|
Collections / Decorative Arts, Textiles, and Sculpture
|
||
![]() |
About the Collection
Aside from the original 1915 building designed by McKim, Mead, and White, the MIA's best known example of architecture is the Purcell-Cutts House (1913), a Prairie School gem designed by William Purcell and George Grant Elmslie for the Purcell family. The house was bequeathed to the museum in 1985 by Anson Cutts, Jr., the son of the house's second owner. Located in the heart of Minneapolis, it is open for public tours on specific weekends. Architectural fragments and furnishings by Purcell and Elmslie, Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, and George Washington Maher, and their contemporary architect-designers are presented in the Ulrich Architecture and Design Gallery in the museum. See Unified Vision: The Architecture and Design of the Prairie School for more. The Norwest Modernism Collection comprises nearly 500 works in many mediums documenting salient components of six modernist movements, from Arts and Crafts (1880) through Art Deco (1950). Since its donation in 1998, the collection has supplied works in a series of exhibitions at the museum, at the Wells Fargo Center in downtown Minneapolis, and on the award-winning Modernism Web site. A particular strength of the collection is Continental, English, and American silver, which is showcased in the Mary Agnes and Al McQuinn Gallery (350). These holdings include highly important works donated by James Ford Bell, Ruth and Bruce Dayton, and the McQuinns. Many collectors and donors have contributed to the porcelain and pottery collection, which includes eighteenth-century French faience from Mrs. John P. Rutherfurd, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English delft from Mr. and Mrs. George R. Steiner, and Chinese Export porcelain from Leo and Doris Hodroff. Domestic interiors and furnishings spanning four centuries are presented in the MIA's nine period rooms, with a 1730 salon from the Hôtel de la Bouexière in Paris which has been restored with funds from the Groves Foundation. The museum's textile collection spans fifteen centuries, and represents more than seventy countries. The collection demonstrates the talents of European court artists as well as the pride and artistic identity of many ethnic groups. The objects represent diverse cultures, from Egyptian Coptic to twentieth-century Moroccan. The collection has gained an international reputation for its spectacular individual pieces as well as its impressive holdings of European tapestries, early Italian laces, passementerie, Kashmir shawls, Turkish embroideries. The acquisition of the Jack Lenor Larsen company archive in 1999 has broadened the scope of the collection's twentieth-century holdings, complementing its already strong collection of contemporary fiber art. Exhibitions of contemporary studio ceramics, glass, and wood are now staples. This initiative is thanks to generous donors such as Robyn and John Horn, who gave a substantial collection of turned wood, and Mrs. Eunice Butler, who has supported the acquisition of works by contemporary American ceramists. Sculpture from the Middle Ages to 1960 includes world-class works by Amedeo Modigliani, Sir Jacob Epstein, John Bernard Flannagan, Constantin Brancusi, Henri Matisse, and Henry Moore. Recent acquisitions in this area include Raymond Duchamp-Villon's Head of Baudelaire of 1911, and Alberto Giacometti's Diego of 1962. Judaica and arms and armor also fall under the purview of the department, with recent gifts of religious metalwork from Harold and Mickey Smith and a sixteenth-century Italian half suit of armor acquired in 2001 with a gift from Mr. and Mrs. Wayne H. MacFarlane.
featured objects in this collection »
Collection Related Online Resources
Modernism at the MIA (YouTube™) » Tatra T87 (YouTube™) » Pursue Your Artistic Passions
MIA Affinity Groups are a great way for museum members to connect more closely with special areas of art interest, allowing you to delve deeper into the curatorial area of your choice. Affinity Group members...
Curatorial Staff
Jennifer Komar Olivarez Eike D. Schmidt, Ph.D. Corine Wegener |
|