs. G. A., Sr.
H ughes, Mrs. E . C.
Huteson, Mrs. T. J.
Trafford
Kane, Mrs. James H .
Kent, Charles E.
Kerns, Blaine
Kerry, Mrs. Albert, Jr.
Kerry, Miss Olive
Ketcham, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry
King, Mrs. C. P .
Kinnear, Mrs. Charles A.
Koch, Rabbi Samuel
Koiransky, Alesander
Krauss, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur J.
Kreielsheimer, Leo T.
Kuner, Mrs. Max
27
�Rattray, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice
Rawson , Dr. and Mrs.
Erroll W.
Reagh, Mrs. John Dallas
Redman, Mr. and Mrs.
O 'Brien, Col. Arthur
Arthur P.
. O 'Brien, Mrs. Arthur
Reed, Mrs. Benjamin M .
O 'Bryan, Mrs. J . Grattan Reese, Walter 0.
-Ostrander, Miss Alice
Reichel, Dr. Gustav A .
•Owen, Mr. and Mrs.
Rennie, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry B.
Wesley F .
Owen, Lloyd
Reynolds , Miss Clara
-Owens, Mrs. H . K.
Rey~olds, Mrs . Robert Max
· M Richmond , Mrs. Volney
k
Padelford, Dr.Fredenc_ · Ridean, Mrs. G. L.
Padelford, Mrs. FredenckM. Riker, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph M.
Palmer, ~rs . Rob.ert
.Park, Miss Dorohs
Roberts, Mr. and Mrs.
Parks, Mrs. F . H.
Fred M .
Roberts, Dean Milnor
Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
George H..
Roberts, Miss Milnora
.Parsons, Regmald B.
deBeelen
Robinson, Mrs. J. H .
Peet, Mrs. W. James
R d
M c rri' e
Pelly, Mr. and Mrs. B.
P ll T M
o gers, rs. a.
pe
Id ' M: H 1
Rolfe, Mrs. Hamilton
. en ~e , 1ss e en
Cawley
Perkms, Mrs. W . D .
R
. B h
Perry, P. J .
osa1a rot ers
:j:Peters, Russell
Ross , Mrs. Charles
Peters, Mrs. W . A .
Rowe, Mrs. Harry
Petite, Mrs. J . W .
Ryan , Mr. and Mrs.
John E .
Philbrick, Mrs. Clay
Phillips, Mrs. Cress
Ryan, Mrs. T . F.
Pick, Mrs. Rose Blanche
Salmon, Mrs. Harvey W.
Pigott, Mrs. Paul
Samuels, Dr. and Mrs.
Pike, Mrs. R . D.
Maimon
"Playter, Mr. and Mrs.
Sanford, Mr. and Mrs.
John E.
Rollin
Plestcheeff, Mr. and M rs.
Savery, Mrs. William
Theodore
:j:Sayre, J. Willis
Plum, Dr. and Mrs.
Sayres, Mrs. S. S.
Frank A .
Schiff. Mrs. H. M .
Po rtmann. Miss Frieda
Schmitz , Dietrich
~ Powell , Mrs. John H.
Schoenfeld, Mr. and Mrs.
Pratt, Mrs. Arthur W .
L. Kenneth
Price, Mrs. George E .
Primrose, Mrs. Phelps
Schram, Mrs. Serene 0 .
' Proctor.Mrs. A . Phimister Schwabacher, Mr. and Mrs.
Prosser, Miss Margaret
Morton
Prosser, Mr. and Mrs.
Scott, Mrs. Gordon N.
William T.
Scripps, J . G.
Scruby, Mrs. W.W.
Quinan, Mrs. George
Seattle Federation of
Women's Clubs
·Rabel, Mrs. 0 . R .
Sebring, Russell W.
Radford, F . McL.
Seifert, W . H .
:Radford. Miss Janet I.
"
Nicholson, Dr. and Mrs.
D . A.
Nickson, Dr. and Mrs.
D. H.
Nickum, Mrs. W . B.
t
28
Seymour, Mrs. W . W .
Shank, Corwin S.
Shaw, Mr. and Mrs .
Gordon T .
Sheehan, Dr. and M rs.
T . V.
Shelton, Harry
Siegley, Mrs. E. E .
Sivertz, Mrs. V ictorian
Skeel, Mr. and Mrs. E. L.
Skinner, Mrs. Gilbert W .
Sleigh, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter 0 .
Smith, Mrs. George
McPha il
Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Roland
Spangler, Mr. and M rs .
J . W.
Spickard, Mrs. Vernon W .
Stacy, Terry Stewart
Stanley, Mrs. Elsie E .
Starr, Miss Lucy H.
St. Clair. Mrs . W . H .
Stephens, Dr. and Mrs.
Lorenzo L.
Stiles , Mr. and Mrs.
LeConie
Stone, Mrs. E. C .
:j:Stone, Edward T .
