The Joslyn Art Museum is a fine arts museum in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. It opened in 1931 at the initiative of Sarah H. Joslyn, in memory of her husband, businessman George A. Joslyn.[1][2][3] Since its opening there have been multiple building expansions to house the museum's growing collection.[4][5][2] It is the only museum in Nebraska with a comprehensive permanent collection.[2] Some of the main works in the museum are part of the nineteenth and twentieth-century collections of American and European artists.[3][6]
Established | 1931 |
---|---|
Location | Omaha, Nebraska, United States |
Coordinates | 41°15′37″N 95°56′46″W / 41.2603°N 95.9461°W |
Type | Art museum |
Website | joslyn |
George and Sarah Joslyn
editOriginally from Vermont, George and Sarah Joslyn moved to Des Moines, Iowa in 1879 for George's new printing job at the Iowa Printing Company, which involved manual labor.[5][7][1] In 1880, they went to Omaha, where George was to manage his own printing branch of the company.[1][8] He then founded his own company, called the Western Newspaper Union, which soon became the largest supplier of "ready print" newspapers and provided news for 12,000 people within the United States. This is the period during which he gained most of his wealth.[8][3][1] George was known as a philanthropist, but he was also considered a hard man of business in the Omaha community, and also considered an entrepreneurer.[8]
As a couple, George and Sarah Joslyn were known to be great lovers of the arts, especially music.[7][3] When George died in 1916 (as the richest man in Nebraska),[8] Sarah decided she wanted a memorial building dedicated to his life and accomplishments, which would reflect their love for the arts.[3] It would also serve as a gift to the people of Omaha and a way for the Joslyns to give back to the city that had given them so much.[6][2] Sarah Joslyn founded and funded the nonprofit Society of Liberal Arts to find a permanent home for art collections in Omaha.[3] When the Society of Liberal Arts was created, her intended purpose for it was to create and operate the Joslyn Memorial building; it would officially become the Joslyn Art Museum in 1987.[2][3][5]
In 1940, Sarah Joslyn passed away and gave control of the Society of Liberal Arts to the trustees.[1][3] The endowment she left to help maintain the museum was then also used to acquire new art and expand the museum's collection.[2][6]
Building history
editKiewit started construction on the Joslyn Memorial building in 1928,[9] but plans for the building started to come together much earlier, in 1920.[7] Since the Joslyns were particularly fond of music, the building was initially designed as a concert hall. Art galleries were added at the suggestion of various arts groups throughout Omaha.[5][6]
The Memorial occupies a large and impressive art deco building designed by John McDonald (architect) and Alan McDonald (architect).[7][5][2][3] John McDonald was a close friend to the Joslyns; before designing the Memorial, he designed their Scottish castle-like home, commonly known as the Joslyn Castle, along with several other public and residential buildings throughout Omaha.[5][1][10][7] The impressive art deco facade of the building drew inspiration from Egyptian temples, art moderne motifs, and the Nebraska capitol building in Lincoln.[7][10] The Memorial building is constructed of Georgia pink marble, with 38 different marbles from all over the world and stone from across Europe and Africa in the interior.[2][3]
The decorative panels on the exterior were designed by sculptor John David Brcin, and refer to the peoples of the plains—both the original Native American inhabitants and the later European explorers and settlers.[5][2] There are eight decorative panels in total around the outside of the building: Dissemination of Intelligence (front right), The Pioneer Press (front left), The Homesteaders (north), Civic Builders (south), Indian Signal Fire (north), Indian Prayer for Life (south), Indian Picture Writing (back north), and Indian Sign Language (back south).[5] The inscriptions carved on the building were written by Hartley Burr Alexander.[2] Sarah gave $2.6 million for the construction of the Memorial building, and an endowment for its continued maintenance.[10]
