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Spencer Museum of Art

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Established
  
1928

Phone
  
+1 785-864-4710

Type of business
  
Art museum

Website
  
www.spencerart.ku.edu

Date founded
  
1928

Spencer Museum of Art

Location
  
1301 Mississippi Street Lawrence, Kansas

Address
  
University of Kansas, 1301 Mississippi St, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–8PMWednesday10AM–8PMThursday10AM–8PMFriday10AM–4PMSaturday10AM–4PMSunday12–4PMMondayClosedTuesday10AM–4PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Robert J Dole Institute o, University of Kansas Natural H, Lawrence Arts Center, Clinton State Park, Lied Center of Kansas

Profiles

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The Spencer Museum of Art explores the capacity of art to spark curiosity, inspire creativity, and create connections among people. The Museum, located on the University of Kansas campus in Lawrence, Kansas, houses an internationally known collection that is deep and diverse, currently numbering nearly 36,000 artworks and artifacts in all media. The collection spans the history of European and American art from ancient to contemporary, and includes broad and significant holdings of East Asian art. Areas of special strength include medieval art; European and American paintings, sculpture and prints; photography; Japanese Edo period painting and prints; 20th-century Chinese painting; and KU’s ethnographic collection, which includes about 10,000 Native American, African, Latin American and Australian works.

Contents

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History

In 1917 Sallie Casey Thayer, a Kansas City art collector, offered her collection of nearly 7,500 art objects to the University of Kansas to form a museum "to encourage the study of fine arts in the Middle West." Her eclectic collection included paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings, furniture, rugs, textiles, metalwork, ceramics, glass, and other examples of decorative arts, primarily from Europe and Asia. Eventually the University of Kansas Museum of Art was established in 1928, based on this collection. Over the years the collection has grown substantially thanks to the generosity of many benefactors and the expertise of many curators.

By the late 1960s the Museum had outgrown its quarters in Spooner Hall. Mrs. Helen Foresman Spencer, another Kansas City collector and patron of the arts, made a gift of $4.6 million that funded construction of a new museum. The building housing the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, the Kress Foundation Department of Art History, and the Murphy Library of Art and Architecture opened in 1978. The neo-classical structure, built from Indiana limestone, was designed by Kansas City architect Robert E. Jenks, a 1926 graduate of KU.

In 2007, the Spencer Museum grew again when approximately 9,500 ethnographic collection objects from the former University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology were transferred to the Spencer Museum of Art. The collection includes a wide variety of cultural materials from all around the world, with a particular emphasis on American Indian materials. The collection is still housed in historic Spooner Hall and the storage space has been upgraded to include specially designed cabinets to house and protect the collection.

As of 2015, the Spencer Museum of Art is undergoing Phase I of a major renovation that will transform nearly 30,000 square feet of the building. Phase I will provide a complete renovation of the Museum’s entry lobby and central court, expand the teaching gallery, introduce a multi-use object study room, and expand storage and research facilities. Architects for the project are Pei Cobb Freed & Partners.

Mission (as of December 2015)

The Spencer Museum of Art sustains a diverse collection of art and works of cultural significance. It encourages interdisciplinary exploration at the intersections of art, ideas and experience. Among its collections are items from the estate of local literary icon William S. Burroughs, e.g., a Dreamachine fabricated by David Woodard. The Spencer strengthens, supports, and contributes to the academic research and teaching of the University of Kansas and is committed to serving communities of learners across Kansas and beyond.

References

Spencer Museum of Art Wikipedia


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