OBJECT#
Nov. 11, 2022 - March 18, 2023

A Permanent Collection Exhibition about Art Museums and the Practice of Collecting Art

Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art presents OBJECT#—an exhibition stemming from the perspective of museology, which is the study of museums and the history of their establishment and development. The focus of OBJECT# is to share with you the importance and history of our collection, the significance of stewarding the collection, and the necessary behind-the-scenes efforts we take to responsibly care for the collection.

The impetus for this exhibition revolves around the Curatorial Department’s continued effort to provide sustainable care for the art in the museum’s collection. We are planning an improved future for the permanent collection, which directly benefits and exists specifically for the public we serve. We invite you to visit today and find out more! An exhibition catalogue accompanies this exhibition featuring essays by the panelists below.

Related Programming:
OBJECT# Expert Panel Discussion & Reception (More info below!)
Friday, March 10th | 5:30pm

OBJECT# is curated by Nicole Maria Evans, Curator of Exhibitions and Collections at Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art. Exhibitions presented by The Square are supported in part by the Montana Arts Council a state agency funded by the State of Montana, National Endowment for the Humanities: Exploring the human endeavor, and National Endowment for the Arts. We are funded in part by coal severance taxes paid based upon coal mined in Montana and deposited in Montana's cultural and aesthetic projects trust fund. Additional funding is provided by museum members and the citizens of Cascade County, and generous support from Davidson Family Foundation, and D.A. Davidson. Special support from an anonymous donor, Kelly’s Signs, and Montana Woman Magazine.

OBJECT# Expert Panel Discussion & Reception
Friday, March 10th | 5:30pm | 1400 1st Ave N | FREE!

Please join us on March 10, 2023 for a Museums and Collections Panel Discussion. The panel discussion coincides directly with the featured exhibition OBJECT# at Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art and correlates with the museum’s Collections Assessment for Preservation (CAP) award. Panelists include museum curators, historians, artists and writers from Montana, who have experience and knowledge in the field of Museum Practice and Museum Studies. The discussion will focus on the care of collections, meaning/history of collecting, and the future for museum collecting. Read more about our guest panelists below:

  • Nicole Maria Evans is Curator of Exhibitions and Collections at Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art in Great Falls, Montana. In addition to the featured exhibition OBJECT#: A Permanent Collection Exhibition about Museums and The Practice of Collecting Art, her recent exhibition projects include Peter Koch: The Book as a Work of Art; Beyond Intention: A Contemporary Fiber and Mixed-Media Arts Exhibition, featuring the work of Jennifer Reifsneider, Ashley V. Blalock, and Maggy Rozycki Hiltner; Dr. Charles Smith: Black History Lessons; VESSEL: Formative Works by Peter Voulkos. Prior to her position as Curator at The Square, she held the position of Curatorial Research Associate at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for the exhibition GOYA: Order and Disorder. Evans was a fellow at the Smithsonian Institution Latino Center Museum Program conducting language research and translations for the National Museum of the American Indian, as well as  co-founder of the Itinerate Arts Collaborative in San Diego, California.  She has served in curatorial, research and educational roles at the C.M. Russell Museum, Tufts University Art Gallery, deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, UCLA Hammer Museum and The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC. Evans holds a Master of Arts in Art History and Museum Studies from Tufts University and her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art History from University of California Los Angles (UCLA). Evans serves on the Board of Trustees of the Montana Art Gallery Directors Association.

  • H. Rafael Chacón, Ph.D., is Bruce and Suzanne Crocker Director of the Montana Museum of Art and Culture and Professor of Art History and Criticism in the School of Visual and Media Arts at the University of Montana—Missoula. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in art history with honors from the University of Chicago. Dr. Chacón has taught a range of courses in art history and criticism and received numerous teaching and publication awards over 25 years, most recently being named among the top ten lecturers by the Smithsonian Institute. His academic research and publications lie in American architectural history, historic preservation, and Montana history, especially its visual arts. A new passion is for vexillology (the study of flags) having received the top awards for his research at both national and international conferences. He is presently overseeing the construction of the MMAC’s first permanent building in its 128-year history.

  • Gordon McConnell is a visual artist and writer based in Billings, Montana. He curated 65 exhibitions and helped shape the Montana Collection at the Yellowstone Art Center (now Museum), serving as Assistant Director (1982-1998) and Senior Curator (1992-1998). He was curatorial consultant to the Ucross Foundation in Clearmont, Wyoming (2002-06). Through his writings and curatorial activity, he has long been an advocate for the contemporary artists of Montana and the American West, while maintaining his own significant and evolving studio practice. McConnell did graduate work at the California Institute of the Arts and received his M.A. in art history from the University of Colorado, Boulder. In 2020, he was a recipient of the Montana Governor’s Arts Award.

  • Jennifer Reifsneider lives in Missoula and has exhibited her work around the country. Current projects include Made in L.A., a two-year installation at the Los Angeles International Airport curated by the Center for Craft in America, and preparations for a solo exhibit at the Lewistown Art Center in 2024. Her work is in public and private collections, including the High Desert Test Sites Archive at the Nevada Museum of Art and the Franklin Furnace Artist Book archive at the Museum of Modern Art. In 2019, she received a Montana Arts Council Artist Innovation Award. She earned her BFA from Rochester Institute of Technology in 1995 and MFA from California State University, Long Beach in 2011.

    Between 1994 and 2020, Reifsneider worked in museums, including 15 years as Registrar at the Missoula Art Museum. She served as a committee member for the international Association of Registrars & Collection Specialists, peer reviewer for the federal Institute of Museum & Library Services, and presenter for the Montana Art Gallery Directors Association. She is a current member of the Montana Museum of Art & Culture Collections Committee and provided leadership in revising its Collection Management Policy.

  • Brandon is senior curator at the Missoula Art Museum. He previously worked at the Montana Museum of Art & Culture at the University of Montana-Missoula, Speed Art Museum in Louisville, Kentucky, the Akron Art Museum in Akron, Ohio, and the Holter Museum of Art in Helena, Montana. Recent publications include Anne Appleby: Hymn (2021) and Jon Lodge: Fracture (2021), which was a High Plains Book Awards Finalist. In addition, Brandon regularly contributes articles to the Journal of Modern Craft, Ceramics Art & Perception, and Ceramics Monthly. He received a BFA in painting and drawing from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and MA in curatorial and critical studies from the University of Louisville.

  • Jennifer Woodcock-Medicine Horse, PhD • Program Director: IndigenEyes: Contemporary Native American Art of the Rocky Mountains and Plains • Dr. Jennifer Woodcock-Medicine Horse holds a PhD in American Studies and an MA in Native American Studies from Montana State University-Bozeman; and a BA in Anthropology/Archaeology from UC Berkeley. Her academic research explores the complex intersection of museum studies, Indigenous representation, contemporary Native art, climate disruption, anthropology, and education; seeking effective and affective ways of engaging museum visitors regarding cataclysmic Anthropocene issues and an enthusiastic appreciation of contemporary Native art. She serves as Adjunct Faculty in MSU’s Departments of Art History, Native American Studies, University Studies and Gallatin College. Recent work includes • 2022-23: SLAM advisory board member • 2022-2023: Montana Arts Council: State of the Arts quarterly contributor • 2022: Asst curator, Tinworks Art - Louis Still Smoking - mural installation, Gina Still Smoking - Native fashion show, July 8-9 2022. • 2021: Guest curator, “ReCouping Sovereignty” Bozeman Art Museum. Jennifer lives in Bozeman, Montana with her spouse, Cassidy; her three supervisory felines - Elvis, Attica and Sassafrass; and faithful hyperdog, Lizzie.