The Philadelphia Museum of Art is among the largest art museums in the
United States. It has collections of more than
227,
000 objects that include "world-class holdings of
European and
American paintings, prints, drawings and decorative arts."
The Main Building is visited by more than 800,000 people annually, and is located at the west end of
Philadelphia's
Benjamin Franklin Parkway. Other museum sites include the
Rodin Museum, also located on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway; the
Ruth and
Raymond G. Perelman Building, across the street from the
Main Building; and historic houses in
Fairmount Park. The
Perelman Building opened in
2007, and houses some of the more popular collections, as well as the
Museum's library, with over
200,000 books and periodicals, and 1.6 million other documents. The museum is closed on Mondays, and the basic entrance price is $20, with various concessions. The museum holds a total of about 25 special exhibitions every year, including touring exhibitions arranged with other museums in the United States and abroad. Some have an extra charge for entrance.
The City Council of Philadelphia funded a competition in
1895 to design a new museum building,[9] but it was not until 1907 that plans were first made to construct it on
Fairmount, a rocky hill topped by the city's main reservoir. The Fairmount
Parkway (renamed Benjamin Franklin Parkway), a grand boulevard that cut diagonally across the grid of city streets, was designed to terminate at the foot of the hill. But there were conflicting views about whether to erect a single museum building, or a number of buildings to house individual collections. The architectural firms of
Horace Trumbauer and
Zantzinger, Borie and Medary collaborated for more than a decade to resolve these issues. The final design is mostly credited to two architects in Trumbauer's firm:
Howell Lewis Shay for the building's plan and massing, and
Julian Abele for the detail work and perspective drawings. Construction of the Main Building began in
1919, when Mayor
Thomas B. Smith laid the cornerstone in a Masonic ceremony. Because of shortages caused by
World War I and other delays, the new building was not completed until 1928. The facade and columns are made of
Minnesota dolomite. The building's eight pediments were intended to be adorned with sculpture groups. The only pediment that has been completed, "
Western Civilization" (1933) by
C. Paul Jennewein, features his polychrome sculptures of painted terra-cotta figures, depicting
Greek deities and mythological figures. It was completed in 1933 and garnered much praise when it was unveiled. The building is also adorned by a collection of bronze griffins, which were adopted as the
symbol of the museum in the
1970s. The Main Building was once derided as the "
Great Greek garage," but now is fondly nicknamed the "
Parthenon on the Parkway."
The Museum houses more than 227,000 objects showing the creative achievements of the
Western world since the first century CE and those of
Asia since the third millennium
BCE Though the Museum houses over 200 galleries spanning 2,000 years, it does not have any galleries devoted to
Egyptian,
Roman, or
Pre-Columbian art. This is because a partnership between the Museum and the
University of Pennsylvania had been enacted early in the Museum's history.
The University loaned the Museum its collection of
Chinese porcelain, and the Museum loaned a majority of its Roman, Pre-Columbian, and Egyptian pieces to the
University. However, the Museum keeps a few important pieces for special exhibitions.
Highlights of the
Asian collections include paintings and sculpture from
China, Japan, and
India; furniture and decorative arts, including major collections of
Chinese, Japanese, and
Korean ceramics; a large and distinguished group of
Persian and
Turkish carpets; and rare and authentic architectural assemblages such as a
Chinese palace hall, a
Japanese teahouse, and a sixteenth-century
Indian temple hall.
The European collections, dating from the medieval era to the present, encompass
Italian and Flemish early-Renaissance masterworks; strong representations of later European paintings, including
French Impressionism and Post-Impressionism; sculpture, with a special concentration in the works of
Auguste Rodin; decorative arts; tapestries; furniture; the second-largest collection of arms and armor in the United States; and period rooms and architectural settings ranging from the facade of a medieval church in
Burgundy to a superbly decorated
English drawing room by
Robert Adam.
- published: 25 May 2013
- views: 2975