The Davis Museum at Wellesley College doubles works of art on view with reinstallation
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, June 6, 2025


The Davis Museum at Wellesley College doubles works of art on view with reinstallation
Moneo’s Davis Museum is the fourth home to the collection on campus.



WELLESLEY, MASS.- On September 28, 2016, the Davis Museum at Wellesley College unveils the Davis. ReDiscovered, a total transformation of the Museum’s permanent collections galleries, reshaped and reconceived to present the breadth and strength of the Museum’s encyclopedic holdings. This complete reinstallation project brings renewed attention to geographic and chronological specificity and context, while more than doubling the works of art on view. the Davis. ReDiscovered is the most ambitious project of its kind since the Davis Museum building, designed by renowned Spanish architect Rafael Moneo, opened in 1993.

Moneo’s Davis Museum is the fourth home to the collection on campus. The Wellesley art collection, initiated by Henry Fowle Durant and Pauline Durant with the founding of the College in 1875, was originally displayed in great College Hall, the primary residential and classroom building. It was later housed in the Farnsworth Art Building, founded in 1889, and then in Paul Rudolph’s 1958 Jewett Arts Center, a masterpiece of mid-century Modern architecture.

“Over three years in the making, the reinstallation demonstrates the pedagogical innovation, the bold approach to curatorial practice, and the aesthetic flair that distinguish today’s Davis. This project showcases the many stories, both local and global, that animate the objects in the Davis collections and reveals a collection that supports the legacy of Wellesley’s pioneering approach to teaching art history, as well as inspires a long-standing commitment to the value of learning,” said Dr. Lisa Fischman, Ruth Gordon Shapiro ’37 Director of the Davis Museum at Wellesley College. “We want to reintroduce our community to the hidden gems in our collections, to honor Wellesley’s legacy of teaching through first-hand encounters with art across cultures, and to celebrate the power of giving that has built these extraordinary collections and the building that houses them.”

Over three floors and eleven galleries, the Museum is more than doubling the number of works of art that will be on view from approximately 300 to more than 620 objects. In total, the Davis holdings have grown to include nearly 13,000 objects, with areas of strength in painting, sculpture, works on paper, photography, and decorative objects, from antiquity to the present day.

New research conducted by staff with wide-ranging areas of study
This milestone of “rediscovery” has been nearly three years in the making, involving research conducted by Davis curators, in consultation with scholars and specialists at Wellesley College and beyond; conservation treatments to paintings, sculptures, objects, and frames; and an intense summer of installations. The galleries are structured to highlight the Museum’s finest objects from across the globe, spanning more than four millennia of civilization: from recently conserved Mycenaean vessels to new acquisitions of art created in the 21st century.

Organized into “collections,” the galleries, some of them jewel-toned, offer many surprises for even the most familiar visitor. The second level presents art of the Ancient Mediterranean, Ancient Americas, South Asia, East Asia, Oceanic, African, the Study Gallery (devoted to supporting specific research and teaching interests, selected by faculty each semester), and “Wellesley Collects,” which outlines historical highlights and major figures. Among them, beloved objects like the Roman classical sculpture known as the “Wellesley Athlete,” stand alongside lesser-known works and recent acquisitions—some of which will be shown in the galleries for the first time. Also on this level visitors will encounter the Antioch Mosaic, which was recently moved in a feat of engineering and fortitude, via large cranes from its previous 22-plus year wall mount on the fifth level, to the second level where it is displayed in its original orientation as a floor. The move took two years of planning with a team of structural engineers, a rigging company, and conservation specialists. Also on the second level, the Morelle Lasky Levine ’56 Works on Paper Gallery, the Joan Levine Freedman ’57 and Richard I. Freedman Gallery, the Robert and Claire Freedman Lober Viewing Alcove, and the Friends of Art Gallery continue to house temporary exhibitions.

