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American Art

Newark Museum to expand, upgrade American Art Galleries

American Art
The Newark Museum’s entrance facing the western corner of Washington Park, which will be renovated and reopened this year. Image courtesy of the Newark Museum image

 

NEWARK, N.J. – The Newark Museum has received a $750,000 grant from the Henry Luce Foundation to expand and reinterpret its permanent galleries of American art and to document the collections through two new publications.

The two-year grant will support the American art collections in the museum’s recently renamed Seeing America galleries, previously named Picturing America. Works from the Native American collection and a diverse selection of African-American, Latin American and European-American art will be showcased with new interpretation in a series of fully renovated galleries on the second floor of the museum’s north wing. The grant will allow for a thorough conservation review of Newark’s 20th century painting collection. The physical renovations in the galleries will include upgraded lighting and new flooring throughout the second floor, and the redesign of key galleries to expand wall space and improve site lines.

One of the highlights of the renovation will be a new thematic gallery that explores important intersections between the indigenous arts of the Americas and modernist painting and sculpture. From John Sloan to Louise Nevelson, Adolf Gottlieb, and Leon Polk Smith, many American artists studied and collected indigenous art. Placing modern and contemporary works from North and South America in context with Pueblo watercolor paintings and other rarely exhibited works from the Arts of the Americas collection will bring this rich history to life for visitors.

Beginning in August 2015 and continuing through October 2016, several new permanent installations were integrated within the Modern and Contemporary galleries, drawing on collection strengths as well as identified areas for development in the future. Highlights include “The Harlem Renaissance” and “The City in the Machine Age,” “Latin American Abstraction” and “Civil Rights and the Art of Identity.”

In October 2016 the museum opened the exhibition “Native Artists of North America,” relocating the permanent installation of Native American art to the entrance of the Seeing America galleries. Native Artists reasserts a practice pioneered by the museum at its inception: exhibiting Native American art and craft as art.

The Native Artists reinstallation will be a highlight during a period of transformative museum projects, among them being the reopening of the Washington Street entrance. After having been closed for nearly 20 years, the doors facing Washington Street will be renovated and reopened this year in accordance with ADA compliance standards, providing entry to a new state-of-the art welcome area. To coincide with this effort, the permanent galleries of African art will be relocated to the first floor of the museum, while a new 5,000 square-foot special exhibition space will be fabricated on the second floor.

Opening in February 2019, the reinstalled Seeing America galleries will feature an installation of new work by Los Angeles-based artist Matthew Brandt. Brandt’s photographic practice engages directly with landscape art, natural science, history and the altered environment. As part of the museum’s artist in residence program, Brandt will research the city of Newark and the surrounding environment as he develops new work for this show, which will be installed as a special exhibition in the American Contemporary galleries.

“We are completing the transformation from Picturing America to Seeing America with beautifully renovated galleries, some exciting new works coming out of storage, and new interpretation. This broader view of American art does justice to the diversity and scope of these collections,” said Tricia Laughlin Bloom, curator of American Art.

American Art