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Moses Myers House

323 E. Freemason St.
Open Saturday and Sunday

Noon–5 p.m.

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Reading Room
Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.–5 p.m.
Closed May 17-19, 2024

About the Myers House

The oldest Jewish home in America open to the public as a museum offers a glimpse of the life of an early 19th century merchant family.
More about the house

About the Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Art Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

Located in Norfolk

One Memorial Place,
Norfolk, VA
Get Directions

While You're Here

Visit our Museum Shop
and Zinnia Cafe.

Perry Glass Studio

A state-of-art facility on the Museum’s campus. See a free glassmaking demo Tuesdays–Sunday at noon. Like what you see? Take a class with us! More about the Studio

The Myers House

The home of the first permanent Jewish residents of Norfolk, this historic house offers a glimpse of the life of a wealthy early 19th-century merchant family.
More about the house

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the Library

Wedding & Event Rentals

The perfect place for your big day or special event. Get the details

Field Trips

Field trips are available for groups of 60 or fewer. More about field trips

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Visit one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

About the Chrysler

Our story spans well over 100 years. See where we began, how we grew, and where we're going. Explore our history

News and Announcements

See what's happening at the Museum, read Chrysler Magazine, and find our Media Center. Read now

Location

One Memorial Place
Norfolk, VA 23510

Location

245 Grace Street
Norfolk, VA 23510
757-333-6299

Always Free Parking

Get Directions

Visiting Artist Series

Bringing the world’s top glass art talent to Hampton Roads
Find out more

Studio Team

Meet the brilliant minds behind the Studio.
See the team

Give the Chrysler Experience

Share everything you love about the Chrysler Museum with a gift membership. Perfect for everyone on your list.

The Masterpiece Society

Learn about this innovative group of museum supporters.
Meet the Masterpiece Society

Planned Giving

Help ensure the long-term success of the Museum.
Learn about planned giving

Moses Myers House

323 E. Freemason St.
Open Saturday and Sunday

Noon–5 p.m.

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Reading Room
Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.–5 p.m.
Closed May 17-19, 2024

About the Myers House

The oldest Jewish home in America open to the public as a museum offers a glimpse of the life of an early 19th century merchant family.
More about the house

About the Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Art Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

Located in Norfolk

One Memorial Place,
Norfolk, VA
Get Directions

While You're Here

Visit our Museum Shop
and Zinnia Cafe.

Perry Glass Studio

A state-of-art facility on the Museum’s campus. See a free glassmaking demo Tuesdays–Sunday at noon. Like what you see? Take a class with us! More about the Studio

The Myers House

The home of the first permanent Jewish residents of Norfolk, this historic house offers a glimpse of the life of a wealthy early 19th-century merchant family.
More about the house

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the Library

Wedding & Event Rentals

The perfect place for your big day or special event. Get the details

Field Trips

Field trips are available for groups of 60 or fewer. More about field trips

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Visit one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

About the Chrysler

Our story spans well over 100 years. See where we began, how we grew, and where we're going. Explore our history

News and Announcements

See what's happening at the Museum, read Chrysler Magazine, and find our Media Center. Read now

Location

One Memorial Place
Norfolk, VA 23510

Location

245 Grace Street
Norfolk, VA 23510
757-333-6299

Always Free Parking

Get Directions

Visiting Artist Series

Bringing the world’s top glass art talent to Hampton Roads
Find out more

Studio Team

Meet the brilliant minds behind the Studio.
See the team

Give the Chrysler Experience

Share everything you love about the Chrysler Museum with a gift membership. Perfect for everyone on your list.

The Masterpiece Society

Learn about this innovative group of museum supporters.
Meet the Masterpiece Society

Planned Giving

Help ensure the long-term success of the Museum.
Learn about planned giving

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April 25, 2017

Thomas Hart Benton Exhibition Features Navy Scenes From World War II

NORFOLK, VA. (April 25, 2017) — Colorful and energetic scenes of World War II heroism make a splash in the Chrysler Museum of Art’s special focus exhibition Thomas Hart Benton and the Navy. Experience ship and submarine life through two dozen paintings and drawings by this iconic American painter from the Navy Art Collection. The exhibition is on view from May 19 to September 24, 2017 in the Museum’s Focus Gallery (G. 229). Admission is free.