The Joslyn Memorial building opened in 1931 and consisted of various art galleries, a concert hall, a lecture hall, an art library, classrooms, and an atrium with a fountain.[2][3] In 1938, the Memorial was listed as one of the one hundred finest buildings in the United States.[2]
Several decades after the Memorial building opened to the public, it was running out of space for staff and the growing collection.[5] Eugene Kingman, the director of the Joslyn during the 1960s, wanted the Joslyn to be the "Smithsonian of Omaha," a place where science and the arts could come together.[5] With this idea in mind, he wanted to expand the Memorial and construct additional buildings, which would include a science museum and a planetarium.[5] Lack of funds for the project and Kingman's departure in 1969 put an end to this plan.[5] However, Kingman saved quite a bit of historical material as part of his vision for the Memorial, which was later donated to historical museums around Omaha.[5] After his departure, the Joslyn Memorial returned to a strong focus on the arts.[5]
Even though there was still no expansion of the memorial building, in 1987 the Joslyn Memorial participated in a land exchange with Omaha Central High School.[5] Through this exchange the Joslyn acquired land to the east of the memorial building to add a sculpture garden and expand parking, while the high school gained land to the northeast where a new football stadium was constructed.[5]
In 1994, the first addition to the Joslyn Art Museum was finally built. Designed by Lord Norman Foster, and included the Scott Pavilion.[4] HDR Inc. and the Kiewit construction company worked together to build this addition.[5] The exterior of the 1994 addition used pink Georgian marble from the same quarry as the original Memorial building, to make the addition look like a part of the original structure.[10][7][5] A development campaign for the Joslyn Museum and the Western Heritage Museum (Durham Museum) ensured that there was plenty of money to construct this long-awaited addition to the museum.[5] The $15.95 million budget included modern art acquisitions, visiting show galleries, a cafe, a kitchen, offices, storage space, a security control center, classroom space, and a beautiful glass atrium that connects the new addition to the Memorial building.[2][5] Aside from the 1994 addition, sections of the memorial building were updated as part of the project, such as the restrooms, concert hall, and lecture hall.[5]
In 2008, construction began on the Joslyn Museum Sculpture Gardens, which would better utilize the space received in the 1987 land exchange.[2][5][11] The gardens opened in the summer of 2009, featuring work from local and national artists as well as a reflecting pool and waterfall.[12][2] Shortly after its opening, the garden hosted the 24th annual Jazz on the Green festival; it continued to host that event until 2010, when Omaha Performing Arts began producing it. It was then moved it to the Midtown Crossing at Turner Park.[13]
Announced in 2018, the next addition to the Joslyn Art Museum will be the Rhonda and Howard Hawks Pavilion, named after the philanthropists who created the Hawks Foundation.[4] The museum closed for construction of the new addition in the spring of 2022 and plans to reopen in 2024.[11][4] This new space will create an extra forty-two thousand square feet for the museum, which will include gallery spaces, classrooms, a new gift shop, and multi-purpose community spaces.[4][11] The architecture firm Snøhetta (company) and local architecture company Alley Poyner Macchietto Architecture worked together to design the new addition.[14][4] As with the original Memorial building and the 1994 addition, Kiewit Building Group will serve as the contractor for the project.[4] Along with the new building space, the gardens and outdoor spaces surrounding the museum will be revamped, and old offices in the original building will be restored.[14] The exterior of the Rhonda and Howard Hawks Pavilion resembles a cloud, reflecting the original theme of the Great Plains.[14] To tie the addition in with the rest of the museum exterior, there will be small flecks of pink, noticeable from the outside of the pavilion.[14][2] The addition will also create a new entrance to the museum, allowing visitors to access the rest of the museum through the Pavilion.[4]
Admissions