Strohecker, Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin
Stryker, Mrs. H . M .
Stuart, Mrs. Elbridge Amos
Sullivan, Charles E .
:j:Sullivan, Leo
Sundt, Mrs. Frederick
Sutherland, Mrs. A. A .
Swalwell, Joseph
Swift, Mrs. Louis F.
:j:Talmadge, Miss Madge
Tanner, W . V.
Taylor, Howard D.
Tenneson, Mrs. John
Terrell, Miss Elizabe th
Thayer, Mrs. Austin
Thom, Miss Mary Gordon
Thompson, Dr. and Mrs.
G. G .
Thomson, Mrs. Dorothy
Thorgrimson, Mr. and
Mrs . 0 . B.
Tondel, Mr. and Mrs.
Lyman
Townsend, Mr. and Mrs.
c. L.
Washington Title Insurance Wilson", Miss Katheryn
Wilton, Mrs. Mary C.
Company
Wingate, Mr. and Mrs.
Watts, Mrs. C. E .
S. D .
U hl, Mr. and Mrs. W . L. Way, Mrs. W.W.
West Seattle Art Club
U mlauff, Mr. and Mrs.
Women's City Club
West Side Women 's
Wood, Miss Clara Louise
J acob
Improvement Club
U mphrey, Mrs. A. K.
Worden, Miss Ruth
U mpleby, Mrs. Joseph B. :j:Westphal. Victor
Wright, Miss Betty
White, Mrs. Elmer J.
Wright, Mrs. Raymond G _
Vanderbilt, Mrs. W . D .
White, Mrs. Wesley
V ance, Mrs. Joseph A.
Williams, Dr. George T .
Youell, Mr. and Mrs .
V an Tuyl. Mrs. F rank R. Willis, Mrs. Bayley
George
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Boland y
A M
.
p f
d M
oung, . .
:j:Wadleigh, Miss Helen
Wilson, . ro . an
rs.
y oung, Dr. and Mrs.
G
W agner, Mrs . Corydon
F
E . Weldon
. ranc1s .
Wanamaker, Dr. and Mrs. Wilson, Mr. and M rs .
Frank L.
:j:PRESS MEMBERSHIP
All ison T.
T reat , Mrs. H . W .
Trimble, Mrs. Glen Kerry
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Adams, Mrs. E. E.
Adams, Dr. F rederick A .
Adams, Mrs. George Davis
Adams, Mrs. Howard
Adams, Robert S.
Adams, Mrs. Robert S.
A gnew, Mrs. John C.
Albers, Miss Genevieve
Albert, Miss Drusilla
Albert, Mrs. Sarah Truax
Allen , M rs. H . A .
Allen, Mrs. Orville
Allen, Mrs. P . W .
Allingham, Mrs. J oh n
Edw_
ard
A lt, Mrs. E . C.
Ames, Mrs. J . W illis
Anderson , Mrs. A . E.
Anderson, Miss Helen
Anderson, Mrs. H ila B .
Anderson , Mrs. Richard H.
Asbury , Miss Laura
Berens, Mrs. S. N .
Bergman, Miss H ilda
Bernnard, Mrs. B.
Berquest, Edwin
Berry, Mrs. A. M .
Biggerstaff, Mrs. Knight
Billingsley, Miss H . Joy
Bisazza , Miss Charlotte
Blackstock, Mrs. Herbert
Blackwell, Miss Lenore R .
Blancher, Mrs. Harold L.
Blogg, Ainsworth
Blogg, Miss Violet
Blum, Mrs.Meyer
Bodine, Mrs. Margaret S.
Bush. Mrs. John K.
Butler, Mrs. J . D.
Calhoun, M iss Annie H .
Calhoun, Miss Marjorie
Callahan, Mrs. Charles P .
Campbell, Mrs. C. I.
Canadian Women 's Club
Capell, Mrs. Theresa
Carleton, Mrs. William H .
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Case, Mrs. Austin
Case, Mrs. Elwell C.
Case, Mrs. Kenneth E .
Case, Mrs. Frank Elwell
Caskey, Miss Julia
Bogardus, Mrs. Almon E . Cassill, Mrs. Scott K.
Castleton, Mrs. W. A .
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Challiss, Mrs. Arthur H .
Bogue, Miss Jane
Bohon, Mrs. W . J.
Chambers, F . R .
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Chapman, Miss Effie Louise·
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Boundy, Mrs. J. W .
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Bovee, Mrs. D . G .
Chilcott, Mrs. W . K.
Bacon , Mrs. Cecil
Brace, Mrs . H . G .
Chisholm , Mrs. Jack
Baird, Mrs. Hugh, J r.
Braun, Mrs. Paul J .
Church, Mrs. Campbell , J r.
Baldwin , Dr. Belle H .
Baldwin, Mrs. H . G .
Brink, Mrs. Herbert
Clake, Mrs. Alfred W .
Brockman, Mrs. R. E .
