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Chronology of Articles and Essays
February, 2002
Excellent art is food for the soul.
Enjoy art's many flavors
at a museum near you.

(above: Dong Kingman, Coastline, California, between 1935 and 1941, 15.7 x 22 inches, Smithsonian American Art Museum. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons*)
Peter Coes; essay by Cindy Nickerson (2/28/02)
Peter Coes' Neighborhood: A Thirty-Year Retrospective (2/28/02)
The Ansel Adams Centennial (2/25/02)
American Modern, 1925-1940: Design for a New Age (2/25/02)
John Walker: Oceans, Tidepools and Plein Air Paintings (2/22/02)
Mary Frank, born 1933, Striding Woman, 1986; essay by Hollister Sturges (2/22/02)
Views of New York: Selections from the Permanent Collection (2/21/02)
The Many Faces of Cleveland: A Century of Portraiture (2/21/02)
Norman Rockwell Lithographs from the Powers Collection, Cheney, Washington (2/20/02)
19th-Century American Paintings: The Henry Melville Fuller Collection (2/20/02)
"West By Southwest" from the Collections of the Museum of the Southwest (2/20/02)
Frederic Remington: Illustrator, Sculptor, Painter (2/20/02)
Looking Forward/Looking Black (2/20/02)
Scene in Oakland, 1852-2002: Artworks Celebrating the City's 150th Anniversary (2/19/02)
Pen, Pencil, and Brush: American Drawings and Watercolors, 1850-1950 (2/13/02)
Whistler's Nudes at the Freer Gallery of Art (2/13/02)
Jack Dowd Looks at Diversity and Individualism (2/13/02)
Cassatt and Duncanson Paintings Acquired by MFAH (2/11/02)
Unbroken Spirit: The Wild Horse in the American Landscape (2/11/02)
Masquerade and Revelation: A William Wolff Retrospective (2/11/02)
"The Cowboy's Dream:" The Mythic Life and Art of Lon Megargee (2/11/02)
George Washington by Gilbert Stuart (1755-1828) at The Frick Collection (2/11/02)
William Wolff: Themes and Motifs; essay by Art Hazelwood (2/11/02)
Ann Stewart Anderson: Mythic Women (2/8/02)
Brooks Sisters Paint, article by Sarah Beserra (2/8/02)
The American Art Colony at Lyme (2/7/02)
Elliott Daingerfield: Victorian Visionary (2/7/02)
Tools as Art: The Hechinger Collection (2/7/02)
Ralph Fasanella's America (2/6/02)
Morgan Monceaux: A Century of African Americans in Dance; essay by Claude L. Elliott (2/5/02)
Lincoln and Washington: The Printmakers Blessed Their Union; article by Harold Holzer (2/4/02)
The Challenge of Thomas Hart Benton; essay by Don Gray (2/4/02)
Milton Avery: Elemental or Simplistic?; essay by Don Gray (2/4/02)
George Beck: An Eighteenth Century Painter; article by Edna Talbott Whitley (2/2/02)
Iridescent Light: The Emergence of Northwest Art (2/1/02)
The Urbane Cityscapes of Frederick Brosen (2/1/02)
See TFAO's Museums Explained to learn about the "inner workings" of art museums and the functions of staff members. In the exhibitions section find out how to get the most out of a museum visit. See definitions for a glossary of museum-related words used in articles. Also see notes about our 2011 editing project.
To help you plan visits to institutions exhibiting American art when traveling see Sources of Articles Indexed by State within the United States.
Permissions from sources
When Resource Library published over time more than one article concerning an institution, there was created as an additional resource for readers a sub-index page containing links to each Resource Library article or essay concerning that institution, plus available information on its location and other descriptive information. .
Unless specifically described in editor's notes or headers within Resource Library or Resource Library Magazine pages containing articles and essays by named authors, such materials were published in 1997 through 2016 by either permission of a named institutional source within the Art Museum, Gallery and Art Center index, an author within the Author Study and Index, or a non-institutional source. In some cases, both the source and author provided permissions.
