Subject: Press Release - Exhibition: William Christenberry: Tracing Time

William Christenberry: Tracing Time


November 6, 2020 – April 3, 2021


Opening Reception, First Friday, November 6, 6 pm - 9 pm 

Please register for the opening reception to ensure social distancing and to keep visitors and staff safe, by visiting belgerarts.org/william-christenberry-tracing-time. Capacity is limited to 20 visitors per time slot.  


Belger Arts Center Hours: 

Wednesday - Friday: 10 am - 4 pm; 10 am – 9 pm every first Friday of the month

Saturday: 12 pm - 4 pm

Please call or email to schedule your visit or group tour.


Belger Arts Center

2100 Walnut Street, Kansas City, MO 64108

mdickens@belgerartscenter.org 

816-474-3250

Belgerarts.org

William Christenberry, Grave II, 1963, Oil on Canvas, 90 x 123 in. Courtesy of the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Kansas City, MO - Belger Arts Center presents William Christenberry: Tracing Time, opening Friday, November 6, 6 pm – 9 pm at 2100 Walnut Street, Kansas City, MO 64108.  The exhibition will remain on view through April 3, 2021.


“This is and always will be where my heart is. It is what I care about.” -  William Christenberry


Over the course of many decades, contemporary art icon William Christenberry made annual pilgrimages to Hale County, Alabama, documenting the landscape, its architecture, and its transformation. Tracing Time offers an examination of Christenberry’s relationship to Hale County, where he spent his summers as a child, its influence on his conceptual approach and artistic vision, and the psychology of place and memory.


The exhibition includes photographs, drawings, paintings, and sculptures from the Belger Collection, some never before seen in Kansas City.  The evolution of Christenberry’s experimental, creative process is also presented in displays of source material pages from his sketchbooks, photographs that served as foundations for drawings and structures, and rare early constructions from the early 1960s. The artist’s father, a woodworker, and a strong early influence on the artist would create models of buildings that were important to him out of simple, sometimes unrefined materials.  One of these buildings is included in the exhibition.


Christenberry’s deep affection for Hale County, his curiosity about the effects of mankind and nature on the landscape, reveal a poignant perspective on the passage of time and chronicle the life cycle of place.  Although profoundly personal and geographically specific, the themes of William Christenberry’s work are universal and remain relevant.


For a high-resolution image, click here. More information about William Christenberry and the Belger Collection can be found at Belgerarts.org.

About Belger Arts:

Since 2000, the Belger Arts Center has encouraged viewers to explore, question, and deepen their understanding of art and of the world around them. Drawing upon the extensive John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation collection, as well as a rich variety of local, national, and international artists, the Belger Arts Center, has staged over 70 large-scale exhibitions that represent some of the best in contemporary art.


In 2013, Belger Arts expanded the Foundation’s commitment to the creative process by opening Belger Crane Yard Studios, an arts complex dedicated to providing studio and exhibition space for artists. A range of programming in ceramics education, in addition to the Red Star Residency program and Crane Yard Clay ceramics supply store, has made Belger a center for contemporary art.

Safety measures:

Belger Arts is committed to maintaining a safe place for our visitors, studio members, and staff.  To ensure this, we require that six feet of social distancing be maintained and that visitors wear a mask. Disposable masks and hand sanitizers are available.


For more information on upcoming exhibitions, classes, and workshops, or to schedule a group tour, please visit BelgerArts.org or call 816-474-3250.

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