Clapp, Mrs. James N.
Ballard, Mrs. Carl
Barker, Mrs. Harry
Brown, Mrs. Dana
Clark, Mrs. Archibald G .
Barksdale, Julian D.
Brown, Mrs. Francis H .
Clark, Irving M.
Barrall, Mrs. A . D .
Brown, Mrs. Isaac
Clark, Mrs. William G .
Baxter, Mrs. John McGraw Brown, Miss Priscilla
Clarke, Mrs. Caspar W .
Baxter, Mrs. Kirk S.
Brown, Mrs. Roland ClougbClendening, Miss L_ouise
Brown, Mrs. R . M .
Clerf, Mrs. John Pierre
Beall, Mrs. W . E .
Bryant, Mrs. C. P .
Colby, Mrs. Mark R.
Beddow, Mrs. W . L.
Benson , Miss Edna G.
Bryant P. T. A.
Colby. Mrs. William R .
29
�?
Cole, Mrs. Kenneth C .
Erwin , Mrs. Edith G .
Collins, Mrs. Frederick B. Evans, Miss Catherine
Comnieree, M iss Juanita
Everett, Mrs. Fred
Compton, Mrs. H.F.
.
.
Cooper Miss Louise Merrill Fairbanks, Miss Esther
Corbally, Mrs. J . E .
Fairbanks, Miss Lulu M .
Corbett, Mrs. Roy W .
Fairview P.-T. A.
Cornell, Mrs. C. E .
Ferguson, Mrs. George
Cornu, Mrs. Donald
Ferry, Mrs. Edward
Couper, Mrs. W . E .
F ilson, Mrs. C. C.
Cowan, Mrs. Nelle Drake Finger, Mrs. Ray H .
Crane, Mrs. Everett E .
Fisher, Mrs. George W .
Curtis, Miss Elizabeth L.
Fisken, Mrs. A . J .
Fisken, Mrs. Keith G.
Fitzgerald, Mrs . John
Dahl. Miss Bernice I.
Dalin, Mrs. Anna
Brian
Dally, Miss Mary E .
Fletcher, Mrs. W . W .
Dameyer, Mrs. Christian
Flohr. Mrs. E . Firmin
Danner, Miss Eleanor J .
Flynn, Mrs. Donald V .
Foote, Miss Hope L.
Davies, Mrs. Dan
Davis, Mrs. Don P.
Foster, Mrs. Albert 0 .
Foster, Mrs. Elsie S.
Davis, Mrs. S. W.
Frater, Mrs. John
Dawson, Miss Grace
Frazier, Mrs. Stuart
Elizabeth
Friese, Mrs. Norman
Dawson, Mrs. Lewis R .
Frost, Miss Alice A.
Dawson, Miss Mary
Fuller, Mrs. Gordon C.
Day, Mrs. Martha
Fullington, Miss Mary
Dean, Mrs. Jessica
Dearborn, Mrs. Frank
Denman, Mrs. McDonald Gaines, Mrs. Joseph W .
Gannon, Mrs. Claude E.
Denny, Miss Grace G .
deTurenne, Mrs. Leon A. Gates, Mrs. Ira N.
Gerbel. Mrs. Arthur
Detwiller, Mrs. W. K.
Gerber, Mrs. Sidney
d'Evers, Mrs. Arthur H.
Gertridge, Mrs. Carl H.
Dexter. Glenn E .
Gibson, Miss Marie J .
Dickey, Miss Frances
Gifford, Miss Annie L.
Donaldson, Miss Helen
Gilbert, Mrs. John N.
Dougan, Mrs. James A .
Douglas, Mrs. Thomas E. Glass, Mrs. Joseph C.
Glenn, Miss Nancy
Douglas, Mrs. Walter T.
Goodfellow, Mrs. J. R .
Downing, Mrs. Blanche
Drummond, Mrs. Roscoe Gorham, Miss Helen M .
Gorsuch, Mrs. William P .
Dueber, Miss Charlotte
Gowen, Lance
Dumett, Mrs. Ray
Graff, Mrs. A. C.
Dunn, Mrs. Charles
Grant, Mrs. Joseph F.
Duperu, Mrs. W. A .
Graves, Mrs. Homer B.
Duryee, Mrs. A. P.
Graves, Mrs. L. W .
Dwyer, Miss Kathryn
Graves, Morris
Easter, Mrs. Charles W .
Gray, Mrs. A. A .
Green, Miss Zula
Easterbrooks, Mrs. B. F .
Eastman, Mrs. Austin V . Green Lake P.-T. A.
Eggert, Mrs. Jerry P.
Greenfield, Mrs. L. J.
Ehrlichman, Mrs. Ben B.
Gregg, Mrs. E. J.
Elliott, Mrs. Henry, Jr.
Greig, Mrs. Wallace 0.
Elliott, Mrs. R. S.
Griffiths, Mrs. Austin E.
