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Buffalo AKG Art Museum

Coordinates: 42°55′57″N 78°52′32″W / 42.93245°N 78.87563°W / 42.93245; -78.87563
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Buffalo AKG Art Museum
Map
Interactive fullscreen map
Former names
Albright–Knox Art Gallery (1962–2022?)
Albright Art Gallery (1905–1962)
EstablishedMay 31, 1905 (1905-05-31)
Location1285 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, New York
Coordinates42°55′57″N 78°52′32″W / 42.93245°N 78.87563°W / 42.93245; -78.87563
TypeArt museum
DirectorJanne Sirén
ArchitectAugustus Saint Gaudens, Edward Brodhead Green[1]
Nearest parkingUnderground
Websitewww.buffaloakg.org
DesignatedMay 27, 1971
Reference no.71000538[1]
Aerial Photo of the Buffalo AKG Art Museum

The Buffalo AKG Art Museum, formerly known as the Albright–Knox Art Gallery, is an art museum in Buffalo, New York, United States, in Delaware Park. The museum was expanded beginning in 2021, and re-opened in June 2023.[2]

The museum is a major showplace for modern art and contemporary art. It is directly opposite Buffalo State University and the Burchfield Penney Art Center.

It is named after three major donors, John J. Albright,[3] Seymour H. Knox II, and Jeffrey Gundlach.[4]

An Interior Gallery of the Wilmers Building

History

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The parent organization of the Buffalo AKG Art Museum is the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, founded in 1862, one of the oldest public arts institutions in the United States.[5] On January 15, 1900, Buffalo entrepreneur and philanthropist John J. Albright, a wealthy Buffalo industrialist, donated funds to the Academy to begin construction of an art gallery.[3] The building was designed by prominent local architect Edward Brodhead Green.[6] It was originally intended to be used as the Fine Arts Pavilion for the Pan-American Exposition in 1901, but delays in its construction caused it to remain uncompleted until 1905.[5] When it finally opened its doors on May 31, 1905, it was named the Albright Art Gallery.[5]

Clifton Hall, the third building on the museum's campus, was constructed in 1920 as the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. In 1927, the dilapidated building was renovated until 1929, when it was reopened as the Albright Art School. The sponsor was Charles Clifton, which is why the building was named Clifton Hall.[7]

In 1962, a new addition was made to the gallery through the contributions of Seymour H. Knox, Jr. and his family, and many other donors. At this time, the museum was renamed the Albright–Knox Art Gallery. The new building was designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill architect Gordon Bunshaft, who is noted for the Lever House in New York City. The Buffalo AKG Art Museum is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

The museum first began discussing a possible expansion in 2001. In 2012, the board commissioned the architectural firm Snøhetta to produce a master plan for future growth.[8] In 2014, the board voted to initiate a museum expansion and, in June 2016, the museum announced its selection of OMA partner Shohei Shigematsu as the architect for the project.[9] It is the first art museum designed by this association of architects in the United States.[10] Doubleline CEO and Buffalo native Jeffrey Gundlach pledged $42.5 million to the project, while businesses, foundations, government groups, and individuals promised matching funds toward a $125 million goal.[4] Another 20 million came from New York State.[11] In recognition of Gundlach's donation, a newly constructed building was named the Jeffrey E. Gundlach Building.[12] The museum would be renamed the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, representing the names of the museum's historical donors, on the completion of the renovations and its reopening in spring 2023.

The Seymour H. Knox Building, until its renovation, had an open courtyard that was not accessible to museum visitors. As part of the redesign of the terrain, a new artwork was created by artists Ólafur Elíasson and Sebastian Behmann, Common Sky, which now encloses this courtyard: "At once architectural and sculptural, Common Sky presents a canopy of glass and mirrors rendered in alternating triangular segments that allow the light to pour into the space below. Visitors can look up and see themselves reflected in the mirrors too, creating a synergistic and kaleidoscopic pushing and pulling of reflections and space. Common Sky’s form tapers into the courtyard itself, with a cyclone-shaped column that leads to a complex system of drains below. This asymmetrical element nods both to the location of a lone hawthorn tree planted in the original courtyard in the 1960s, while simultaneously serving as a drainage system of rain and snow that Buffalo is famed for."[12] The resulting 6,000 square feet (560 m2) community gathering space was given the name "Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. Town Square" in honor of the $11 million donation of Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. and the Wilson Foundation for the renovation.[13]

Clifton Hall houses, among other things, the museum's archives,[14] offices for the staff as well as the "F. Paul Norton and Frederic P. Norton Family Prints And Drawings Study Center", and working spaces for the Public Art Initiative.[15]

