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Lauren Rogers Museum of Art:...

Lauren Rogers Museum of Art: Celebrating over a century of exhibits

By: Laura Lee Leathers - October 1, 2024

  • You don’t have to travel to Italy to view exquisite art collections. You can begin by visiting outstanding art museums within Mississippi, and one of the finest is The Lauren Rogers Museum of Art in Laurel.

Masterpieces! That is the word that comes to mind when I think about art. I know very little about art, and I can’t describe the differences between the works of Rembrandt and James McNeill Whistler. It is not in my DNA. However, I might recognize the paintings of Norman Rockwell before I noticed his signature on the artwork.

I admire people who can draw, paint, sculpt, and design beautiful pieces from wood, glass, clay, metal, and other mediums. When I visited the Sistine Chapel, the artwork of Michelangelo was more than my mind could comprehend–breathtaking.

But you and I don’t have to travel to Italy to view exquisite art collections. We can begin by visiting outstanding art museums within our state. One of the finest is The Lauren Rogers Museum of Art (LMRA), located at 565 N. Fifth Avenue in Laurel, Mississippi.

Two Foundations Leave a Lasting Legacy

Lauren Eastman Rogers was born in Clinton, Iowa, on August 13, 1898, the only child of Wallace Brown Rogers and Nina Louise Eastman Rogers. He graduated from Princeton University in June 1920 and married Miss Lelia Payne Hodson of East Orange, New Jersey in October of the same year. The newlyweds returned to Mississippi for Lauren to become a part of his grandfather’s business, the Eastman-Gardiner Lumber Company.

Lauren Chase Eastman, his maternal grandfather, along with George and Silas Gardiner, moved to Laurel from Clinton, Iowa, to open the first lumber mill in Laurel in 1893. The business multiplied, adding three more sawmills. When the young Lauren Eastman Rogers joined the company in 1920, Laurel was known as the Yellow Pine Capital of the World. Life was busy and promising.

The foundation for the young couple’s new home was started, and construction was underway. Sadly, on June 30, 1921, Lauren Eastman Rogers had an emergency operation for acute appendicitis. He passed a few days later, after only nine months of marriage.

According to his obituary, he was a young man who “But though life had brought him so many privileges, he had grown but to a broader outlook on life and a strong determination to use these abundant privileges for greater and truer usefulness in the world.” He is also described as being “kind and courteous.”

The following year, on May 26, 1922, the Eastman Memorial Foundation was established by his family in Lauren’s memory. The original purpose statement reads, “to promote the public welfare by founding, endowing, and having maintained a public library, museum, art gallery, and educational institution with the state of Mississippi.”

The foundation site, where Lauren and Lelia were building their new home, was dismantled. The location took on a new purpose—the first art museum in Mississippi built by the Eastman Memorial Foundation. New Orleans architect Rathbone deBuys designed the Georgian Revival structure. It opened to the public on May 1, 1923.

The Beginnings of the Library & Exhibits

Recently, I made the trip to Laurel, taking a leisure drive from Forrest to Raleigh, Bay Springs, and Stringer. The beautiful autumn surroundings were brilliantly on display. Furthermore, I could envision an artist with an easel, canvas, and paints creating a beautiful landscape painting from the country landscape. 

When I arrived at the Museum, I was greeted by a volunteer who handed me a brochure and suggested I begin in the Reading Room to watch the two informative videos about the family, the Museum, and the beginnings of Laurel, which I did.

Lelia Hodson Rogers created the Browsing Room (now the Reading Room), and the portraits of Lauren Rogers and his father, Wallace B. Rogers, are prominently placed, along with other memorabilia. As I watched the video, I was impressed by what the family did to invest and help build the town of Laurel.

The LRMA brochure states, “The Museum features seven galleries for its permanent collections, three galleries for temporary exhibitions, an art studio, and an art reference library containing more than 10,000 volumes.”

The founding families gifted and formed the initial collection for the Museum. Then other family members, like Catherine Marshall Gardiner, great aunt to Lauren, donated over 500 North American Indian baskets and artifacts in 1923. Today, the number of objects has grown to almost 800. It was fascinating to look at the tiniest basket. It must be viewed through a magnifying glass, smaller than the size of my pinky finger.  

Lauren Chase Eastman donated a painting of the American West by H. W. Hansen (1854-1924). Another aspect of the family gifts includes a collection of medals that belonged to the Rogers and Eastman families.

I enjoyed the Georgian Silver Gallery, donated by Harriet and Thomas Gibbons, because of the exquisite objects used for high tea; some items in the collection date back to 1773. There are over 86 items in the collection.

Don’t skip the back gallery, number five, when you visit the museum. I hesitated because the overhead lights were not on. When I entered the room, floodlights illuminated the Japanese Print Gallery donated by Wallace B. Rogers. The gallery features  Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints dating back to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

Modern Exhibit Additions

Making my way through the Museum, I viewed and studied the paintings. One of my favorites was by William Owens (English, 1769-1825), Family Group, c.1810. I was spellbound when I got to the etching by Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (Dutch, 1606-1669), Virgin and Child with Cat and St. Joseph at the Window, dated 1654, also a part of the Van Gogh exhibit.

Glass Artists

Before I visited the museum, I was encouraged to view Washington State’s glass blower, Dale Chihuly’s Aventurine Green Chandelier with Copper Leaf. It is “the stunning centerpiece of the gallery.” Don’t forget to look up as you descend the marble steps to the lower level.

The latest edition of the LRMA News (Fall 2023) has an article mentioning the acquisition of another Dale Chihuly (1941) glass piece named White Venetian.

The Museum also acquired a glass sculpture by Richard Jolley (1952) called Suspended in Dreams #14.

Current Exhibit – Power of Phography

The Power of Photography exhibition, up through November 17, features a selection of 120 iconic images from 120 different photographers that celebrate the photograph’s unique capacity for sensibility. The exhibition was curated by pioneering collector and gallerist Peter Fetterman, who runs one of the leading fine art photography galleries in the world with a special emphasis on humanist photography. Works in the exhibition include The Afghan girl, Sharbat Gula, Pakistan by Steve McCurry, as well as other portraits of Muhammad Ali, Audrey Hepburn, and Maya Angelou, to name a few. Other works show still lives and streetscapes by artists such as Minor White and Henri Cartier-Bresson. The exhibition was organized by Photographic Traveling Exhibitions, Los Angeles, CA.

Information and Upcoming Events

The Lauren Rogers Museum of Art (Phone: 601-649-6374) is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Sunday, and the hours are 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. While admission is free, a donation is suggested.

 A Historic District Walking Tour is scheduled for October 4 from 10:30 to 11:30. Meet in the Museum lobby to tour the historic area around the Museum. There will be additional walking tours this month on the 11th, 18th, and 25th. 

Enjoy the cool night air at Under the Oaks Light Up the Night on October 19. Enjoy an incredible light projection show created by Colin McQuilkin Design. This year’s production will be another unbelievable combination of art, music, and light. Music begins at 6:00 pm with the projection show at 7:00 pm and again at 8:00pm.

About the Author(s)
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Laura Lee Leathers

Laura Lee Leathers is a writer and speaker. Imagine Lois Lane, over sixty-five, and living on a farm. Her metropolis is the area of freelance writing. Her primary love interest is the Word of God. She digs for information, interviews fascinating people, offers a cup of biblical hospitalit-tea, encourages, and helps others with the ‘how-to’s’ of life.