ANN ARBOR, MI.- The
University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA) will open a landmark 53,000-square-foot expansion and major restoration of its historic, 41,000-square-foot home, Alumni Memorial Hall. Designed by principal architect Brad Cloepfil and his team at Allied Works Architecture, the $41.9 million transformation not only more than doubles the space available for collections display, temporary exhibitions, programs and educational exploration, but also fulfills the Museums mission to bridge visual art and contemporary culture, scholarship and accessibility, tradition and innovation.
The new UMMA will be a vibrant meeting place for the arts, challenging the ways so many people perceive the traditional museum experience, said UMMA Director James Steward. Were excited about our vastly expanded ability to showcase and interpret more of the collections alongside a wider range of temporary exhibitions. The new addition, named the Maxine and Stuart Frankel and the Frankel Family Wing for the projects lead benefactors, will act as a beacon for the arts with comprehensive arts programming drawing on the incredible resources at this university, engaging our students and our communitys perceptions of the world in the global marketplace of ideas.
The 24-hour public openingfrom 6 p.m. Saturday, March 28 to 6 p.m. Sunday, March 29, 2009caps a celebratory week of special events for the Museums family of donors, members, volunteers, and University of Michigan faculty, staff and students.
Five key factors combine to make this project remarkable: architecture that reflects and enhances the Museums mission and its location at the intersection of campus and community, singular collections that represent 150 years of art collecting at the University of Michigan, programming that will position the Museum as a meeting place for the arts, the vibrancy of a 40,000 member student community eager for academic and social opportunities centered on the visual arts, and the projects position at the heart of a powerhouse research university. Together, these elements serve a common goal of putting art at the heart of contemporary life and civic experience.
Highlights of the project include vastly increased galleries for collections and special exhibitions; open-storage galleries and study rooms that foster close looking; stateof-the-art conservation and art storage facilities; expanded public programming, including performing arts, spoken word, film, and art making; a 225-seat auditorium; classrooms and event spaces to serve multiple audiences; a curatorial research center; a café; and an expanded museum store.
The Museum will reopen with newly installed collections galleries featuring works drawn from the Museums collections of more than 18,000 works of art and three special exhibitions: Museums in the 21st Century: Concepts, Projects, Buildings, in which UMMAs expansion and restoration figures; Expressions of Vienna: Master Drawings by Klimt and Schiele from the Pulgram-McSparran Collection, highlighting an extraordinary recent gift of artwork by two iconic masters of Austrian Expressionism from two University of Michigan professors; and UMMA Projects: Walead Beshty, which serves to inaugurate the Museums new signature series focusing on global contemporary art.