Elshin, Jacob
Griffiths, Mrs. Mansel P.
30
Greninger, Mrs. Robert R.
Gunther, Dr. Erna
Guthrie, Mrs. E . R .
Guthrie, M iss Gale
Hagen, Mrs. J . C.
Hall, Mrs. James B.
Hare, Mrs. Arthur M.
Harms, Mrs. J. D.
Harrison, Mrs. Max
Harrison, Mrs. Theodora
Hatch, Mrs. E. H.
Hauck, Mrs. A . W .
Hawley, Mrs. A. L.
Hawley. Mrs. George A.
Healy. Mrs. T. E .
Hedges, Mrs. F . R .
Hemphill, Mrs. Wendell
Hennessy, Mrs. A. E .
Heuer, Mrs. Anne S.
Hickey, Mrs. C . T .
Hill, R . L.
Hodge, Mrs. J . Russell
Hodges, Mrs. James F.
Hollister, Mrs. C . T. W .
Hooker, Mrs. A.H., Jr.
Hopkins, Miss Kate
Horrocks, Mrs. Charles H .
Horsfall, Mrs. Frank L.
Hotchkiss, Miss Lulu M.
Howes, Mrs. Robert
Hoyt, Mrs. Dora Webb ·
Hughes, Mrs. C . E .
Hughes, Mrs. D. E.
Hughes, Glenn
Hummel. Mrs. W. G.
Hunt, Mrs. G. Halsey
Huntoon, Mrs. Richard
Waldron
Huston, Mrs. Harold H.
Hutton, Mrs. S. E.
Ihrig, Mrs. Herbert
Ingalls, Miss Ida
Isted, Mrs. Jessie B.
Ivey, Edwin J .
Jackson, Miss Dorothea
Jacobs, Mrs. Orange
Jacobson, Mrs. Albert
Jacobsen, Mrs. Leonard H .
Jacoby, Mrs. J. F.
Jarrett, Miss Mary
Jennings, Judson T.
Jensen, Mrs. George A.
Jensen, Mrs. Lloyd E.
Jerome, Mrs. Timothy,.
Mack, Mrs. George E .
Maddux, Miss Elizabeth
Maitland, Mrs. Ida
Mantor, George, Jr.
Martin, Mrs. Winter
Standish
Mathews, Miss Dorothy
McAuley, Mrs. Frank C.
Kalfus. Mrs. Milton
McAusland, Mrs. RobertD.
Karrer, Mrs. Lawrence E . McBride, Miss Ella E .
Kelley, Miss Mary A.
McCann, Mrs. Isabel
Kerr, Mrs. Kenneth C .
McCarthy, Mrs. C . A .
Kerr, Mrs. S. H .
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McClure, Worth
Kimmel, Mrs. Edward
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McDonald, Mrs. Donald A.
Kincaid, Mrs. Charles E.
King, Mrs. Brien T .
McDonald, Mrs. Darrel W .
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Kippen, Mrs. Herbert
McFadon, Mrs. Donald
Klamm.Mrs. William J . C. McGrath, Mrs. R. L.
Kleinberg, Mrs. Dan
McGrath, Mrs. William H .
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McKay, Mrs. A. W.
Koetter, Mrs. H. L.
McKenzie, Mrs. Vernon
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McLaren, Mrs. W illiam
Kullberg, Miss Jule
Gardner
McLaughlin, Mrs . E . E .
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McLean, Mrs. Martin
Lachman, Mrs. Max
McMann, Mrs. Dorothy
Ladley, Miss Frankie
McMicken, Mrs.
Lane, Mrs. J. Richard
Maurice, Sr.
Lanser, Mrs. Martin M .
McNeil. Mrs. Marvin F.
Larkin, Mrs. F. G .
McOuat. Miss Grace
Laurie, Miss Helen
Medhurst, Miss Eleanor
Law, Mrs. C. H.
Melrose, Mrs. S. H.
Lawson, Miss Jane S.
Merrill, Mrs. Emma E.
Lembke, Mrs. Walter M
Millard, Mrs. Alfred
Lenz, Mrs. H.J.
Miller, Mrs. Ernest D.
Levings, Mrs. Mary B.
Miller, Mrs. Fritz
Levinson, Miss Bessie E .
Miller, Miss Ruth
Lewis, Mrs. John
Mills. Mrs. Blake D .
Lewis, Mrs. V . P .
Mills, Mrs. E. Douglas
Littell. Mrs. Max
Milne, George W .
Litvin, Mr.s. J. D .
Minor, Miss Julia
Lorig, Arthur N .
Misner, Mrs. Hallett S.
Loveless, Arthur L.
Mitchell. Mrs. Mabel
Lowry, Miss Stella M .
Kriebel
Lowry, Mrs. T. F.
Moffitt, Mrs. Thomas
Loynahan, Mrs. Thomas E. Montlake P.-T. A .
Lucas, Mrs. Henry S.
