Lowe Art Museum

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Lowe Art Museum
Lowe.jpg
Lowe Art Museum at UM
Lowe Art Museum is located in Florida
Lowe Art Museum
Location within Florida
Established1950
LocationUniversity of Miami
1301 Stanford Drive
Coral Gables, Florida, United States
Coordinates25°43′10″N 80°16′32″W / 25.719425°N 80.275657°W / 25.719425; -80.275657
TypeVisual arts museum[1]
Visitors41,000[2]
DirectorJill Deupi [3]
CuratorJill Deupi [3]
Public transit accessMetrorail access via University Station
Websitewww.lowe.miami.edu

The Lowe Art Museum, in Coral Gables, a Miami suburb in Miami-Dade County, is a visual arts museum. It opened in 1950 and is operated by the University of Miami. It was originally established by a gift from philanthropists Joe[4] and Emily Lowe.[5] At the time it opened, it was the first art museum in South Florida. The museum has an extensive collection of art with permanent collections in Greco-Roman antiquities, Renaissance, Baroque, 17th- and 19th-century European art, 19th-century American Art, and modern art.[1] The museum's national and international works come from Latin America, Africa, Asia, Native America, Ancient Americas, and the Pacific Islands. It also has a large collection of glassworks including creations by Robert Arneson, Jun Kaneko ("Dango") and Christine Federighi ("Globe").[6] There are also glassworks by Pablo Picasso, William Morris, Emily Brock,[7] Harvey Littleton, Erwin Eisch, and Ginny Ruffner in the permanent collection.

The permanent collection includes works by: Lippo Vanni, Sano di Pietro, Lorenzo di Bicci, Lorenzo di Credi, Vincenzo Catena, Francesco Bacchiacca, Bernardino Fungai, Adrian Isenbrandt, Jacob Jordaens, Jusepe de Ribera, El Greco, Francisco Goya, Thomas Gainsborough, Paul Gauguin, Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, Frank Stella, Knox Martin, and Duane Hanson. There are also Modern works of Art by Roy Lichtenstein, Sandy Skoglund, Purvis Young, Louise Nevelson, Julian Stanczak and Enrique Montenegro in the permanent collection.

The Lowe Art Museum is served by the Miami Metrorail at the University Station.

General[]

The Lowe Art Museum is one of the most important art museums in Miami, and one of the most important in the south of Florida (United States of America).

The museum is located within the University of Miami complex, located in Coral Gables, a city southwest of Downtown Miami in Miami-Dade County.

The museum's collections include pieces ranging from classical archeology to contemporary art, with important pieces of Renaissance and Baroque art and of Asian and Native American art.

History[]

On February 22, 1950, the University of Miami inaugurated what would later become the Lowe Art Museum in the former's newly completed Merrick Classroom Building. As the City of Miami's first professional art exhibition space, the "University of Miami Art Gallery" was founded to serve faculty, students, scholars, researchers, and members of the general public throughout the region.

In 1951, Miami philanthropists Joe and Emily Lowe underwrote the construction of a stand-alone facility on UM's campus to absorb the Gallery's rapidly growing collections: The new "Lowe Art Gallery" was formally dedicated on February 4, 1952. Four years later (1956), Alfred I. Barton donated to the Lowe his extensive collection of Native American art, which was accommodated in a 1,300 square-foot purpose-built addition.

In 1961, the Gallery was selected as a repository for 43 works from the Samuel H. Kress Collection of European Renaissance and Baroque art, which was housed in a new wing built specifically for this purpose.

In 1968 the Lowe Art Gallery was renamed the "Lowe Art Museum," which in 1972 became the first museum in Miami-Dade County to be professionally accredited by the American Alliance of Museums.

In 1985, the Lowe was recognized by the State of Florida as a Major Cultural Institution, the first museum in Miami-Dade County to be thus honored. The Lowe continued to make important art acquisitions (primarily through gift acceptance) in the intervening years, which necessitated a major expansion of its facility in 1991. Miami architect Charles Harrison Pawley was selected for this project, which—when completed in 1996—added 13,000 additional square feet of temporary and permanent exhibition gallery space to the Museum, bringing its total footprint to over 36,000 square feet. This project also addressed the Lowe's need for new HVAC, security, and fire protection systems.

The Museum's most recent expansion, the Myrna and Sheldon Palley Pavilion for Contemporary Glass and Studio Arts, opened in 2008 and added another 4,500 square feet of exhibition space. The Lowe's comprehensive collection now comprises more than 19,250 objects, which collectively represent more than 5,000 years of human creativity on every inhabited continent.

Exhibition halls[]

The collection is divided into thematic rooms, dedicating a single room for each theme or artistic current in the collection. Currently it includes about 14 rooms, plus the Palley Pavilion, dedicated to the glass collection, and the outdoor garden of contemporary art sculptures.[8]

Greek and Roman antiquities[]

Sylvia and Ray Marchman, Jr. Gallery

This gallery includes pottery, sculpture, metalwork, and glasswork from ancient Greece and the Roman Empire, dating from the first millennium BCE through the 4th century CE. The antiquities on view are complemented by Washington Allston's mural-sized, neoclassical painting Jason Returning to Demand His Father's Kingdom (1807-1808).

