Springfield Art Museum exhibition explores wide range of river-based work

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Ozark rivers continue to serve as inspiration and respite for our community, and for our artists. A new exhibition, pulled entirely from the museum’s collection, explores a wide range of river-based work from our local rivers and beyond, reflecting upon the importance of this resource as both a natural amenity and a source of artistic inspiration. “Afloat: Artists and Rivers,” will be on display through April 18.

Southwest Missouri is home to numerous natural resources. Easy access to beautiful parks, trails, and waterways is an important draw for tourists and residents alike. But it may come as a surprise that the Ozarks, and the Current and Buffalo rivers in particular, were at the forefront of the national effort to protect this country’s natural rivers.

The beauty of Ozark rivers attracted enough advocates to stop the building of a dam along the Current River in 1949, and to create America’s first “explicitly protected river corridor” in 1964, with the development of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways, managed by the National Park Service.

“I lost the rivers for part of my life. I took them up again after I came back again (to Missouri) in 1935.”

                                                 – Thomas Hart Benton

One of these staunch advocates was none other than Missouri artist Thomas Hart Benton who voiced his support towards protecting his favorite rivers – the Current, the Buffalo, and the White; sites that he floated on a regular basis and that were featured extensively in his work.

Afloat: Artists and Rivers is generously underwritten by Bass Pro Shops/Cabela’s. Additional financial assistance for this project has been provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency

 

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