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SERVING VIRGINIA, LOOKING OUT TO THE WORLD:
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Updated
7/29/09
In the midst of the Great Depression, on January 16, 1936, Virginia's
political and business leaders bravely demonstrated their faith
in the future and their belief in the value of art by opening the
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond on the former site of the
Robert
E. Lee Camp Confederate Soldiers' Home. The English Renaissance-style
headquarters building designed by Peebles and Ferguson Architects
of Norfolk barely hinted at the innovative mandate given to the
fledgling institution: the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts was to serve
as the state's flagship art museum and as the headquarters for an
educational network that would bring the best of world art, past
and present, to every corner of the commonwealth.
The idea of a state-operated art museum in Richmond, and the beginnings
of an unusual partnership between private donors and state legislators,
actually surfaced long before the new museum was built. In 1919,
Judge
John Barton Payne, a prominent Virginian who held high offices
in law and national politics, donated his entire collection of 50
paintings to the commonwealth. Gifts of art to the state from other
donors soon followed, and in 1932 Judge Payne proposed a $100,000
challenge grant to build a museum for this burgeoning public art
collection.
The challenge was accepted by Virginia Governor John
Garland Pollard. He not only helped to raise funds from private
donors, but also promoted the use of state revenues to support the
new museum's operating expenses. Virginia's General Assembly approved
legislation authorizing the museum on March 27, 1934. With additional
funds from the Federal Works Projects Administration, Judge Payne's
dream became a reality.
BUILDING THE COLLECTION
Judge
Payne's collection was the first of many gifts offered to the Virginia
Museum of Fine Arts. One of the institution's earliest and most
popular donations was the Lillian Thomas Pratt Collection of jeweled
objects by Peter Carl Fabergé
donated in 1947. In that same year the museum also received
the T. Catesby Jones Collection of Modern Art; and in the early
1950s the museum's holdings of European art were significantly augmented
by bequests from Adolph D. and Wilkins C. Williams and from Arthur
and Margaret Glasgow. Clearly, more galleries were needed. The museum's
first addition, built in 1954 by Merrill C. Lee, Architects, of
Richmond, offered a temporary solution to this happy problem.
VMFA's acquisition program, funded entirely by private patronage,
continued at a rapid pace during the 1960s. Especially significant
was the 1968 purchase, with funds from Paul
Mellon, of more than 150 Indian and Himalayan paintings, sculptures
and decorative arts from the world-famous collection of Nasli Heeramaneck.
By the mid 1960s, additional gallery space was again desperately
needed. Funded solely by the commonwealth and completed in 1970,
the museum's second addition, the South Wing, was designed by Baskervill
& Son Architects of Richmond. It featured four new permanent
galleries and a large gallery for loan exhibitions, as well as a
new library, photography lab, art storage rooms and staff offices.
As the South Wing was being completed, two important gifts were
received. The first, in 1970, was a donation from the estate of
Ailsa
Mellon Bruce of 450 European decorative objects, including a
dazzling group of 18th- and 19th-century European gold, porcelain
and enamel boxes. The second gift, funds from Sydney
and Frances Lewis of Richmond in 1971, provided for the acquisition
of Art Nouveau objects and furniture.
As more exhibition space and visitor services were needed, a third
addition, the North Wing, designed by Hardwicke
Associates, Inc., Architects, of Richmond, was completed in
1976. It added three more gallery areas - two for loan exhibitions
and one for the Sydney and Frances Lewis Art Nouveau Collection
- as well as a new sculpture garden with a cascading fountain.
In the following years, the Lewises and the Mellons proposed major
donations from their extensive private collections, which necessitated
more construction. Once again, public and private resources were
pooled to provide for growth. In December 1985, the museum opened
its fourth addition, the West Wing. It now houses the Mellon collections,
consisting of major examples of French Impressionist, Post-Impressionist
and British Sporting art (which was permanently given to the museum
in 1983); the Lewis Contemporary art collections; and the outstanding
Lewis collections of Art Nouveau and Art Deco furniture, glass and
other decorative arts. The West Wing was designed by Hardy
Holzman Pfeiffer Associates of New York.
New collections and acquisitions funds continue to be donated to
the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. In 1988, patrons Harwood and Louise
Cochrane established a handsome endowment to acquire major examples
of American art; and in 1997, a spectacular collection of 18th-
and 19th-century English silver was given by Jerome
and Rita Gans.
At his death in 1999, Paul Mellon bequeathed additional important
French and British works, including five paintings by Stubbs and
drawings by artists ranging from Degas to Cézanne.
