Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows

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Established
  
2000

Headquarters
  
Illinois, United States

Dissolved
  
2014

Founded
  
2000

Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows httpss3amazonawscomurbanglassblognewMuse

Location
  
Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois

Website
  
www.navypier.com/things2do/rides_attract/smith_museum.html

Similar
  
Chicago Children's Museum, Driehaus Museum, Balzekas Museum of Lithuania, National Museum of Mexican, Bronzeville Children's Museum

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The Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows was an exhibition which opened in February 2000 at Chicago’s Navy Pier entertainment complex. It permanently closed in October 2014. It was the first American museum dedicated solely to the art of stained glass windows.

Contents

Named after prominent Chicago collectors E.B. and Maureen Smith, the museum held over 150 individual pieces displayed in four galleries: Victorian, Prairie, Modern, and Contemporary. The majority of the works originally came from Chicago-area buildings, and a number of prominent artists are represented, including John LaFarge, Adolfas Valeška, and Ed Paschke. The collection contained religious themes, secular work, and some more unusual items, including a stained glass portrait of basketball player Michael Jordan and a window created from glass soda bottles.

The adjacent Richard H. Driehaus Gallery of Stained Glass Windows opened in 2001 and remains open. The gallery was devoted to ecclesiastical and secular windows by Louis Comfort Tiffany and interrelated businesses between 1890-1930. The windows are from the extensive Tiffany collection of Chicago businessman Richard H. Driehaus. There are 11 Tiffany windows on display in the Driehaus Gallery, along with a Tiffany Studios fire screen.

The museum was located along a strip of shops, theatres, and restaurants, and admission was free. Most of the windows in the museum were illuminated with artificial light to highlight the colors and intricate details. Since each piece was protected by a layer of bulletproof glass, patrons were encouraged to come close to the works and even bring food into the galleries. Curator Rolf Achilles says, “It’s one of the very few museums in the world you can stroll through eating an ice cream cone right in front of the art. We don’t keep people away”.

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References

Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows Wikipedia