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Fla. museum displays icons of Western art

Most of the artists in billionaires’ collection still alive

By TAMARA LUSH, Associated Press
Published: April 22, 2018, 5:04am
2 Photos
Visitors look at an installation on April 11 inside the James Museum of Western & Wildlife Art in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Visitors look at an installation on April 11 inside the James Museum of Western & Wildlife Art in St. Petersburg, Fla. Photos by Tamara Lush/Associated Press Photo Gallery

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — When you think of Florida, the colored stone walls of the Grand Canyon don’t come to mind. Neither do cowboys, wolves or Native American silver-and-turquoise jewelry.

In downtown St. Petersburg, all of those icons of the American West are on display in a new museum.

It’s called the James Museum of Western & Wildlife Art, and it opened this month. The 80,000-square-foot space is two blocks from the glittering blue waters of Tampa Bay. But at the museum’s front door, visitors are transported west. For vacationers in the Gulf Coast city, it will be a fascinating cultural respite from sun, sand and palm trees.

• THE BUILDING:

The entrance is through a sandstone sculptural exterior evoking mesas of the American Southwest. That aesthetic — of cliffs and cave dwellings and vertical forms — runs throughout the museum. A two-story black granite waterfall is the centerpiece of the entrance.

If You Go

 JAMES MUSEUM OF WESTERN & WILDLIFE ART: 150 Central Ave., St. Petersburg, Fla.; https://thejamesmuseum.org. Open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily, and on Tuesdays until 8 p.m. Adults, $20; students, military, seniors $15; children ages 7-18, $10; kids 6 and under, free.

A high ceiling and cubist angles frame a bank of windows at the entrance, allowing Florida’s sun to shine through.

• THE ART:

There are 400 pieces on display, from large sculptures of Native Americans on horseback to pop-art conceptual paintings of the pioneer spirit. It’s unusually earthy and rustic fare, especially for a state that’s known for beaches, alligators and sanitized theme parks. Even the gallery walls are painted in earthy, Southwestern colors.

All of the art was collected over decades by billionaire Thomas James, chairman emeritus of the Raymond James financial services company, and his wife Mary. Much of the art once decorated the corporate offices of the company, which is based in St. Petersburg.

“The collection is inspired by Tom’s fascination with cowboy lore,” museum director Bernice Chu said.

Many Western-themed collections in other parts of the country showcase works from the 19th and early 20th centuries, like Frederic Remington’s famous depictions of the Old West. What’s different about this collection is that nearly all the artists featured are still alive.

The collection is organized in six themes. Native American life includes artwork that tells the story of the complicated and often brutal history of how Native Americans were treated. A room called “The Jewel Box” in the Native American artists area displays contemporary Native American jewelry owned by Mary James, who has “free rein” to dip into the collection and take out “anything she wants” to wear, Chu said.

A wildlife exhibition is the only one that’s not dedicated to the West. That display includes paintings and sculptures of animals from around the globe, which will delight younger visitors.

• ST. PETE, ARTS HUB:

The Museum of Western & Wildlife Art is the latest museum in a city that’s increasingly becoming known as an arts hub.

One of the museum’s architects, Jann Weymouth, created another unique local institution: the nearby Dali museum, which is devoted to works of Spanish artist Salvador Dali.

In 2019, the Museum of the American Arts and Crafts Movement is expected to open, housing businessman Rudy Ciccarello’s collection of furniture, pottery, tile, metalwork, lighting, photography and other decorative arts from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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