15-07-09

The Columbia Museum of Art to unveil freshly designed galleries

The Columbia Museum of Art unveils its art collection in newly re-installed galleries on Saturday, July 18, 2009. This is the first re-installation since the Museum opened on Main Street on July 18, 1998. In celebration, free admission, lectures, gallery talks, and hands-on arts activities for children are offered that day.
The art in the 17 galleries on the second floor are arranged in a new configuration with informative materials that help broaden and deepen the museum’s educational impact. The approximately 350 works on view include nearly 90 works that are on display for the first time. The re-installation of the galleries is made possible by a leadership gift from the City of Forest Acres, with additional funding provided by the Henry Luce Foundation.
Columbia Museum of Art’s executive director Karen Brosius says, “July will be an exciting time for the Museum as we show what has been accomplished since moving to Main Street in 1998. The publication of the catalogue of the European art collection – a culmination of 15 years of research – and the re-installation highlighting two major new focuses – American art and Asian art – adds breadth and diversity to the museum’s international art collection.”
The 60-year-old museum has been best known for its world-class Kress Collection of Renaissance, Baroque and 18th-century art. Now for the first time in the museum’s history, there are dedicated galleries for the display of American and Asian art objects in addition to the European art collection. This is, in large part, the result of recent gifts and loans to the museum – the gift of the Robert Turner Collection of Chinese Art, the largest and most significant collection of Asian art created for the Asian market in South Carolina, and a new collaboration with the Dietrich American Foundation. Located at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Dietrich American Foundation is providing approximately 45 works on long-term loan, including exceptional examples of Philadelphia and New England furniture, Philadelphia silver, Chinese export porcelain, China Trade paintings, and English ceramics. Paintings from the Foundation include a portrait of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney – a famous South Carolinian – by John Trumbull and a painting by N.C. Wyeth. The receipt of the Dietrich American Foundation objects transforms the museum’s 18th-century American furniture collection into the strongest in the state and one of the finest in the Southeast region.
In conjunction with the re-installation, the museum is also premiering the newly published catalogue, European Art in the Columbia Museum of Art, Including the Samuel H. Kress Collection, Volume 1: The Thirteenth through the Sixteenth Century, which is the first-ever publication about the museum’s European art collection. Published by University of South Carolina Press, the catalogue is a lavishly illustrated guidebook to the museum’s late Gothic and Renaissance collections and highlights 84 paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures, decorative bronzes, furniture, ceramics, stained glass and textiles. Presented with color illustrations and detailed art historical context, 56 works of Renaissance art by such prominent figures as Bernardo Daddi, Sandro Botticelli, Mariotto Albertinelli, Albrecht Dürer, Parmigianino and Jacopo Tintoretto are described by accomplished art historian Dr. Charles R. Mack and a team of researchers, including the museum’s chief curator and curator of European art. Included are essays with in-depth examinations of the artist’s biography and contribution, the work and its provenance, and its history of attributions, ownership and exhibition. The entries also describe such matters as condition, conservation history, and in the case of paintings, the authenticity of frames. The catalogue is available, beginning July 18, in the Museum Shop for $29.95 paperback and $59.95 hardcover. This catalogue is supported, in part, through the generosity of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.

Website : http://www.columbiamuseum.org/