Reception for Samuel Bak
Michael Pucker (left) is a law partner of Wabash's Chariman of the
Board, Stephen Bowen. On Sunday, Pucker honored their friendship by
donating a painting by Holocaust survivor Samuel Bak to Wabash's
permanent collection in honor of Bowen and their years of friendship.
The painting was made in 1999 and is titled Creation. Dean of the
College Gary Phillips says the painting "asks us to consider the
relationship between creation and destruction. He [Bak] asks us to
imagine a world where the divine is present only in absence."
Wabash Dean Gary Phillips has researched and studied the work of
Holocaust survivor and artist Samuel Bak for years. He and his colleague
Danna Fewell of Drew University have orchestrated a collaboration that
includes Wabash, Drew, and DePauw University to share the art and
scholarship associated with Bak's work. After a five-week run at Wabash,
paintings from "The Art of the Question: The Paintings of Samuel Bak"
will be exhibited at the Prindle Institute of Ethics at DePauw
University. At right is former DePauw President Robert Bottoms, who now
directs the work of the Prindle Institute.
Dena Pence (right), the Director of the Wabash Center for Teaching and
Learning in Theology and Religion, talks with Amy Robbins, whose husband
Clay is President of Lilly Endowment Inc., which made the Bak exhibition
possible. Pence and her colleagues at the Wabash Center will be hosting
a colloquy on art and theology.
A gift to Wabash that honors Stephen Bowen ’68, Creation
was donated to the College by Michael and Gigi Pucker, long-time friends
of the Wabash Board Chairman. The presentation of the painting coincided
with the opening of the exhibit "The Art of the Question: Paintings by
Samuel Bak," which will run in the Eric Dean Gallery for five weeks. Creation
was made in 1999. Dean of the College Gary Phillips says the painting
"asks us to consider the relationship between creation and destruction.
He [Bak] asks us to imagine a world where the divine is present only in
absence."