Gift To Provide Permanent Home For Collection And Ensure Greater
Public Access
OMAHA, Neb.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun. 15, 2016--
ConAgra Foods, Inc. (NYSE:CAG) announced today that it plans to donate
its corporate collection of nearly 600 original Currier & Ives prints to
the Joslyn Art Museum, in Omaha, Nebraska. The prints represent a
remarkably expansive pictorial documentation of the post-Civil War
republic before the widespread use of photography.
This Smart News Release features multimedia. View the full release here:
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160615006402/en/
Currier & Ives: Central Park in Winter (Photo: Business Wire).
“We’re excited to present ConAgra’s rare Currier & Ives collection to
Omaha’s Joslyn Art Museum so that the entire community and visitors from
all over the world can enjoy these historic works,” said Sean Connolly,
president and chief executive officer, ConAgra Foods. “There is no
better home for this artwork where it will be properly cared for and
maintained in a professional, sustainable manner.”
Connolly added, “This donation is just one of the ways that we will
continue to support the Omaha community, home to more than 2,100 of our
valued employees.”
ConAgra obtained the Currier & Ives works in the late 1980’s when the
company acquired Beatrice Foods, the collection’s former owner. Although
portions of the collection were on display over the years at ConAgra’s
Omaha campus, viewing opportunities for the public were limited, and the
majority of the works remained in storage. ConAgra’s gift to the Joslyn
Art Museum ensures that the collection will be permanently available to
share with the Omaha community and beyond.
“We are grateful to ConAgra for this extraordinary gift,” said Jack
Becker, Joslyn Art Museum executive director & CEO. “These works will
complement Joslyn’s overall collection, enhance our growing works on
paper collection, and serve as an important cornerstone of our American
art collection. Currier and Ives made their work available to as many
people as possible, and that spirit is paralleled by ConAgra’s decision
to gift this collection and ensure that countless visitors will enjoy it
in the years to come.”
About ConAgra Foods
ConAgra Foods, Inc., (NYSE: CAG), is one of North America's leading
packaged food companies with recognized brands such as Marie
Callender's®, Healthy Choice®, Slim Jim®, Hebrew National®, Orville
Redenbacher's®, Peter Pan®, Reddi-wip®, PAM®, Snack Pack®, Banquet®,
Chef Boyardee®, Egg Beaters®, Hunt’s® and many other ConAgra Foods
brands found in grocery, convenience, mass merchandise and club stores.
ConAgra Foods also has a strong business-to-business presence, supplying
frozen potato and sweet potato products as well as other vegetable,
spice and grain products to a variety of well-known restaurants,
foodservice operators and commercial customers. For more information,
please visit us at www.conagrafoods.com.
About Joslyn Art Museum
Joslyn Art Museum showcases art from ancient times to the present.
The Museum was a gift to the people of Omaha from Sarah Joslyn in memory
of her husband, George, who made his fortune as president of the Western
Newspaper Union. The Museum’s original 1931 building is one of the
finest examples of Art Deco architecture in the nation, with 38 types of
marble from seven countries. The Walter and Suzanne Scott Pavilion, a
58,000-square-foot addition built in 1994, was designed by renowned
British architect Norman Foster as his first U.S. commission. The Museum
features galleries, a 1,000–seat concert hall, fountain court, education
technology gallery, lecture hall, classrooms, sculpture garden, café,
shop, and Art Works, an interactive space for art exploration.
About Currier & Ives
Currier and Ives was a New York based publishing company, founded by
lithographer Nathaniel Currier (1813–1888) in 1835. James Merritt Ives
(1824–1895) joined the firm first as an accountant, and was later made a
full partner. Currier and Ives advertised themselves as visual
journalists of the nineteenth-century, producing lithographic and
chromolithographic print images of American life, including sporting
life, landscapes, industry, politics, fashion, and current events. Their
prints were marketed as “the best and cheapest, and the most popular
pictures in the world.” The firm employed noted artists including Arthur
Fitzwilliam Tait, George Durrie, Eastman Johnson, Frances Flora Bond
Palmer, and George Innes, and new commercial lithography techniques that
allowed more copies to be printed from a single stone and faster, more
efficient output. The publishers were able to distribute illustrations
of current events within days of their occurrence, and sell them at
affordable prices.
From the 1830s to 1880s, the United States doubled in geographic
size, increased its population from 13 to 62 million, and experienced an
Industrial Revolution. A new economic middle class emerged with both
leisure time and disposable income, as well as the desire to decorate
its homes with affordable art. Currier and Ives established a wholesale
business by mail to grant dealers in cities beyond the New York region
discounted bulk pricing for their work. Prints were shipped across the
country and as far away as Europe to be resold for twenty cents to three
dollars, depending on size. Its catalogue reads like a narrative of the
American story, documenting historical events and an array of idealized,
celebratory scenes eagerly sought by the public. Altogether, the firm
created between 7,000 and 8,000 scenes that were reproduced as
hand-colored prints that sold in uncounted millions of copies — at one
point 95 percent of all lithographs in circulation in the United States
were theirs.

View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160615006402/en/
Source: ConAgra Foods, Inc.
ConAgra Foods, Inc.
Chris Kircher, 402-240-5392
Chris.kircher@conagrafoods.com
www.conagrafoods.com
EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.