editAt its opening in 1931, the Memorial was to be an admission-free facility.[15][16] Free admission continued until 1965, when an entry fee of 25 cents per person was instituted.[15][16] As time went on the price of admission continued to rise; in 1987, it was two dollars for adults, while children and seniors paid one dollar. [16] In 2010, admission went up to eight dollars per adult. In 2013, however, the museum moved back to its original vision of free admission.[16][2] This change was made possible through a three-year grant from the Sherwood Foundation Grant; the Foundation believed that the Joslyn would be able to make up the funds from paid admissions in other ways once the grant concluded, as admission fees only represented 2–4% of the museum's overall revenue.[16][17] As of the museum's temporary closure for renovations and expansion in 2022, admission remained free.[2][17]
Collections
editWhen the Joslyn Memorial first opened, there was a need for art to fill the galleries.[3] The Art Institute of Omaha and the Friends of Art donated paintings, local business owner Charles Nelson Dietz donated a personal collection in 1934, and the Jessie Barton Christianity Bequest donated works from the collection of Guy Barton.[3][2] These were some of the first groups and people to donate collections to the Joslyn. After Sarah's death, Paul Grummann, who was the director from 1931–1947, and Harold Parsons purchased European art for the Memorial.[3] When Eugene Kingman took over as director in 1947, he expanded the Greek vase collection as well as art and artifacts from Indigenous cultures.[3] In 1986 the Karl Bodmer collection, initially on loan to the museum, was donated and became part of the permanent collection.[3] In recent years, the Joslyn has continued to expand its collections, particularly the contemporary and modern, with the acquisition of the Phillip G. Schrager collection, which will be housed in the Hawks Pavilion.[4][2]
Permanent collections at the Joslyn Art Museum:[2]
- Ancient: A collection of Greek pottery and various statues of Greek, Roman and Egyptian origin.[2]
- European: 16th- and 17th-century works, including paintings by Veronese, Titian, Claude Lorrain, Rembrandt and El Greco. The 19th century collection includes Romantic works by Delacroix and Gustave Doré, realist works by Corot and Gustave Courbet, and impressionist works by Degas, Monet, Pissarro, and Renoir[2][3]
- American: Early American portraiture by James Peale and Mather Brown; works by painters of the Hudson River School, realist works by Winslow Homer and Thomas Eakins, and works by the American impressionists Childe Hassam and William Merritt Chase.[2][3]
- Native American: Both traditional works and art done under the influence of, or in reaction against, European conventions and training.[18][2]
- Art of the American West: Collections of work by the Swiss artist Karl Bodmer, based on his 1832–34 journey to the Missouri River frontier, and by Alfred Jacob Miller, illustrating the West in the 1830s.[3][2]
- Latin American: Prominent works in this collection include paintings of saint figures and pottery from Felix Ortiz.[2]
- Post War and Contemporary (20th century): A wide range of paintings and sculpture is represented, including paintings by Henri Matisse, Stuart Davis, Theodore Roszak, John Sloan and Robert Henri. Sculpture by Deborah Butterfield, Robert Haozous, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt and Martin Puryear. The collection stresses significant American artistic movements, including regionalism (with paintings by Grant Wood and Thomas Hart Benton) and Abstract Expressionism (with work by Jackson Pollock, Hans Hofmann, and Helen Frankenthaler) and Pop Art (with work by George Segal and Tom Wesselmann).[6][2][3]
- Asian: Consists mainly of ancient Asian sculpture from the 2nd and 3rd centuries, through works from the 19th century.[2]
- Sculpture Gardens[2]
Peter Kiewit Foundation Sculpture Garden:[2]
- Oedipus at Colonnus (1968) by Leonard Baskin
- Untitled (2005) by Jun Kaneko
- Bronze Bench #5 (2005) by Betty Woodman
- Dineh (1981) by Allen Houser
- Spirit of the Dance (1932) by William Zorach
- Large Covered Wagon (2004) by Tom Otterness
- One of the Burghers of Calais (1987) by Auguste Rodin
- Double-Sided Settee (A Trio) (1983) by Scott Burton
- Addih-Hiddisch, Hidatsa Chief (2008) by John Coleman
- Sioux Warrior (2008) by John David Brcin
- The Omaha Riverscape (2008-2009) by Jesús Moroles
Discover Garden:[2]
- Noodles & Doodles by Smith Bourne and Associates Inc.