Moon, Mrs. Herbert L.
Lyda, Mrs. E. R .
Moore, Mrs. Harold N.
Lyon, Miss Laura
Moore, Dr. Harry'N.
Moore, Mrs. Harry N .
Macdonald, Miss Dorothy Moran, Mrs. John M.
Macfarlane, Mrs. Alan
Morrison, Mrs. George L.
Walter
Moser, Mrs. George E.
MacGown, Mrs. Clara
Mudge, Mrs. James D .
Macintyre, Mrs. C. S.
Mullen, Mrs. Bernard
Johanson, Mrs. Perry B.
Johnson, Mrs. Carl E.
John Marshall P.-T. A.
Johnson, Miss Martha R .
Johnson, Mrs. Walter
Jones, Mrs. H . B.
Junior League of Seattle
31
Munro, Mrs. Walter A.
Murdey, Mrs. Clarence
Myers, Mrs. David R .
Myers, Mrs. George T.
Nance, Mrs. E . C .
Nagelvoort, Mrs. Floris
Nelson, Mrs. A . J.
Neupert, Mrs. E. D.
Nichols, Mrs. Robert
Stanley
Niemeyer, Arthur F .
Nilsen, Mrs. 0 . E .
Norman, Miss Katherine M.
Nobles, 0 . ~·
Nystrom, Miss Ruth
Oakes, Mrs. Prescott
Odland, Mrs. Henry
Olcott, Miss Virginia
Oldden, Steever B.
Oles, Mrs. Floyd
Olinger, Mi$$ Gerry
Olivier, Mrs. John L.
O'Neil. Griffith
Orr, Mrs. F . W.
Ovens, Mrs. Alex C .
Parker, Mrs. Earl Nelson
Parkinson, Mrs. John
Jay, Jr.
Patten, Mrs. Charles E.
Patterson, Ambrose
Patterson, Mrs. Ambrose
Paul. Mrs. Alice Paine
Pearson, Mrs. Niles Arthur
Pease, Mrs. H. M.
Pellegrini, Mrs. F. A.
Penington, Miss Ruth Esther
Peters, Mrs. H . C.
Peterson, Mrs. Joseph A .
Philips, Miss Corajo
Phillips, Miss Jessie W .
Pielow, Mrs. William H.
Plank, Mrs. Heber
Plummer, Mrs. George
Howard
Pody, Mrs. Harry
Poole, Mrs. H . M.
Pratt, Dudley
Pratt, Mrs.Daniel L.
Pratt, Mrs. Henry P.
t
Pres. on, Mrs. Frank
Preston, Mrs. W. M .
Pries, Lionel H.
Proctor, Miss M. Joanne
Quainton, C. Eden
I
�Radford, Mrs. Colin
Raitt, Effie I.
Rehbock, Mrs. Ralph H .
Reid, John H.
Reiniger, Mrs. R. G.
Reynolds, Miss Helen M .
Rhodes, Mrs. Harry A .
Rhodes, Miss Helen N.
Rich, Mrs. David K.
Richards, Mrs. Walter N .
Richardson, Stephen H .
Ricksecker, Mrs. Wheeler
Riggs, S. W .
Riker, Miss Rilla
Risser, Mrs. C. D.
Robertson, Mrs. Harriet C.
Robertson, Miss Mildred
Robertson, Mrs. R . R.
Robinson, Mrs. John S.
Robinson, Mrs. John
Stringham
Robson, Mrs. John T.
Robson, Mrs. Theodore T .
Roche, Miss Ellen
Rosen, Morris
Ross , Miss Elizabeth C.
Ross, Mrs. Fred S.
Roth, Mrs. A. C.
Rourke. Mrs. George W.
Rowe, LeoR.
Rudow, Mrs. E . W.
Russell, Mrs. Evan
Russell, Miss Pearl
Rutherford , Mrs. D. J.
Ryan, Mrs. Ray
Sampson, Mrs. S. Andrea
Sands, Edward E.
Sanford. Mrs. Chester W .
Sargent, Mrs. A . W .
Sayres, Mrs. Arthur R.
Schaefer, Mrs. Henry E .
Schaller, Mrs. Gilbert
Scharr, Mrs. F . C.
Schermer, Mrs. John M .
Schmitz, Mrs. Frankie
Schuett, Mrs. Henry
Schultz, Mrs. Gustav
Schwabacher, Mrs. L.
Schwager, Mrs. Alvin
Schwarz, Mrs. Harvey
Schweppe, Mrs. Alfred J.
Seattle Altrusa Club
Seattle Sororis Club,
Art Department
Seelye, Mrs. E. B.
Seiter, Mrs. H . Ray
Seymour, Mrs. Glen L.
Tenny, Mrs. Cecil L.
Shalley, Mrs. J . B.
Therrien, Mrs. Z. W.