In
2009, VMFA acquired one of the finest remaining refugee collections
of German Expressionist art the Ludwig and Rosy Fischer Collection,
assembled by the couple in Germany between 1905 and 1925, the most
creative years of German Expressionism. The acquisition was a gift-purchase
agreement between VMFA and Anne Rosenberg Fischer (1902-2008) of
Richmond and her family.
VMFA has made further extraordinary acquisitions with endowments
provided by many private donors. The museum has assembled a wide-ranging
collection of world art characterized by great breadth and exceptional
aesthetic quality. It includes significant holdings of Classical
and African art;
paintings by European masters such as Poussin, Goya, Delacroix and
Monet, and American masters such as John Singer Sargent and Winslow
Homer; one of the world's leading collections of Indian and Himalayan
art; an internationally important collection of fine English silver;
unequaled holdings of Art Nouveau and Art Deco furniture, ceramics,
glass and jewelry; a dynamic collection of Modern and Contemporary
art; a popular collection of Fabergé
imperial jeweled objects; and noted holdings of French Impressionist
and Post-Impressionist art, including original waxes and bronzes
by Edgar Degas.
In 2003, a year after its selection of London-based architect Rick
Mather, VMFA unveiled a master plan for a $150-million building
expansion and transformation
of its 13½-acre campus. Mather's design will provide Virginians
with a work of contemporary architecture that will display more
fully the museum's extensive collection of world art. His virtuoso
handling of transparency and natural light will function as both
a tool and a metaphor to open the museum to its surroundings and
create an inspiring atmosphere in which to view art. The expansion
Grand Opening will be May 1, 2010.
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS
Since
its inception, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts has actively supplemented
its permanent collections with special exhibitions. Only five years
after its opening in 1936, the museum boldly presented an exhibition
of Modernist works by artists of the School of Paris from the collection
of Walter P. Chrysler Jr.
In the 1950s, VMFA originated notable shows such as "Furniture
of the Old South" (1952), "Design of Scandinavia"
(1954) and "Masterpieces of Chinese Art" (1955). The 1960s
opened with "Masterpieces of American Silver" and continued
with "Painting in England, 1700-1850," which drew heavily
from the private collections of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon and was
at that time the most comprehensive exhibition of British painting
ever presented in the United States. In 1967, the museum also mounted
a major exhibition of the work of the masterful English social satirist
William Hogarth.
In 1978, the museum presented a landmark exhibition on Colonial
cabinetmaking in early Virginia, "Furniture of Williamsburg
and Eastern Virginia, 1710-1790." Another first, and one that
received widespread international attention, was the 1983 exhibition
"Painting in the South: 1564-1980."
In 1994 and 1995, the museum exhibited its entire 250-object African
art collection in "Spirit of the Motherland: African Art at
the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts." This special exhibition
was a major element of 3½-year, $1.4-million project funded
by a grant from the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund Museum Collections
Accessibility Initiative.
In the fall of 1996, VMFA was one of five major American museums
to present "Fabergé in America" and "The Lillian
Thomas Pratt Collection of Fabergé." These two exhibitions,
featuring more than 400 objects and 15 imperial Easter eggs, drew
more than 130,000 visitors to Richmond.
In 1999, the museum presented "Splendors of Ancient Egypt,"
an exhibition assembled from the renowned collection of the Pelizaeus
Museum in Hildesheim, Germany. Nearly a quarter of a million people
saw the show in Richmond. It was one of the largest exhibitions
of Egyptian art ever to tour the United States.
In 2005, VMFA presented an exhibition of more than 30 fine Impressionist
and Realist oils, watercolors and pastels and two sculptures in
"Capturing Beauty: American Impressionist and Realist Paintings
from the McGlothlin Collection." In conjunction with the opening,
the McGlothlins announced their plan to bequeath art and give financial
support valued at well above $100 million to VMFA.
IN PARTNERSHIP TO
SERVE THE PEOPLE OF VIRGINIA
In
1999, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts opened a new addition to
its campus, the Pauley Center (formerly Virginia's Home
for Needy Confederate Women). This complex houses the museum's
Office
of Statewide Partnerships, which delivers programs and exhibitions
throughout the commonwealth via a voluntary network of more than
350 nonprofit institutions (museums, galleries, art organizations,
schools, community colleges, colleges and universities). Through
this program, the museum offers crated exhibitions, arts-related
audiovisual programs, symposia, lectures, conferences and workshops
by visual and performing artists. Included in the statewide partnership
offerings is a special program of exhibitions, programs and educational
resources tailored to help students meet the state's Standards of
Learning.
FOR
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Suzanne Hall, 804/204-2704; or Sarah Pennington, 804/204-2701; Virginia Museum
of Fine Arts, 200 N. Boulevard, Richmond VA 23220-4007; FAX 804/204-2707;
e-mail <suzanne.hall@vmfa.museum>
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