- Folded Square Alphabet O (1987) by Fletcher Benton
- Metamorphosis by Benard Matemera
- Yellow Ascending (1977) by George Sugarman
- Pencil Bench (2009) by Ron Parks
- 22 1/2 Degrees with Crayon Tips (2009) by Ron Parks
- Cubular (2009) by Peter McClenon Carter
Other Outdoor Sculpture:[2]
- Able Charlie (1983) by Kenneth Snelson
- Untitled (1981) by John Henry
- Pawn (1980) by Sidney Buchanan
- Generations (2007) by Josiah Manzi
Temporary Exhibitions at the Joslyn Art Museum (most recent):[2]
- Allison Janae Hamilton: Recent Works (February 5–May 1, 2002)
- Yuyi Morales: Soñadora (January 15–April 17, 2022)
- Ninety Years of Joslyn Art Museum (October 27, 2021–May 1, 2022)
- Faces from the Interior: The North American Portraits of Karl Bodmer (October 2, 2021–May 1, 2022)
- Guy Goldstein (October 2, 2021–January 2, 2022)
- American Art Deco: Designing for the People. 1918-1939 (June 5–September 5, 2021)
- Diedrick Brackens (June 5–September 5, 2021)
- Wendy Red Star (January 30–April 25, 2021)
- Revisiting America: The Prints of Currier & Ives (November 21, 2020–April 11, 2021)
- Tuan Andrew Nguyen (September 19, 2020–January 3, 2021)
These are just a few of the temporary exhibitions that were displayed at the Joslyn Art Museum after it was safe to reopen due to the COVID-19 pandemic and before construction started on the Rhonda and Howard Hawks Pavilion.[2]
Gallery
editSee also
edit- Joslyn Castle, the place where the Joslyn family lived.
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f "The Joslyns : About : Joslyn Castle". joslyncastle.com. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai "Joslyn Art Museum Omaha Nebraska | Art Museum, Art Classes Omaha Nebraska | Entertainment Omaha". www.joslyn.org. Retrieved April 26, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Day, Holiday T.; Sturges, Hollister (1987). Joslyn Art Museum: Paintings & Sculptures from the European & American Collections. Omaha, Nebraska: Joslyn Art Museum. pp. 10–12. ISBN 0-936364-18-1.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Freeman, Betsie. "Joslyn Art Museum breaks ground on $100 million addition". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Beal, Graham W. J. (1997). Joslyn Art Museum : a building history. Joslyn Art Museum. Omaha, Neb.: The Museum. ISBN 0-936364-25-4. OCLC 31011665.
- ^ a b c d e Joslyn Art Museum (1994). Fifty Favorites of The Joslyn Art Museum.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Joslyn Memorial Museum | Nebraska Architecture". nebraskaarchitecture.org. Retrieved April 28, 2023.
- ^ a b c d Gaster, Patricia C. (October 29, 2022). "George A. Joslyn of Omaha". History Nebraska. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- ^ "The Early Years - Kiewit.com". December 31, 2011. Archived from the original on December 31, 2011. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ a b c d Cruse, Kiley. "Historic Omaha architecture: 5 masterpieces of the 1920s". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ a b c Beau, Bryan F. Le (December 15, 2021). "Arts News: Joslyn Art Museum Announces Plans for a Redesign and New Addition". KC STUDIO. Retrieved May 10, 2023.
- ^ "Join KETV For Jazz On The Green - Entertainment News Story - KETV Omaha". February 22, 2012. Archived from the original on February 22, 2012. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ Pitcher, John (2010). "Turner's green to host jazz". Omaha World-Herald. Archived from the original on June 16, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2023.
- ^ a b c d "Joslyn Art Museum Expansion". www.snohetta.com. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ a b "Sarah Joslyn | Omaha Magazine". www.omahamagazine.com. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e Klein, Becky (2016). "Admission Fees As Barrier To Entry: Joslyn Art Museum".
- ^ a b Bicak, Carol. "New cost to visit Omaha's Joslyn Art Museum: free". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ Miranda, Carolina A. (September 3, 2022). "Wendy Red Star reimagines a 19th century Indigenous gathering at the Broad". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 10, 2023.
External links
edit- Media related to Joslyn Art Museum at Wikimedia Commons
- Official Joslyn Art Museum website