The High celebrates the art of collecting with exhibition of the Medford and Loraine Johnston Collection
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The High celebrates the art of collecting with exhibition of the Medford and Loraine Johnston Collection
Sol LeWitt (American, born 1928), Drawing for a Structure, 1980, pencil, pen and ink on tracing paper, The Medford and Loraine Johnston Collection, promised gift to the High Museum of Art. © The LeWitt Estate / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, 2024. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York. Photo: Steven Probert.



ATLANTA, GA.- In the mid-1970s, artist and Georgia State University professor Medford Johnston, along with his wife and collaborator Loraine, began collecting works by artists who were in the vanguard of contemporary art. Today, they hold one of the finest collections of postwar American drawings and related objects of its kind, now numbering more than 85 works. In 2025, the High Museum of Art will present “Thinking Eye, Seeing Mind: The Medford and Loraine Johnston Collection” (Jan. 17-May 25, 2025), featuring their collection, which is a promised gift to the museum. With works by artists including Sol LeWitt, Brice Marden, Elizabeth Murray, Martin Puryear, Ed Ruscha, Al Taylor, Anne Truitt, Stanley Whitney and Terry Winters, among others, the exhibition will demonstrate how establishing the parameters of an art collection requires infinite patience, focus, discipline and a keen eye.


Interested in the intersection of art, mathematics, and systems? Find insightful books on Amazon that explore the life, work, and writings of Sol LeWitt, a pioneer of Conceptual Art.


“The Johnstons have been friends of the High for a very long time. They’ve also built an impressive collection featuring works by many of the 20th century’s most significant abstract artists,” said the High’s Director Rand Suffolk. “We are honored that they have promised to leave their collection to the Museum where it will be preserved for future generations – and we are delighted that they are sharing it with our audiences now, hopefully inspiring the next generation of art collectors and supporters.”

The Johnstons’ story is a testament to, in the words of the High’s Wieland Family Senior Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Michael Rooks, “knowing the difference between what is right and what is almost right” when building a collection. Although the Johnstons acquired several paintings and objects when they first began collecting in 1972, they quickly narrowed their focus to drawing, primarily by artists working on the frontlines of abstraction in the mid-1960s during a time of great innovation and experimentation.

Rooks added, “Med and Loraine’s collection struck me at once by its single-minded focus on a specific moment in time, which was essentially the time of their contemporaries. The artists in their collection are like close friends to the Johnstons — in fact many are or were. What is equally astonishing about the collection is the Johnstons’ dogged pursuit of quality. Their in-depth knowledge of each artist’s practice combined with their understanding of specific qualities to look for — or more appropriately, to hold out for — will be a revelation to emerging collectors.”

The Johnstons have built their collection with the High in mind as the benefactor of their passion and discernment. For them, their collection “is a labor of love, pursued over more than 50 years, and we are delighted to be able to help the High Museum document and celebrate these important artists working during the same decades as our lives.”

“Thinking Eye, Seeing Mind: The Medford and Loraine Johnston Collection” will be presented in the Special Exhibition Galleries on the Second Level of the High’s Stent Family Wing.


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