Reading Public Museum

Museum in West Reading, Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Reading Public Museum is a museum in Reading, Pennsylvania, located in the 18th Ward, along the Wyomissing Creek. By the size and scope of its collection, numbering more than 280,000 objects and specimens, it is the largest private museum and largest collection of artwork, numbering over 50,000 works, located between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. The museum's permanent collection focuses primarily on art, science, and cultural artifacts and its site also features the Neag planetarium and a 25-acre (100,000 m2) arboretum filled with rare plants and champion trees. [1]

Coordinates40.3274°N 75.9514°W / 40.3274; -75.9514
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Reading Public Museum
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LocationWest Reading, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40.3274°N 75.9514°W / 40.3274; -75.9514
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Alice Kent Stoddard (American, 1883 – 1976), Leila, 1915, oil on canvas, 30 x 25 inches, Reading Public Museum, Gift, George D. Horst
Julien Dupré (French, 1851 – 1910), The Balloon, 1886, oil on canvas, 95 1/4 x 79 inches, Reading Public Museum, Museum Purchase

The Museum has a long history of innovative programming and exhibitions, including hosting major solo exhibitions and retrospectives for artists such as Alexandre Iacovleff (1947); Claude Venard (1969); Valfred Thelin (1969); Tetsuro Sawada (1970); Gloria Vanderbilt (1971); Marsden Hartley (1971); Robert Indiana (1983); Jimmy Ernst (1991); Liliana Porter (1993); Brigitta Bertoia (1994); Reuben Nakian, (1999); Dan Namingha (1991) and David Lynch (2003) among others. It was one of the first museums in the United States to exhibit, in 1937, the original cartoons and drawings of the noted animator and film executive Walt Disney (1901-1966); and was the very first museum in the world to both exhibit a work by and award a prize to the internationally recognized pop artist and Pennsylvania native, Keith Haring (1958-1990).[2]

History

The Museum was founded in 1904, when the Reading School District board authorized the purchase of exhibits from the Saint Louis World's Fair.[3] These new purchases were added to the private natural history collections of Dr. Levi W. Mengel.[4] The Museum opened its doors, at the old school administration building on Washington and Eighth streets, to the general public in 1913; that same year, The Museum started collecting works of art. While the name 'public' has always been a part of the museum's name, it was, in fact, founded as a private institution. Originally the museum was not open to the general public, but was only accessible to the students of the Reading School District to support their studies.

Levi Mengel was The Museum's first director and was its founding father. Christopher Shearer, a well-known landscape artist was The Museum's first curator of art. Ground was broken at its current location in February of 1925; the foundation stone was laid on May 1, 1925, and by 1928, the Museum was officially opened to the public in its new Beaux-Art style structure that was designed by Alexander Forbes Smith.[5] In 1998, architect Der Scutt was commissioned to add an atrium entrance to the existing structure.[6] The Arboretum was planned in the late-1920s by renowned American landscape architect John Nolen and outfitted with rare plant and flower specimens from the personal collection of noted Irisarian Bertrand H. Farr (1863-1924).[7] Since 1991, The Museum has been operated by The Foundation for the Reading Public Museum. The Museum has been accredited by the American Alliance of Museums since 1982.[8]

Collections

A Study in White (undated), by Charles Webster Hawthorne.

The Museum's art collection contains works from many cultures but the strengths of the collection include American works of art. Its fine art collection includes more than seven hundred oil paintings by American and international artists. Paintings by Benjamin West, Raphaelle Peale, Thomas Birch, Gilbert Stuart, Thomas Sully, Peter Rothermel, Jacob Eichholtz, Paul Weber, Hermann Herzog, Worthington Whittredge, Frederic Church, Susan Macdowell Eakins, Childe Hassam, William Merritt Chase, John Singer Sargent, John Henry Twachtman, N. C. Wyeth, Edward Redfield, John Fulton Folinsbee, Fern Coppedge, Paulette van Roekens, Walter Elmer Schofield, George Sotter, Daniel Garber, Robert Henri, William Glackens, George Bellows, John French Sloan, Frank Weston Benson, William Paxton, Colin Campbell Cooper, Guy Carleton Wiggins, Abbott Handerson Thayer, Martha Walter, Elihu Vedder, Joseph Stella, Frederick Judd Waugh, Aldro Hibbard, Alfred Henry Maurer, Arthur B. Davies, and Leon Dabo form the core of the historic American art collection.

American modernist works in the permanent collection include those by Milton Avery, Alexander Calder, Robert Gwathmey, Hans Hofmann, Adolph Gottlieb, Robert Motherwell, William Baziotes, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, Richard Anuszkiewicz, Vivian Springford and Louise Nevelson.

These join a group of European paintings by Edgar Degas, Charles Francois Daubigny, Julien Dupre, Albert Lebourg, Marià Fortuny, Martin Rico y Ortega, Fritz Thaulow, Oswald Aachenbach, and Anton Mauve, among others, which are in The Museum's holdings.

Sculptures by Aguste Rodin, Edward McCartan, Harriett Whitney Frishmuth, Cyrus Dallin, James Earl Fraser, Henry Moore, Harry Bertoia, George Segal, Nancy Graves, Frank Stella, and Deborah Butterfield are also part of the permanent collection at RPM.

More than 12,000 works on paper from illuminated manuscripts, works by Albrecht Dürer, Rembrandt, Francisco Goya, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, through the prints of Andy Warhol, Jim Dine, Chuck Close, and Keith Haring are also housed in the collection. Photographs by Edweard Muybridge, Edward Steichen, Alfred Stieglitz, Ansel Adams, Berenice Abbott, and Dorthea Lange are represented in the collection.

The Museum's collection includes Nefrina, a mummy from the Ptolemaic period in ancient Egypt.[9] The ancient collection also contains a notable collection of Greek vases (including the Herakles Vase attributed to the Alkmene Painter), and Greek and Roman marbles.[10] The Arms and Armor gallery features exceptional European examples from the sixteenth[11] and seventeenth centuries—including a Maximilian suit of armor—as well as examples from Japan, the Islamic world, Africa, and the South Pacific.

Frank Weston Benson (American, 1861 -1951), On Grand River, 1930, oil on canvas, 36 x 44 inches, Reading Public Museum

Hundreds of historic North American Indian artworks from the Lenape, Montagnais, Inuit, Blackfoot, Acoma, Hopi, Sioux, Crow, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chippewa, Cochiti, and Mandan peoples are housed at The Reading Public Museum. The Museum also includes Asian collections with artwork from China, Japan, India, and Thailand.

The Museum also houses a large collection of Pennsylvania German objects that include fraktur, painted furniture—including one of the finest examples of a dower chest by the Black Unicorn Artist,[12] glazed earthenware, clocks, tinware, and paintings.[13] The Museum also has galleries dedicated to American Art, Modern and Contemporary Art, European Art, the arts of North American Indians, Ancient Civilizations, Arts of the Ancient Americas,[14] and Natural History, among others.

The Museum's natural history collections include thousands of specimens of moths and butterflies (many of them collected by Levi W. S. Mengel), as well as other insects, birds, nests, bird eggs, mammals, fossils, minerals, botanical specimens, and animal skins.

See also

References

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