Shannon, Mrs. William D . Thomas. Mrs. Christy
Shaw, Jack
Thomas, Harlan
Sheldon, Mrs. Josephine
Thomas, Mrs. Joseph Mead
Shelor, Mrs. Douglas A .
Thompson, Mrs. Howard G
Shelton, Mrs. R. D.
Thomson, Miss Marian
Shidler, Mrs. Roger L.
Thurber, Mrs. Philip L.
Shorts, Mrs. B. C.
Tigard, Mrs. Frank E.
Shroat, Mrs. Loren G.
Tilmont, Mrs. Paul
Sieg, Mrs. L. P.
Titcomb, Mrs. F. R .
Silver, Max A .
Titus, Mrs. J. Harvey
Simon, Mrs. Arthur E.
Todd, Mrs. C.H.
Simpson. Donald
Todd, Miss Florence R.
Skeel. Mrs. Willard E .
Trenholme, Miss Ruth
Skillman, Mrs. Cora A .
Trotter, Mrs. Carrie L.
Small. Mrs. V eo Fuller
Truax, Mrs. Anna K.
Smetheram, Mrs. F. E.
Tuohy, Mrs. Albert G.
Smith, Mrs. Harold
Turner, Miss Anna C.
Vincent
Turner, Mrs. Lester, Jr.
Smith, Mrs. J. A.
Turtle, Mrs. Lewis
Smith, Miss Jane B.
Smith, Mrs. Millard
van Dalen, Mrs. Pieter
Smith, Mts. W. Philip
Van Ogle, Mrs. Louise
Smithson,Mrs.ElizabethA. Vaupell, Mrs. L. J.
Snortland, Mrs. Mandius Vorwick, Mrs. William S.
Snyder, Mrs. Edgar
Wagner, Mrs. Henry
Spencer, Lloyd
Waldron, Lawrance
Sperry. Mrs. E. J.
Walker, Mrs. Cyrus
Squires, Miss Ruth S.
Walker, Mrs. E . P .
Staadecker, William
Walker, Miss Ruth
Starr, Miss Mary E.
Walker, R. S.
Stevens. Mm. Edwin B.
Walsh, Mrs. Stuart P.
Stevens. Mrs. M . G.
Ward, Miss May Dunn
Stillinger, Mrs. J. W .
Warhanik, Mrs. C. A.
Stillman, Mrs. Allyn P.
Warrack, Miss Jane
Stirrat, Mrs. George R.
Watkins, Mrs. H. M .
Stoddard, Mrs. G. W.
Watson , Mrs. Oscar W.
Stone, Mrs. Anna B.
Wattleworth, Mrs. Brian
Storm, Mrs. J. R.
Webb , Mrs. Nell
Stuart, Mrs. Ardelle K.
Webber, Mrs . Carl
Sully, Mrs. Charles D.
Sumbardo, Mrs. Martha K. Weber, Mrs. R . P.
Weeks, Mrs. Harold F .
Sunde, Mrs. G. C.
Wehn, James A.
Swendsen, Mrs. H . G.
Swift, Mrs. Frances DeBois Weidner, Mrs. C . Ken
Wells, Mrs. Lucy D.
Taber. Miss Josephine
Wells, Miss Mary Ann
Talbot, Mrs. A. W.
West, Miss Maud I.
Talbott, Mrs. Ivan
Whalley, Mrs. A. W.
Taliaferro, John
Wheelan, Dr. Homer
Tapert, Mrs. E . L.
Wheless, Mrs. A. D .
Taylor, Mrs. C. D.
Whitelaw, Mrs. J . C.
Taylor, Miss Dorothea
Whitney, Mrs. W. T.
Taylor, Mrs. Frank G .
Wiestling, Mrs. Frank
Taylor, Mrs. Walter
Beecher
Raleigh
Wiggins, Mrs. Myra Albert
32
Wightman, Mrs. Rob ert
Will , Mrs. Carl H .
Williams, Mrs. Cla yton
Williams, Mrs. Charles R.
Willis, Mrs. Park Weed
Willis , Mrs. Park Weed, Jr.
Wilson, Miss Clotilde
Wilson, Mrs. Kathryn
Wilson, Mrs. Worrall
Wilson, Mrs. William R .
Wilt, Mrs. F. T.
Wisner, Mrs. William Kent
Witherspoon, Mrs. Herbert
Wolgemuth, Mrs. Philip U .
Women's Century Club,
Art Department,
Yakima, Wash.
Women Painters of
Washington
Woodland Heights Unit
of Music and Art
Woods , Mrs. Harvey J.
Worman, Mrs. Eugenie A .
Worth, Mrs. Harry I.
Wright, Mrs. Elias A.
Wyckoff, Mrs. Hulett J .
Wyckoff, Walter L.
Wyckoff, Mrs. Walter L.
Wynn, Mrs. H. Watkin
Yuile, Mrs. H . W .
