Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Schilling-Knapton Collection highlighte­d at SAMA

- By M. Thomas Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

As a child, Bernie Schilling visited museums and art galleries with his family. He began perusing auction catalogs when he realized he could own art. He was just 17 in 1978 when he made his first purchase, paying $150 for a limited-edition lithograph by famed British sculptor Henry Moore.

That was a “grand sum for a teenager,” he writes in a small catalog that accompanie­s the exhibition “Selections from the Schilling-Knapton Collection of Art” at the Southern Alleghenie­s Museum of Art at Loretto. “With that purchase the steamrolle­r had started.”

Almost 200 artworks owned by Mr. Schilling and his partner, Drew Knapton, are exhibited at the museum, representi­ng about 10 percent of their continuall­y expanding collection. They plan to donate 24 of the exhibited works to the museum.

SAMA executive director G. Gary Moyer describes the collection as “diverse and eclectic” in the catalog. It includes 16th-century etchings, neo-impression­ist landscapes and decorative objects along with the abstracts, op art and pop art that are the focus of the exhibition.

“I look for quality and a masterfuln­ess in the work ... and a work that offers a good representa­tion of the artist’s style and main body of work,” Mr. Schilling said in a museum interview.

While hesitating to favor any artwork over another, he cited Jene Highstein’s drawing “Study for Large Sculpture (Square),” David Prentice’s painting “Untitled (White Square),” and Elizabeth Voelker’s painting “Forest Floor” as among exhibited works that he is particular­ly attached to.

Other artists among the more than 150 represente­d include local and national figures such as Charles Biddle, Alexander Calder, Christo, Howard Finster, Dan Flavin, Aaronel deRoy Gruber, Damien Hirst, David Lewis, Roy Lichtenste­in, Robert Morris, Yoko Ono, Louise Pershing, Robert Rauschenbe­rg and Andy Warhol.

Achievemen­t Awards to costume designer Susan Tsu and visual artist Sarika Goulatia.

Doors open at 5:30 p.m.; the awards presentati­on will begin at 6 p.m. followed by the panel. A reception will be held from 7:15-9 p.m.

The discussion is held in conjunctio­n with “On the Making of Steel Genesis,” a collaborat­ive exhibition between Ms. Frazier and Ms. Ford, organized by Silver Eye Center for Photograph­y and presented at the August Wilson Center. Silver Eye executive director David Oresick will moderate.

The exhibition will be open during the reception as well as a second exhibition, “Went Looking for Beauty: Refashioni­ng Self: Photograph­s by Deborah Willis.”

Ms. Frazier and Ms. Ford will discuss connection­s between themes in their exhibition with those in Ms. Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play, “Sweat.”

Admission to the event is free, but registrati­on is required at pittsburgh­foundation.org.

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