Renaissance and Baroque arts[]

Samuel H. Kress, Palley Gallery and Sheila Natasha Simrod Friedman Gallery

Here you will find Western European Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque paintings, sculptures, and decorative art objects including work from the Samuel H. Kress Collection of Renaissance and Baroque art. This wing was built specifically to house the Kress Collection after the Lowe was selected as a repository for 41 works in 1961.

Arts of Africa[]

The Potamkin Family Gallery

This gallery offers works from all regions of the African continent, with an emphasis on sub-Saharan regions. Works on view include architectural elements, ceremonial and ritual objects, costumes, textiles, and sculptures dating from ca. 500 BCE to the present. In addition, you will find ceramic, stone, metal, and paper objects from Egypt, the Near East, and West Asia.

Arts of Asia[]

Sol and Sheila Taplin Gallery

Here you will find ceramics, metalwork, sculpture, costumes, textiles, and architectural elements dating from the Neolithic period through the present from China, Japan, Korea, India, and Southeast Asia.

Indigenous art of the Americas[]

Alfred I. Barton Wing

This gallery, which is dimly lit to preserve its contents, hosts pottery, basketry, sculpture, costumes, and textiles of Native North, Central, and South America. Works on view span from the period of 2500 BCE to contemporary works by living Native artists.

Contemporary and modern art[]

Ben Tobin Galleries

The long gallery is dedicated to contemporary artwork that is globally influenced and culturally diverse. Contemporary art, produced in the second half of the 20th century or in the 21st century, combines materials, methods, concepts, and subjects that continue to challenge boundaries. Diverse and eclectic, this work is a part of a cultural dialogue that concerns larger contextual frameworks such as personal and cultural identity, politics, community, and nationality.

Contemporary glass and ceramics[]

Myrna and Sheldon Palley Pavillion and Pat and Larry Stewart Hall, Beaux Arts Bay and Matus Bay

The Myrna and Sheldon Palley Pavilion for Contemporary Glass and Studio Arts and houses over 100 objects from the Lowe's glass collection as well as ceramics. The Palley Pavilion opened on May 1, 2008 thanks to the vision of long-time University supporters and alumni, Sheldon and Myrna Palley, whose collection is a promised gift.

Temporary exhibits[]

Friends of Art Gallery and Steven and Dorothea Green Galleries

These two large galleries are dedicated to temporary exhibitions.

Notable Works[]

Renaissance and Baroque[]

Francesco da Rimini (also called Master of the Blessed Clare)

Francesco Guardi (attr.)

  • View of the church of Santa Maria della Salute c. 1750

Jacopo Robusti known as Tintoretto

  • Portrait of a young man c. second half of the 16th century

Vincenzo Catena

  • Portrait of Giambattista Memmo c. 1510
Vincenzo Catena Portrait of Giambattista Memmo c. 1510

Lucas Cranach the Elder

  • Portrait of a scholar c. 1515 ca.

Lippo Vanni

  • Madonna and Child Enthroned with Donors and Saints Dominic and Elizabeth of Hungary c. 1343

Jacob Jordaens

  • The oath of Paris c. 1620–1625

Adriaen Isenbrandt

  • Madonna with child and member of the Hillensberger family 1513

Giuseppe Maria Crespi

  • Lady with dog c. 1690–1700

Lorenzo di Credi

  • Madonna and Child c. 1500

Andrea del Sarto

  • Madonna with child and San Giovannino c. 1429

Antonio da Correggio (attr.)

Ambrogio Bergognone

  • Madonna and Child 1520 ca.
Jacob Jordaens The Judgment of Paris c. 1620–1625

17th - 20th Century American and European[]

Jusepe de Ribera

  • Sant' Onofrio c. 1642
  • St. Peter [9]

Dominikos Theotokopoulos known as El Greco

  • Christ Carrying the Cross [9]
  • Feast in the House of Simon [9]

Bartolomé Esteban Murillo

  • Portrait of a Gentleman [9]

Thomas Gainsborough

  • Portrait of Mrs. Collins c. 1770–1775

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes

  • Jose Antonio, Marques de Caballero 1807 [9]

Paul Gauguin

  • Le Chaland et la barque 1882

Claude Monet

Albert Bierstadt

  • Yosemite Valley, California c. 1863

André Masson

  • Mistral
Paul Gauguin Le Chaland et la barque 1882

Fernando Botero

  • Las Frutas 1964

Carlos Alfonzo

  • Lifetime [Curso de la Vida] 1988

José Bedia

  • Nkunia, Gajo or Rama 1995

Contemporary[]

Roy Lichtenstein

  • Modular Painting in Four Panels V 1969

Frank Stella

  • Le Neveu de Rameau 1974

Duane Hanson

  • Football Player 1981

Deborah Butterfield

  • Rex 1991

Tatiana Parcero

  • Interior Cartography # 43 1996

Sandy Skoglund

  • Breathing Glass, Installation, 2000

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Lowe Art Museum: About, ARTINFO, 2008, retrieved 2008-07-28
  2. ^ 60 years of the Lowe Art Museum in Coral Gables Miami Herald
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Lowe Art Museum contact
  4. ^ About Joe Lowe Company of New York business see Jefferson M. Moak The Frozen Sucker War: Good Humor v. Popsicle Prologue Magazine 2005, Vol. 37, No. 1
  5. ^ Emily Lowe Obituary.
  6. ^ Christine Federighi
  7. ^ Emily Brock
  8. ^ Lowe Art Museum - collection
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e The Cintas Foundation

External links[]

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