/
33
�CLUB MEMBERS
Bryant P.-T. A .-One associate membership
Canadian Women's Club-One associate membership
Coterie Club-One active membership
Elementary Art Teachers' Club-One active membership
Fairview P.-T. A.-One associate membership
Green Lake P .-T. A.-One associate membership
John Marshall P.-T. A.-One associate membership
Junior League of Seattle-One active, one associate membership
Montlake P.-T. A.-One associate membership
Seattle Altrusa Club-One associate membership
Seattle Federation of Women's Clubs-One active membership
Seattle Sorosis Club, Art Department-One associate membership
West Seattle Art Club-One active membership
West Side Women's Improvement Club-One active membership
Women Painters of Washington-Two associate memberships
Women's Century Club, Art Department, of YakimaOne associate membership
Women's City Club-One active membership
Woodland Heights Unit of Music and ArtOne associate membership
34
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Young, Mrs. A. M. (Edith Thackwell), 1886-1978 | Meals, John E.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1937. Report includes text.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Thirty-second Year, 1937
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1937
Annual Report for the Year 1937
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1937
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Children’s Story Hour
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Museum Library
National Early American Glass Society
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Radio KJR
Radio KXA
Seattle Parent-Teacher Association
Seattle Park Department
Study Guild
Volunteer Park Building
Western Association of Art Museum Directors
-
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1f1d387c3d1af49621e46c0c555ced10
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Young, Mrs. A. M. (Edith Thackwell), 1886-1978 | Meals, John E.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1940
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1940
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1940. Report includes text.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Thirty-fifth Year, 1940
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1940
Annual Report for the Year 1940
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1940
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Carl F. Gould Endowment
Children’s Story Hour
College of Puget Sound
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Fort Lewis
Mills College
Mrs. A. Scott Bullitt Endowment
Museum Library
New York Museum of Modern Art
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Radio KJR
Radio KXA
Seattle National Art Week
Seattle Parent-Teacher Association
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Seattle Public Schools
Study Guild
The Seattle Times
University of Washington - Department of Art
-
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Meals & Company
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1943
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1943
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1943. Report includes text and images.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Thirty-eighth Year, 1943
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1943
Annual Report for the Year 1943
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1943
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text | Image
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
American Red Cross
Associated Shipbuilders
Boeing Company
British Information Services
British-American War Relief Association
China Club
Civilian Defense
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Office of Inter-American Affairs
Radio KXA
Russian War Relief
Seattle Art Museum Concert Series
Seattle International Exhibition of Photography
Seattle Parent-Teacher Association
Seattle Photographic Society
University of Washington
University of Washington - Department of Art
University of Washington - Department of Political Science
War effort
-
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Meals & Company
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1944
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1944
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1944. Report includes text and images.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Thirty-ninth Year, 1944
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1944
Annual Report for the Year 1944
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1944
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text | Image
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
American Red Cross
Children’s Story Hour
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Northwest Watercolor Society
Office of Inter-American Affairs
Radio KXA
Seattle Art Museum Concert Series
Seattle International Exhibition of Photography
Seattle Parent-Teacher Association
The Seattle Times
University of Washington
University of Washington - Department of Art
University of Washington - Far Eastern Department
War effort
-
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Meals & Company
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1946
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1946
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1946. Report includes text and images.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Forty-first Year, 1946
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1946
Annual Report for the Year 1946
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1946
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text | Image
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Ballard High School
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
International Maritime Conference
Junior League
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Watercolor Society
Office of Inter-American Affairs
Puget Sound Group of Northwest Painters
Radio KEVR
Radio KIRO
Radio KJR
Radio KOMO
Radio KXA
Seattle Art Museum Concert Series
Seattle Photographic Society
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The Seattle Star
The Seattle Times
University of Washington
University of Washington - Department of Anthropology
University of Washington - Department of Geography
