The Allentown Art Museum of the Lehigh Valley is an art museum located in Allentown, Pennsylvania.[2] It was founded in 1934 by a group organized by Walter Emerson Baum, a Pennsylvania impressionist painter.
Established | March 17, 1934 |
---|---|
Location | 31 N. 5th Street Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Director | Max Weintraub[1] |
Public transit access | LANta bus: 102, 107, 209, 210, 220, 324 |
Website | www |
The museum maintains a collection of over 19,000 works of art and is a major regional art institution. The museum also maintains a library and archives containing over 16,000 titles and 40 current periodicals.
History
edit20th century
editAllentown Art Museum was founded originally as Allentown Art Gallery and organized by Walter Emerson Baum. It opened in Allentown's Hunsicker School on March 17, 1934. With 70 canvases by local Pennsylvania impressionist artists on display, the gallery attracted major attention from local and regional art communities.
During the Great Depression, Baum was able to grow the collection through the Public Works of Art Project and through acquisitions and gifts. In June 1936, the City of Allentown granted the museum a permanent home in a Federal-style house located in the Rose Garden in Allentown's Cedar Park. The museum's first curator was John E. Berninger, a local artist who lived with his wife on the museum's second floor.
In 1959, a gift of 53 Renaissance and Baroque paintings and sculptures from Samuel H. Kress, a native of nearby Cherryville, Pennsylvania, brought the museum to a new level. The Kress gift served to encourage community visionaries and museum friends to purchase and refurbish a building, formerly the First Presbyterian Church, built in 1902, suitable to house the new collection.
In 1960, the Kress gift was featured in the museum's first major catalog, The Samuel H. Kress Memorial Collection, written by Richard Hirsch, the institution's first director. In his introduction, Hirsch observed how the fleeting imagery of TV changed perceptions of the collection's works. When created, they were not merely one of many representations of religious figures but of the figures themselves.[3] Hirsch's observations portend the Slow Movement that arose over 25 years later and encouraged a renewed, attentive appreciation of the world, including of fine art. The museum later began hosted Slow Art days in 2011 to acknowledge the benefits of quiet, intense reflection.
In 1975, an Edgar Tafel-designed expansion to the building enhanced the museum's programs and collecting plans. The museum installed a library from the second Francis W. Little House that was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. A second room from the Francis W. Little House was built at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
Also in 1975, the museum's collection was expanded with the addition of European paintings and a large collection of textile arts. In 1978, the museum acquired Gilbert Stuart's portrait of Ann Penn Allen, granddaughter of William Allen, the founder of Allentown.
21st century
editIn 2010, the museum completed a $15.4 million expansion project designed by Venturi Scott Brown, a Philadelphia-based architecture firm to renovate the museum. The project added 7,900 square feet (730 m2) of new classroom and gallery space, including a corner cafe, an expanded gift shop, and a new all-glass façade to the museum's Fifth Street side.
The expansion, which was the museum's first since 1975, had been initially proposed in 1999 but ended up to be a significant reduction from the $32 million, 45,000-square-foot (4,200 m2) addition originally planned.[4] Approximately 40% of the new space was allocated to gallery space.[5]
Current collection
editLehighton
editIn 2016, the museum acquired Lehighton, a mural by Franz Kline, which the artist created for the American Legion in Lehighton, Pennsylvania.[6] Following intensive work on the mural by Luca Bonetti Painting Restoration, the restored painting was unveiled to the public in January 2017.[7]
Rembrandt's Portrait of a Young Lady
editOn February 10, 2020, Portrait of a Young Lady, a 1632 portrait by Rembrandt in the museum's collection, was determined to be authentic following a reassessment of it.[8]
American art
edit- Ann Penn Allen by Gilbert Stuart (1795)
- Niagara Falls by Gustav Johann Grunewald (1834)
- Floriform Vase by Tiffany Studios (1905)
European art
edit- Central Panel of an Altarpiece Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine by Giovanni del Biondo (1379)
- Saint Jerome Penitent by Lorenzo Lotto (1515)
- Portrait of Henrica Ploost van Amstel by Paulus Moreelse (1625)
- Game Stall at Market, by Frans Snyders (1625-37)
- Portrait of a Young Woman by Rembrandt (1632)[9]
Prints and drawings
edit- Diogenes after Parmigiano by Ugo da Carpi (after 1525)
- Il Perdono (Vision of Saint Francis of Assisi) by Federico Barocci (1581)
- Untitled by Keith Haring (1982)
Textiles
edit- Table Cover by Margaret Oothout (1764)
- Bed Curtain (Palampore) from the Coromandel Coast in India (1775)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Press, The (2013-10-30). "Art Museum names new president-CEO – Lehigh Valley Press". Bethlehem.thelehighvalleypress.com. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
- ^ Moser, John (12 April 2014). "New president of the Allentown Art Museum is rolling out the welcome mat". The Morning Call. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
- ^ The Samuel H. Kress Memorial Collection of the Allentown Art Museum. Allentown, Pa. The Museum, 1960
- ^ Moser, John J. (April 24, 2010), "Art museum plans smaller expansion ** Economy hurts fundraising, but a $15.4 million project is set to begin next month.", The Morning Call, pp. A.1
- ^ Sozanski, Edward (August 15, 2010), "Art: What is art's place in the picture?", The Philadelphia Inquirer
- ^ Koltnow, Bo (2017-02-01). "Picture of the region's past now forever preserved". Lehigh Valley Regional News. WFMZ. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
- ^ Porter, Kristine (2017-01-28). "Allentown Art Museum painstakingly restores Franz Kline's Lehighton painting". Times News. Archived from the original on 2017-01-28. Retrieved 2017-05-24.
- ^ Dafoe, Taylor (10 February 2020). "A Small Pennsylvania Museum Just Discovered It Has Owned a Rembrandt for 70 Years Without Knowing It". Artnet. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
- ^ Salisbury, Stephan (2020-02-17). "Allentown Art Museum discovers it has a Rembrandt hiding in plain sight". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2024-07-18.