Permissions, in most instances, were provided by institutional sources specifically identified within the article or essay pages. As noted above, when Resource Library or Resource Library Magazine published over time more than one article or essay concerning an institution, it created, as an additional resource for readers, a sub-index page containing links to each Resource Library or Resource Library Magazine article or essay concerning that institution, plus available information on its location and other descriptive information. A typical notation at the end of an article or essay might be "Read more information, articles and essays concerning this institutional source by visiting the sub-index page for the (named institution) in Resource Library (or Resource Library Magazine in instances of publication by Traditional Fine Arts Organization's predecessor)" or similar wording.
An invitation to museums
TFAO advocates for museums to permanently make available materials about special exhibitions on their websites. Most museum websites have a "past exhibitions" section. Often, when information about an exhibition is first posted, a permanent URL is created that is carried forward in website sections for future, current and past exhibitions. A common format is: https//museumname.org/exhibitions/name of exhibit.
A wide variety of materials are posted by museums for an individual exhibition. Contents on a page for an exhibition may include narrative paragraphs about the exhibition, photos of art objects, plus links to: a press release for the exhibition, newspaper and magazine articles, promotional PSA videos, lecture videos, gallery guides, brochures and checklists.
Once a museum has decided upon a URL format for presenting online exhibition information, it is important that the format be maintained permanently. This is to prevent dead links in articles, research papers and other materials published by outside persons and organizations.
An effect of Covid temporary museum closures in 2020-21was that scores of art museums greatly enhanced the quality and quantity of online exhibit presentations.
TFAO catalogues providing useful resources
American Representational Art - links to dozens of topics in American Representational Art
Distinguished Artists - a national registry of historic artists
Videos Online - a comprehensive catalogue of online full motion videos streamed free to viewers
Audio Online - a catalogue of online streaming audio recordings
Collections of Historic American Art - notable private collections
Geographic Tour of American Representational Art History - a catalogue of articles and essays that describe the evolution of American art from the inception of the United States to WWII.
Articles and Essays Online - substantive texts published outside of Resource Library
Videos - an authoritative guide to videos in VHS and DVD format
Illustrated Audio Online - streaming online narrated slide shows
Books - general reference books published on paper
Magazines - paper-published magazines and journals
Interactive media - CD-ROM format
How to find content on our site using search engines
Conduct keyword searches within TFAO's website and Resource Library, a collection of articles and essays honoring the American experience through its art, using the advanced search feature of Google and Yahoo. Or, before entering keywords in a basic search, enter site:tfaoi.org
Also see Indexes and information retrieval for more information.
Return to Topics in American Art -
Site Guide
About Resource Library
Resource Library is
a free online publication of nonprofit Traditional
Fine Arts Organization (TFAO). Since 1997, Resource Library and
its predecessor Resource Library Magazine have cumulatively
published online 1,300+ articles and essays written by hundreds of identified authors, thousands of other texts
not attributable to named authors, plus 24,000+ images, all providing educational
and informational content related to American
representational art. Texts and related images are provided almost
exclusively by nonprofit art museum, gallery
and art center sources.
All published materials provide educational and informational content to students, scholars, teachers and others. Most published materials relate to exhibitions. Materials may include whole exhibition gallery guides, brochures or catalogues or texts from them, perviously published magazine or journal articles, wall panels and object labels, audio tour scripts, play scripts, interviews, blogs, checklists and news releases, plus related images.
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(left: JP Hazeltine, founding editor, Resource Library)
Links to sources of information outside our website are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and all other websites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or out of date. We neither recommend or endorses these referenced organizations. Although we include links to other websites, we take no responsibility for the content or information contained on other sites, nor exert any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating web pages see our General Resources section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
*Tag for expired US copyright of object image:

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