Museum of Agrarian Art
Jul 12, 2019
Amanda Mobley Guenther, Curator Bone Creek Museum
Museum of Agrarian Art

Amanda Mobley Guenther is curator of Bone Creek Museum of Agrarian Art in David City. She is the author of Dale Nichols: Transcending Regionalism, published in 2011. She has planned exhibitions for other institutions in the Midwest since 2008. Amanda holds her BA in Art and MA in Journalism from UNL and is a Young Alumni Achievement Award recipient. She also has worked with the Nebraska 150 Foundation on The Legacy of Nebraska project by Todd Williams in celebration of Nebraska's Sesquicentennial in 2017. She lives in Lincoln with her husband and two daughters. 

 

Bone Creek Museum of Agrarian Art in David City, NE is the nation’s only exclusively agrarian art museum presenting art that connects people to the land. Exhibitions and related events such as artist talks, panel discussions, art workshops, poetry readings, humanities presentations, and musical performances  celebrate the heritage and current themes of rural and farm life. David City is the hometown of nationally recognized Regionalist artist Dale Nichols whose work is the heart of the permanent collection.

In 2007 a group of volunteers founded the museum.  David City is the hometown of Regionalist artist Dale Nichols.  In May 2011 Dale Nichols: Transcending Regionalism opened.

In 2012 Henry Adams of The Smithsonia blog Articulations described Transcending Regionalism this way:  “One of the most provocative exhibitions in the United States right now was organized by an institution that’s a bit off the beaten track: The Bone Creek Museum of Agrarian Art in David City, Nebraska…It’s impressive that such a small community has produced an ambitious exhibition and book of this scale, roughly on a par with those produced by America’s largest museums.”

This exhibition brought 2,800 visitors from throughout the nation to David City and involved 600 students. The exhibition toured to:  the Georgia Art Museum, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, and Utah Museum of Fine Arts.

In 2014 AAA Living magazine listed the four top art museums in Nebraska.  They included the Joslyn, Sheldon, Museum of Nebraska Art, and Bone Creek.

The museum has offered 42 exhibitions since 2007.  Examples of artists from beyond the Midwest include Jean Terry who focused on farming in upstate New York.  Canadian artist Denise Lemaster’s exhibition, “Canadian Foothills” was the museum’s first exhibition from beyond U.S. borders.

The museum has drawn visitors from 50 states and 7 countries in its first seven years.  The museum is supported by 292 members representing 30 states. Thirty volunteers serve as board members; educators; docents; receptionists; maintenance staff; and event set-up crews.