Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum

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Established1976
Coordinates44°57′43″N 89°36′47″W / 44.962°N 89.613°W / 44.962; -89.613
Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum
Established1976
LocationWausau, Wisconsin
Coordinates44°57′43″N 89°36′47″W / 44.962°N 89.613°W / 44.962; -89.613
TypeArt museum
Collection size14,000 works[1]
DirectorMatt Foss[2]
CuratorShannon Pueschner, Amalia Wojciechowski [2]
Public transit accessBus transport Metro Ride
Websitewww.lywam.org

The Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum is located in Wausau, Wisconsin. It is best known for its annual Birds in Art exhibition, which exhibits contemporary artistic representations of birds. The annual exhibition has been held beginning the week after Labor Day since the museum's founding in 1976.[3]

The museum stands on a 4-acre (16,000 m2) estate in a 1931 Tudor Revival-style house previously owned by Alice Woodson Forester (1918–1994) and John E. Forester (1913–2008). The Foresters donated their home in 1973 and the museum opened in September 1976.[4]

The museum originated as a memorial to Leigh Yawkey Woodson (1888–1963), daughter of Cyrus C. Yawkey (1862–1943), a Chicago-born lumber magnate based in Wausau. After her death, her three daughters, Alice Woodson Forester, Nancy Woodson Spire (1917–1998), and Margaret Woodson Fisher (1920–1972), envisioned creating an art museum in her honor.[5][6] In 1973, Forester and her husband John donated their Tudor Revival-style home and estate in Wausau to serve as the museum’s site. The institution was incorporated the same year as a nonprofit educational organization.

Following renovations and the addition of gallery space, the museum opened to the public in September 1976.[7] Its inaugural exhibition was organized with the help of Wisconsin wildlife artist Owen J. Gromme (1896–1991) and evolved into the annual exhibition Birds in Art.[8] The museum received accreditation from the American Alliance of Museums three years later, in 1979, with subsequent re-accreditations in later decades.[9]

Physically, the institution expanded to accommodate its growing collections, building a second two-story gallery in 1987, a new main entrance in 1997, and a 9,000-square-foot addition in 2012, the latter adding 5,000 sq. ft. of gallery space to the museum.[10]

In 2017, the museum received the National Medal for Museum and Library Service from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, recognizing its impact on community engagement.[11]

Collection

References

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