MILWAUKEE, WIS.- The Milwaukee Art Museum, the largest visual art institution in Wisconsin and one of the oldest art museums in the nation, reopened its Collection Galleries to the public November 24. The reopening is the culmination of a 6-year, $34 million project to transform the visitor experience through dramatically enhanced exhibition and public spaces and bright, flowing galleries.
The new Milwaukee Art Museum is poised to set the standard for a twenty-first-century museum at the heart of a great city, said Museum Director Daniel Keegan. What began as a desire to preserve the space and Collection grew into a significant expansion that rejuvenates and sets the future course for the entire institution.
The project is part of a historic public-private partnership with Milwaukee County, which owns the buildings and provided $10 million toward the renovation, with the remaining $24 million raised through the Museums Plan for the Future campaign. Its the first major reimagining of the Museums extensive Collection areas, including the Museums 1957 Eero Saarinen-designed War Memorial Center and 1975 David Kahler-designed addition.
While addressing critical infrastructure upgrades, the renovation creates an intuitive and welcoming visitor experience to showcase the Museums world-class Collection. The Milwaukee Art Museums renovated Collection Galleries and new east entrance now span 150,000 square feet. Within this space, the Museum is installing 2,500 works of artalmost 1,000 more than have been on view at one time in the pastfrom its rich Collection of 30,000 works.
Pieces that havent been on view for decades are back again, alongside new acquisitions and old favorites, said Keegan. Add to that new public gathering spaces with breathtaking views. We simply cant wait to share the new Museum with our community and visitors. This space is now worthy of the Collection their support has helped us build over our 125-year history.
The expansion also allows for more comprehensive displays from the Museum collectionsincluding the full story of American art from colonial times to the present dayand for experimental and rotating gallery spaces. The Museum debuted its first spaces devoted exclusively to 20th- and 21st-century design. In addition, the Bradley Family Gallery, a new changing exhibition space, doubles the Museums capacity for special exhibitions. The inaugural exhibition in this space is Sam Francis: Master Printmaker.
As part of the opening the Museum unveiled the 10,000-square-foot Herzfeld Center for Photography and Media Arts. Unparalleled in size and scope for a regional museum, this is the first time the Museum has dedicated significant permanent collection and gallery space to photography, video and light based media.
The Milwaukee Art Museum was one of the first major museums to start collecting photography in the 1950s, said Keegan. The Herzfeld Center for Photography and Media Arts continues the Museums tradition of leadership and establishes it as a national destination for this type of artwork.
New spaces for families offer unique interactive experiences and hands-on activities. The Kohls Art Generation Gallery: Rubbish! allows kids to explore how artists have turned trash into treasure, and the Kohls Art Generation Lab is a space to learn about the art and culture of Haiti.
Other features and enhancements include: improved wayfinding, rewritten gallery labels and restrooms on every level; a new entrance along the Lake Michigan waterfront that connects the Museum to the popular pedestrian lakefront path; a coffee and wine bar with European style small plates; and glass walls offering panoramic views of both the lake and the Museums iconic Santiago Calatrava-designed Quadracci Pavilion.