IMA exhibits the works of Helen Loggie

January 28th, 2010 – 1:20 am
Tagged as: News

LOGGIE_INFO

Islands Museum of Art                                                                                                Friday Harbor, San Juan Island

Celebrating a Northwest Legacy, Helen Loggie, A Retrospective 1917-1956

Jan 29th - March 7th, 2010; opening reception with Leo lambiel Jan 29th, 5-8pm

The San Juan Islands Museum of Art & Sculpture Park (IMA), at 28 First Street in Friday Harbor, will open A Retrospective of Helen Loggie, 1917-1952, on Friday, January 29th, 5-8 pm.  Helen Loggie, a nationally recognized artist, lived most of her life in Bellingham and on Orcas Island. This exhibition links San Juan Island and Orcas Island in a unique manner, for The Lambiel Museum on Orcas is generously loaning part of its Helen Loggie Collection of over 100 pieces, the largest private collection in existence, to IMA for an exhibit that will run through March 7th.

Helen Loggie was born and grew up in Bellingham, studied at the Art Students League in New York City followed by trips to Europe, and in the late 1920’s returned to her home in Bellingham. In the early 1930’s she had a house of her own design built on Orcas Island.  A place that had very special meaning for her and would become the main focus of her work in later years.  It was here in the Northwest that she created many of her acclaimed drawings and etchings. Throughout her career, there have been exhibitions of her work including solo exhibits at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., the Frye Museum in Seattle, the Whatcom Museum of Art and History and at the Western Gallery at Western Washington University, both in Bellingham.

The IMA exhibition is divided into two sections: Gallery I will include drawings and etchings from her student years in New York with portraiture, dynamic city scenes and St. Patrick’s cathedral, along with vibrant oils, drawings and etchings of magnificent cathedrals, bridges and fishing boats from her European travels.  Gallery II will focus on her transition back to the Northwest with drawings, etchings and oils depicting ships in Bellingham Bay, sawmills and even circus animals, but most importantly, her exquisite images of mountains, islands and trees, particularly her beloved old, gnarled trees of Orcas Island.  The exhibit will also display some of her sketchbooks, etching tools and a collection of Christmas cards.

Helen Loggie scorned abstract art and focused on realistic detail for which she became famous.  Even though she dabbled in oils, her preferred medium was pencil drawing. The brochure for the Western Gallery exhibit quoted from a 1939 newspaper: “For her drawings, Miss Loggie uses three pencils, hard, medium and soft. When she goes out sketching, we are told, she takes with her a dozen pencils of each variety, all carefully sharpened, so she will not have to interrupt her work to repoint them.” Her pencil drawings of trees especially illustrate the intricate lines, e.g. of bark and the grasses on the ground below, which became her signature.

During the first half of the 20th century, current methods of reproducing art did not exist, so she became skilled at the process of etching in order to make copies of her work. Her drawings were particularly suitable for etching and she explored ways to develop contrasts in the etchings to avoid a monotone appearance. Vicki Halper, author of the Loggie Exhibition brochure at the Frye Museum, quotes Loggie as saying: “If I had known how hard etching is, I would never have started.” However, the etching process was essential for her to share and distribute her work and she persisted in honing her skills. A description of the etching process will be part of this exhibit for one of the goals of IMA is be an educational avenue in the arts.

Ann Friedman, author of the essay accompanying the Helen Loggie exhibition at Western Gallery in 1993, quotes Loggie as saying:  “If I could strike an answering spark, especially in the hearts of the young people, so that they would realize that natural beauty is the greatest heritage the West has to give her children, so that they would protect what remains of our Northwest… then I would indeed feel that the years have been well spent.”

Helen Loggie had a reverence for nature and felt it was her role as an artist to preserve its beauty. Although her work covered diverse subjects, her interpretation of the trees, mountains and flowers of the Northwest convey her commitment. In her art and writing, she was clearly an environmentalist long before the word was in our common vocabulary.

3 Comments

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  1. Pam says:

    Does anyone know of a book or article describing Helen Loggie’s life? I cannot find anything except her artwork, which although wonderful to look at, doesn’t tell me how she lived. I live in Bellingham WA and I was shown a Victorian house which she used to own, supposedly. I would love to know more about her life. Anyone know where I should be looking for this info?
    Thank you so much, Pam C.

    Comment made on August 22, 2011 @ 8:05 pm

  2. Mary says:

    Look for the Frye Art Museum booklet “This Flowering Earth,the drawings and etchings of Helen Loggie.” (2000)

    Comment made on August 24, 2011 @ 11:27 pm

  3. marita says:

    Check out the Leo Lambiel Gallery on Orcas Island, he knows about everything there is to know about Helen Loggie.

    MARITA

    Comment made on September 6, 2011 @ 12:21 am

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