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Dadian Gallery
Dadian Gallery Hours:
Monday - Friday 11am to 4:30pm
and by appointment
closed on holidays
Generally, when
seminaries work with the visual arts, they work with them only in terms of
products and not the processes undergirding their creation. When they create a
space for the works, it's usually a ghettoized space in the library or other
building where multiple uses occur. In such situations, the resident community
has little understanding, if any, of the processes which undergird the works and
make them therefore accessible to understanding. At the very heart of the
matter is the issue of understanding the non-verbal vocabulary of the visual
which then makes readable the theological proclamation resident in the work.
When I began my tenure here at
Wesley, I never wavered regarding my notion that the smart way to build a
constituency for a centrally-located gallery would be to first impart a
knowledge of the underlying processes behind the art-making enterprise.
Approximately seven years after
the studio was established, Mr. Dadian, a philanthropic business man in
Washington, DC came to visit, and I told him my thoughts. When he asked me why
I wanted a gallery, I said, "To be honest, Mr. Dadian, I'm not sure it will
work, but in my judgment, this is how I think it will work." I toured the
facilities with him. He perceived a conceptually correct idea and blessed us
with a phone call the next day in which he gave the seminary $100,000 towards
this project.
The gallery was designed by Marvin Leiberman, a
Washington, DC curator and artist, following a study by myself of what
constitutes the necessary ingredients in a fine, museum-quality space for
showing work safely and effectively.
Following the gallery’s construction, it took us
several years to work out policies commensurate with our mission and
simultaneously our administrative limitations. The gallery design has served us
well through the years. Its ever-changing exhibitions have challenged the
community with tough questions as well as keen insights.
Catherine
Kapikian, Director
The Henry Luce III Center for the Arts and Religion
May 1, 2003
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