The fourth level presents collections including Medieval, Renaissance, Southern Baroque, Spanish Colonial, Northern Baroque, Continental Rococo, British Portraiture, Colonial American, 19th century American Landscapes, 19th century Native American, 19th century European, and American. In these galleries, visitors will encounter many more of the Museum’s collections highlights. An example is Dutch marine painter Willem van de Velde the Elder’s painting, Two Boeier Yachts Close in to the Shore with a Flagship Coming in to Anchor. Perhaps the best example of the artist’s “pen painting” in a U.S. museum, the work was recently rediscovered, tucked away in storage, and underwent conservation treatment and technical assessment by several specialists to reveal its impeccable condition.

Masterpieces of late modern and contemporary art are grouped together on the fifth level. Visitors will see George Bellows’ last painting, as well as exceptional works by Oskar Kokoschka, Sonia Delaunay-Terk, Willem de Kooning, Jules Olitski, Lee Krasner, Jackson Pollock, Agnes Martin, Liliana Porter, Sara Rahbar, Chakaia Booker, Linda Benglis, Radcliffe Bailey, Francis Alys, Eddie Martinez, Louise Nevelson, and Alexander Calder.

The Davis has been very active in collections growth over recent years, so in addition to highlighting well-known favorites, the new galleries will present recent purchases and gifts for the first time. For example, the recent acquisition of Kara Walker’s 2002, Nat Turner's Revelation, an installation of projected light, painted glass slides, and a signature hand-cut silhouette, will be on view in the Freedman “Black Box” Gallery. This dramatic narrative installation was inspired by the life of Nat Turner, a self-made preacher born into slavery at the turn of the 19th century.

Newly refurbished and repurposed interstitial spaces at the core of the Davis building’s staircase create opportunities for unexpected encounter; designed to surprise and delight, three landings feature portraits of women whose “female gaze” encompasses the galleries in their purview. Other spaces present rotating selections from the Davis’s exceptional photography collection.

The lower level will continue to host temporary exhibitions, which in the fall include Partners in Design: Alfred H. Barr Jr. and Philip Johnson and Anni Albers: Connections.

New mobile app to enhance the visitor experience
Throughout the newly installed galleries, visitors will encounter stories of how objects came to the Davis and learn about the key directors, curators, scholars, educators, donors, and collectors who have shaped the collections and created a home for art at Wellesley College. This information is presented through traditional wall text panels, as well as via a new mobile app from Cuseum that provides online tours, mobile notifications based on a visitor’s proximity to an object, and way-finding tools.










Today's News

September 13, 2016

Exhibition of forty new works by Kondo Takahiro opens at Joan B Mirviss Ltd

Evidence Aborigines built stone 'houses' 9,000 years ago

Exhibition of works by John Chamberlain on view at Gagosian

Jean Dubuffet's 'Les Grandes Artères' highlights Christie's sale

Stolen Dutch masterpieces 'soon' back at museum

Gianguan Auctions' Autumn Asian Art Sale highlights art, ceramics and carved jades

Sotheby's to hold Made in Britain auction on 28 September

The Davis Museum at Wellesley College doubles works of art on view with reinstallation

Private collection of Art Director Ruth Ansel to be included in Phillips' New York Photographs Day Sale

National Portrait Gallery announces shortlist for Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2016

Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg shows exhibition "sports/no sports"

Frieze Masters: Daniel Crouch Rare Books to present 200 images of London charting 600 years of the city

Mark Reisbaum appointed Chief Philanthropy Officer of The Contemporary Jewish Museum

The finest wines from around the world: First sale of the new season in London

Exhibition celebrates the 25th anniversary of Ukraine's independence

NEU NOW returns with the newest talents from Europe and beyond

Works by Armand Jalut on view at Michel Rein

Art auctioneers are experiencing a revolution say Barnebys

Fruitlands Museum opens two new exhibitions

L. Kanellopoulos Art Centre opens international group art exhibition

Museum of London introduces new Great Fire of London website to mark 350th anniversary

Saint Louis Art Museum announces 23rd Romare Bearden Fellow

University Museums receives a major gift of contemporary prints

Asia Society Museum in New York presents "No Limits: Zao Wou-Ki"




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor:  Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful