Currier Museum of Art

Currier Museum of Art
Currier Museum of Art
Established 1929
Location Manchester, New Hampshire
Type Art museum
Director Susan Strickler
Website www.currier.org

Coordinates: 42°59′52″N 71°27′21″W / 42.99778°N 71.45583°W / 42.99778; -71.45583 The Currier Museum of Art is an art museum in Manchester, New Hampshire, USA, featuring European and American paintings, decorative arts, photographs and sculpture. The permanent collection includes works by Picasso, Matisse, Monet, O'Keeffe, Calder, Scheier and Goldsmith, John Singer Sargent, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Andrew Wyeth. Public programs include tours, live classical music and "Family Days" which include activities for all ages.

Contents

History

The museum, originally known as the Currier Gallery of Art, was founded in 1929 from a bequest of former New Hampshire Governor Moody Currier and his third wife, Hannah Slade Currier.

Moody Currier, Governor of New Hampshire from State Builders.jpgHannah Slade Currier of New Hampshire from State Builders (cropped).jpg
Museum founders Mr. and Mrs. Currier

Currier's will provided for the establishment of an art museum, "for the benefit and advancement of humanity." While not an art collector himself, his funding allowed for the purchase of a great deal of art.

After his third wife's death in 1915, a board of trustees was appointed to carry out the Curriers' wishes that a structure be constructed. Multiple architectural proposals were entertained and the project was not awarded until 1926 to the New York firm of Tilton and Githens.[1] In October 1929, the art gallery opened its new facility.

The main atrium in 2008

The first director was Maud Briggs Knowlton, one of the first women to be a museum administrator in the United States.[1][2]

In 1982, new pavilions, designed by the New York firm Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer, were built to accommodate the museum’s growing collections, programs and staff. The Currier Art Center, home to art activities for all ages, was relocated to the adjacent former Women’s Aid Home in 1998.

In September 2002, the Gallery changed its name to the Currier Museum of Art, because, in the words of its then-director, it "recognizes the Currier’s true mission and clarifies our function for those less familiar with us."[3]

Museum expansion

The Henry Melville Fuller Winter Garden in 2008, with a Sol LeWitt wall drawing

On June 30, 2005, as part of the first phase of major renovations, a moving firm moved the historic Kennard House, formerly the location of the museum offices, from Beech Street to Pearl Street. The house was built in 1867 in the Second Empire style, and was home to several of the city's wealthy industrialists.

The museum closed on June 27, 2006 for the duration of the $21.4 million expansion. The construction took 21 months, and the museum reopened to the public as scheduled on March 30, 2008.[4] The addition and renovations received a 2008 Design Honor Award from the New Hampshire chapter of the American Institute of Architects, as well as a "People's Choice Award" through the AIA.[citation needed]

Zimmerman House

The museum operates tours of the nearby Zimmerman House a Usonian House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. It is complete with the original furnishings and the owners' fine art collection. The Zimmerman House is the only Wright-designed house in New England open for public tours, which are offered March-December.

The Isadore J. and Lucille Zimmerman House was designed in 1950 by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959), one of America’s greatest modern architects. Wright designed the house, the interiors, all the furniture, the gardens, and even the mailbox. In 1979, the building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Dr. and Mrs. Zimmerman left the house to the Currier Museum of Art in 1988. In 1990 it was opened to the public so that visitors could enjoy a private world from the 1950s and 1960s including the Zimmermans unique collection of modern art, pottery, and sculpture. In the estimation of many it is a total work of art and serves as “the largest outdoor sculpture in the collection.” It is the only Wright home open to the public in New England and one of only several of his Usonian homes open nationwide.

References

  1. ^ a b "A New England collection on tour - 'American Art from The Currier Gallery of Art'" ([dead link]). Magazine Antiques (Brant Publications, Inc.). December 1995. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1026/is_/ai_17776999. 
  2. ^ "Currier Gallery of Art". American Art Directory (R. R. Bowker Company) XXXII: 242. 1935. ISSN 0065-6968. 
  3. ^ "New Currier Museum Campaign Boosts Visibility". Currier Museum of Art. Archived from the original on October 22, 2002. http://web.archive.org/web/20021022001740/http://www.currier.org/contact/?show=press. Retrieved June 3, 2009. 
  4. ^ "Currier Museum planning reopening". The Boston Globe. 2008-01-20. http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2008/01/20/currier_museum_planning_reopening/. 

External links

Cram and Ferguson - Currier Art Gallery proposal 1920, external view.jpgCram and Ferguson - Currier Art Gallery proposal 1920, internal courtyard view.jpgCram and Ferguson - Currier Art Gallery proposal 1920, floor plan.jpg
Illustrations and floor plan from the 1920 proposal for the original museum by Boston architectural firm Cram and Ferguson. This design did not win the project.

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