The Seymour H. Knox Building now includes rooms where visitors can participate in art workshops themselves, the so-called Creative Commons, which represents the first cooperation of the Lego Foundation with a museum.[12][16] Likewise, it houses the Cornelia restaurant, which features an almost 30-foot-high (9.1 m) glass mosaic by artist Firelei Báez.[12]

The Jeffrey E. Gundlach Building, a circular glass building, opened in August of 2023 and added more than 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) to the museum's exhibition and five studio classrooms.[17] The first floor of the building houses the Nordic Gallery, dedicated to contemporary Scandinavian art.[18] The third floor of the building showcases the museum's new acquisitions.[12]

The museum is part of the Monuments Men and Women Museum Network, launched in 2021 by the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art.[19]

In November 2023, a unionization campaign was launched by museum employees across the visitor experience, facilities, and food services departments, with employees filing a petition for the election with the National Labor Relations Board in January 2024. 71 employees are set to vote on January 25, 2024 on whether to join AKG Workers United. This vote follows AKG Workers United filing unfair labor practice charges against the museum, accusing its leadership of "heightening surveillance of employees and re-enforcing workplace rules in direct response to unionization efforts." Museum officials have denied these allegations and have stated: "Regardless of the decision, we are committed to continuing to work collaboratively to support all of our Buffalo AKG team.”[20][21]

Exhibitions

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In 1910, the museum hosted the International Exhibition of Pictorial Photography (November 3–December 1, 1910), curated by Alfred Stieglitz. It was the first ever show organized by an American museum that aimed to elevate photography's stature to that of a fine art.[22]

In 1978, the museum's exhibition on the work of Richard Diebenkorn was chosen to represent the United States at the 28th Venice Biennale. In 1988, the museum again won the competition to organize the exhibition representing the United States in Venice; the museum's curator Michael G. Auping proposed media artist Jenny Holzer.[23]

Collection

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An interior gallery of the Wilmers Building

The Buffalo AKG Art Museum has long operated not by collecting artists' work in depth, but by trying to acquire key works.[24] The gallery's collection includes works spanning Impressionistic and Post-Impressionistic styles by artists of the nineteenth century such as Paul Gauguin, Edgar Degas, Berthe Morisot, Claude Monet, and Vincent van Gogh.

Revolutionary styles from the early twentieth century such as abstraction, cubism, surrealism, and constructivism are represented in works by artists like Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Jean Metzinger, Albert Gleizes, Henri Matisse, André Derain, Joan Miró, Piet Mondrian, Giacomo Balla, Sonia Delaunay, Georgia O'Keeffe, Amedeo Modigliani, and Alexander Rodchenko. Frida Kahlo is represented by Self-Portrait with Monkey.

Because of Seymour H. Knox and Gordon M. Smith, a former director, the Albright-Knox was one of the first museums to collect Abstract Expressionism in depth.[25] That movement is widely represented in the collection with works by artists including Arshile Gorky, Jackson Pollock, Joan Mitchell, Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell, Adolph Gottlieb, and Helen Frankenthaler. The museum owns the second-largest collection of paintings by Clyfford Still: 33 abstract works that span the most critical developments of his career from 1937 to 1963. They include 31 paintings donated to the museum in 1964 by Still and two paintings acquired in 1957 and 1959 as gifts of Seymour H. Knox, Jr.[26]

Additionally, the gallery is rich in further examples of post-war American and European art.[27] Works of pop art, minimalism, and art of the 1970s through the end of the twentieth century can be found represented by artists such as Lee Bontecou, Chryssa, Alberto Giacometti, Eva Hesse, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Howardena Pindell, Ed Clark, Kiki Smith, Félix González-Torres, and Andy Warhol.

At her death in 2016 pop artist Marisol left her estate to the museum including hundreds of works of art, making it the largest collection of her work in the world.[28]

Their contemporary collection includes pieces by artists such as Cory Arcangel, Tony Conrad, Mark Bradford, Nick Cave, Simone Leigh, Georg Baselitz, John Connell, and Per Kirkeby. The museum bought Anselm Kiefer's large-scale Die Milchstrasse (The Milkyway) (1985–1987) in 1988 to celebrate its 125th anniversary.[29]

Before its 2019-2023 expansion, the Buffalo AKG Art Museum exhibition space could accommodate only 200 works — just 3% of its 6,740-piece collection.[8]

Selected collection highlights

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Paintings

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The Buffalo AKG Art Museum has more than 6,500 works in its collection, below is a list highlighting a few other notable works:[30]

Name Artist Year Notes
Hotel Lobby Max Beckmann 1950
Music and Literature William Michael Harnett 1878
La Maison de la Crau (The Old Mill) Vincent van Gogh 1888
La Jeune bonne (The Servant Girl) Amedeo Modigliani 1918
Self-Portrait with Monkey Frida Kahlo 1938
Nude Figure Pablo Picasso 1909-1910
La Toilette Pablo Picasso 1906
Chemin de haulage à Argenteuil (Tow path at Argenteuil) Claude Monet 1875
Convergence Jackson Pollock 1952
Icarus Richard Hunt 1956
Orange and Yellow Mark Rothko 1956
Winter Light Norman Carton 1956
Cow Andy Warhol 1976