Click to enlarge

Thomas Hart Benton, She’s Off, watercolor on paper, 1944. All images courtesy of the Navy Art Collection, Naval History and Heritage Command, Washington, D.C. Click image to enlarge.
 

Best known for his celebrations of American history and everyday life in the Heartland, Thomas Hart Benton (1889–1975) firmly established a reputation in the 1930s as one of America’s most patriotic painters. Together with Grant Wood, creator of American Gothic, he led a movement known as Regionalism. These artists used familiar scenes to engage a wide range of audiences with fine art, in contrast to the popularity of European trends in abstract painting among other American painters of their generation.

By the outbreak of World War II in America in 1941, Benton’s work was well-known through exhibitions and major public commissions for murals in libraries, banks, and government buildings, including the State Capitol in his native Missouri. He also made many watercolors, drawings, and prints and was an influential teacher at the Art Students League in New York City, and later at the Kansas City Art Institute in his home state.

“Benton’s legible style has long made him a favorite,” said Alex Mann, the Chrysler’s former Brock Curator of American Art. “Like John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway, or Sinclair Lewis, Benton saw powerful stories in his immediate surroundings. He believed that art could convey profound messages without using the complicated visual games of Cubism or the dense symbolic language of Freudian psychoanalysis.”

Thomas Hart Benton and the Navy presents an important series of works from the peak years of the artist’s fame and influence. Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, he used his art to honor American troops and to maintain national morale throughout World War II. With sponsorship from Abbott Laboratories, a leading maker of pharmaceuticals and medical supplies, Benton served as a commissioned artist-correspondent in the U.S. Navy, with privileged access to shipyards and submarines. The works in this series are not recreations of famous foreign battles as imagined based on photographs, but images drawn from his firsthand observations.

“No artist understood better than Benton how to invest the most mundane moments of military life with a heroic sense of purpose,” Mann said. “Visitors will cheer the triumphal christening of a new ship in the large painting She’s Off, but Benton carefully balances this exuberance with quiet scenes of life below deck like Slumber Deep, where sailors rest deep inside the USS Dorado submarine, which was later lost in action. He presents the Navy as a giant machine in which every sailor is an essential, though often invisible, gear.”

Benton worked as an artist-correspondent in 1943 and 1944, and his resulting series then toured the nation. Some images also appeared on posters and advertisements for war bonds. Following the war, Abbott Laboratories donated these pictures to the government, where they became part of the Navy Art Collection. They are loaned for this exhibition from the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington, D.C.

“It is a privilege to borrow and present a large series of works by one of America’s most distinctive and beloved artists,” said Erik Neil, Director of the Chrysler Museum. “These rarely seen Navy pictures were an especially personal and passionate project, showing Benton’s storytelling skills at their finest.”

Through its presentation of this exhibition of naval art, the Chrysler Museum is proud to join a year of celebrations throughout Hampton Roads honoring the 100th anniversary of the founding of Naval Station Norfolk. Shortly after the base opened, during the final months of World War I in 1918, Thomas Hart Benton served here. His assignments as an architectural draftsman while stationed in Norfolk were a turning point in his artistic career, leading him to a richer appreciation of everyday American life.

“The new air-planes, the blimps, the dredges, the ships of the base… tore me away from all of my grooved habits, from my play with colored cubes and classic attenuations,” Benton later wrote in his autobiography, describing this transformative moment. “I left for good the art-for-art’s-sake world in which I had hitherto lived,” he wrote, describing the sense of artistic purpose that he found in Norfolk.

The works of art in Thomas Hart Benton and the Navy demonstrate that Benton’s commitment to storytelling and patriotic subjects remained a driving force deep into his career. Though the series is not autobiographical, its images of anonymous midshipmen loading cargo, drinking coffee, or enjoying local entertainment speak poignantly to the ways in which the war touched the lives of thousands who never saw combat.

“This exhibition will stir the hearts of viewers,” Mann said. “There is an immediacy and poignancy to each work, showing that Benton was more than just a pictorial journalist. He empathized with these sailors and put soul into each picture.”

Thomas Hart Benton and the Navy is on public view May 19 to September 24, 2017. Admission is free.

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