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/18833/archive/files/882f72c974afa52b96baf857f0cc2f09.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=PJMyYqoHwNXSqvIu86tcY7745W7Cfghan35pvnTvDGYPT-18g2pBdTC5Mi-JSM4G3h4nn4Ckvts0WwFa7GaYgH2Wp%7E6Gh%7EEdpB-Y8ZqP82GG%7EsYNT5tip0Vn3QuIKSIjPSfzDWCc%7EDTG-FkzOyOQf81Fvrj1WE8VzeQjFTh8WyCi8P-kdTs%7EFmpGg328y4zvresm%7EcB8mA64ZYB9HdvX1E663stbBZPtqZNDzNYUWGYm66slO0%7E9KGtjM5HiqM05KVM3mEcNrqgRyHMaKBfC%7EC%7EzF2RUQiq0ymL-sDUFMWjfDtcIVcLWV4DxH-Pe2D9nVsWzeXjvJ48S%7EPv9C9Amjw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
52246f1d702a7fdc1c2dda98503bceb8
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Meals & Company
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1947
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1947
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1947. Report includes text and images.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Forty-second Year, 1947
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1947
Annual Report for the Year 1947
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1947
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text | Image
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Amateur Gardeners Club
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Henry Art Gallery
Junior League
LIFE Magazine
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Watercolor Society
Norwegian Male Chorus
Pomona College
Portland Art Museum
Radio KJR
Radio KXA
Seattle Art Museum Concert Series
Seattle International Exhibition of Photography
Seattle Park Department
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Tacoma Art Association
The Seattle Times
University of Oklahoma
University of Washington
Women Painters of Washington
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/18833/archive/files/3818804f8f90c37edfbe4b3853713ee5.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=YwGh%7EbzHSvDa8oKjrSPsn5AHlfqrSQnTsTqQL2yTeZK41VSjszIyKmFa%7Ez2efM9YmxQNzfiV6sorDd8-zRXyJgeMz7JWnBPfDZcHHi5F0KNsqL2mVSbu13BFpXh8h7FPhDNuXjps1a5jnFNNbxsneq70Ot2k-8GBbGTbTex9e7ZFDg3vxRWP8MgeP7S-geeA4ezmPXPGw-x698zc%7E22qxZGFwizzYPju6ymYGOqW%7EY4jMG8HUa3-00eNQnFbQ3lwBlqAiCReFYPJSBxPNIl9oTxlfAoja86rqlgx9Vc7zhxcYhEoNxsTz92dbJ0SYPzi3fTyVadeOouLeX10Xyj2bg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
5b23cf4624c30f0f1152171cd4c70049
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Meals & Company
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1948
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1948
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1948. Report includes text and images.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Forty-third Year, 1948
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1948
Annual Report for the Year 1948
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1948
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text | Image
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Amateur Gardeners Club
Children’s Story Hour
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Henry Art Gallery
Junior League
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Watercolor Society
Puget Sound Group of Northwest Painters
Radio KJR
Radio KXA
Seattle Park Department
Seattle Photographic Society
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The Seattle Times
University of Washington
University of Washington - Department of Art
University of Washington - Department of Political Science
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/18833/archive/files/1778a8fa276275cd9b305a5a5773e2d5.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=ISN5SSxyYMAaS2yLRZYNKdabriTSvyqgTRDHfsK86Dj7wmOUcEi5zWppDAur2ns5-fNgFiPMF7o%7EREGv9XHv8zR7Y2ISmNTlhpcajbKiyKAN9GsNrp0hPNQai%7Ek4hzyMhTSPO9iGsPoLyPwXqHL%7EsrRgnubYM3sbvEI%7Ev6OgvZkH1c%7EUi1996Wtdfk2X5FPtQALgV5AcewC7RIddzau2t-wLVOFIdfqQLxu3Xs%7E-Z%7EMFlaCAjFIm2EKDl0QaE-419BSpjxcLroPliO6lybW4l6jdEaiJsPfEYTLBGsGzbXlIntxAGAaVHMUEXQYoffzHNMXxnup2EqxclK5m8UqW6g__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
0a8436e5e112abc4151311794037e22a
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Seattle Art Museum Annual Reports
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals
Seattle Art Museum--History
Annual Reports
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This collection consists of digitized and born-digital annual reports and other financial and strategic documentation issued by the Seattle Art Museum from the 1930s to the present. Although the museum officially began in 1933, some reports note a longer period of existence -- the 1932/33 report, for example, is subtitled "Twenty-seventh Year." Prior to becoming the Seattle Art Museum, two predecessor organizations existed: the Seattle Fine Arts Society (1905-1917) and then, after merging with the Washington Arts Association (1906-1917), the Art Institute of Seattle (1917-1932).</p>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-present
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Besozzi
Kate Hanske
Traci Timmons
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1933-present
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Fuller, Richard E. (Richard Eugene), 1897-1976 | Meals & Company
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1949
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seattle Art Museum
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1949
Description
An account of the resource
Annual publication that provides a comprehensive report on the exhibitions, accessions, financial statements, events, contributors, and changes to the Seattle Art Museum from the date of 1949. Report includes text and images.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
application/pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Seattle Art Museum
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Seattle Art Museum--Periodicals | Seattle Art Museum--History | Annual Reports
Title
A name given to the resource
Annual Report of the Seattle Art Museum: Forty-fourth Year, 1949
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1949
Annual Report for the Year 1949
Seattle Art Museum Annual Report 1949
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text | Image
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
Amateur Gardeners Club
American Oriental Society
Chamber Music Concerts
Children’s Story Hour
Donald E. Frederick Memorial Collection
Emma Baillargeon Stimson (Mrs. Thomas D. Stimson)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Far Eastern Association
Junior League
Mrs. Donald E. Frederick
Museum Library
Northwest Annual Exhibition
Northwest Printmakers Annual
Northwest Watercolor Society
Radio KJR
Radio KXA
Seattle Art Museum Concert Series
Seattle Photographic Society
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The Seattle Times
Thomas D. Stimson Memorial Collection
University of Washington