Sculptures

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The gallery contains a variety of sculptures on the exterior grounds. Some of the most notable, from the past and the present, include:

Name Artist Year Image
Alphabet Series Fletcher Benton N/A
Big Red James Rosati 1971
Bond Alexander Liberman 1969
Stainless Steel, Aluminum, Monochrome I, Built to Live Anywhere, at Home Here Nancy Rubins 2011
Cigarette Tony Smith 1961
Diamond I of III Antoni Milkowski 1967
Directional I Lyman Kipp 1962
Karma Do-Ho Suh 2010
E.C. Column Kenneth Snelson 1969–81
Flat Rate II Lyman Kipp 1969
Four Chances Kenneth Snelson 1982
Into the Blue Shayne Dark 2005
Laura Jaume Plensa 2012
Look and See Jim Hodges 2005
Shark Girl Casey Riordan Millard 2014
Stacked Revision Structure Liam Gillick 2005
The Cry Isamu Noguchi 1962
Turning the World Upside Down #4 Anish Kapoor 1998

Deaccessioning and the museum's mission

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Artemis and the Stag, on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

In 2007, the Albright–Knox Art Gallery sold a Roman-era bronze sculpture, Artemis and the Stag, that was auctioned at Sotheby's New York on June 7, 2007, and brought $28.6 million.[31] This was the highest price ever paid at auction for an antiquity or a sculpture of any period, according to Sotheby's. It was purchased by the London dealer Giuseppe Eskenazi on behalf of a private European collector.[32]

The event brought national attention to what until then had been a local question, the mission of the Albright-Knox. In February 2007, when the list of works to be deaccessioned was made public, Albright-Knox Director Louis Grachos defined the ancient sculpture as falling outside the institution's historical "core mission" of "acquiring and exhibiting art of the present." This definition made public critics wonder whether the position at the Gallery of "William Hogarth's Lady's Last Stake or Sir Joshua Reynolds' Cupid as a Link Boy were secure. Works by Gustave Courbet, Honoré Daumier, Jacques-Louis David, and Eugène Delacroix had been purchased by the museum in earlier decades.[33]

The decision to deaccession certain art works was made by a vote of the museum's board of directors, was voted on and ratified by the entire membership, and followed the guidelines of the American Alliance of Museums.[34] The sale raised questions about how museums can remain vital when they are situated in economically declining regions and have limited means for raising funds for operations and acquisitions.[35]

Hours

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The museum is open from 10 am to 8 pm, Thursday and Friday, and 10 am to 5 pm, Saturday through Monday. On the first Friday of each month, admission to the museum is Pay What You Wish sponsored by M&T Bank.[36]

Management

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View of Albright–Knox Art Gallery from Delaware Park

Governance

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Since 2013, Janne Sirén has been director of the Albright–Knox Art Gallery. Sirén is believed to be the first director from the Nordic region to take the helm of a major American art museum.[37]

Complete list of directors:

  • Janne Gallen-Kallela-Sirén (2013–present)
  • Louis Grachos (2002-2013)
  • Douglas G. Schultz (1983-2002)
  • Robert T. Buck, Jr. (1973-1983)
  • Gordon M. Smith (1955–1973)
  • Edgar C. Schenck (1949–1955)
  • Andrew C. Ritchie (1942–1949)
  • Gordon B. Washburn (1931–1942)
  • William M. Hekking (1925–1931)
  • Cornelia Bentley Sage Quinton (1910–1924)
  • Charles McMeen Kurtz (1905–1909)

Funding

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As of 2007, the Albright–Knox Art Gallery's endowment stood at about $58 million, generating about $1.1 million a year for acquisitions.[24] Since the proceeds from the sale of some 200 works of art in 2007 were added to the preexisting $22 million acquisitions endowment, the museum has been able to spend as much as almost $5 million on new art annually.[38] In 2013, the Albright–Knox Art Gallery received an $11 million bequest from the estate of longtime board member and Buffalo arts patron Peggy Pierce Elfvin, the largest single gift in the museum's history at that time.[39] In 2016, Los Angeles financier Jeffrey Gundlach contributed $42.5 million, the largest donation from a single individual in the museum's history.[4]

Albright Art Gallery in 1913

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "National Register of Historical Places - New York (NY), Erie County". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2007-02-24.
  2. ^ "Building the Buffalo AKG Art Museum". Buffalo AKG Art Museum. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  3. ^ a b "John J. Albright | Albright-Knox". www.albrightknox.org. