Memorial Service
Mary Hunt Kahlenberg
1940-2011
Saturday December 17,
2011
11AM
Friends
and Family of Mary Kahlenberg are invited to gather for
Memorial Services in the Museum of International Folk
Art Auditorium.
Mary Hunt Kahlenberg broke barriers throughout the art
world in 1972 by representing Navajo weaving as art. This
action continues to resonate across the globe, inspiring
artists as well as collectors. As private curator for
Lloyd E. Cotsen, the president of Neutrogena Corporation,
Mary built the textile and folk art collection now known
as the Neutrogena
Collection at the Museum of International Folk Art.
Santa Fe residents and visitors got to know Mary better
at
Tai Gallery/Textile Arts.
Throughout the process of bringing the Neutrogena
Collection to Santa Fe, building the new wing, from design,
construction, exhibition installation, and the grand opening,
there was always Mary. The front and back covers of her
book, The Extraordinary in the Ordinary, features
the doors that lead from the Atrium, at the heart of the
Museum, to the Neutrogena Wing. So it is fitting for friends
and family of Mary Kahlenberg to gather at the Museum
of International Folk Art, to share, to remember and honor
her.
Mary's passion for textiles, and world cultures are revealed
in her writing. These excerpts from the Extraordinary
in the Ordinary illuminate her ability to identify
and appreciate art in the ordinary, bringing folk art,
and folk artists, into the new century.
"Around the world, nourishing the needs of the body
and the needs of the spirit have been integrated into
a culture's artifacts. This unification of life and art
explains why in many languages there is not a separate
word for art. A culture's aesthetic is embodied in the
tools and necessities of daily life."
"As travelers, we often find things that fascinate
us, that are different from anything we have seen before,
things that we think are wonderful. The traveler's eye
values and selects material that are perhaps taken for
granted by those more familiar with them."
"The modern American and Western
European practice of placing material from outside our
cultural realm into a lower class of art indicates just
how awkward and ill-formed our cultural perceptions can
be."
"I have always thought of collecting
as a gathering of friends. Not all together, in one place,
but over a lifetime, a constant coming and going. An exchange
of ideas that shifts my viewpoint."
See more at
Tai Gallery/Textile Arts.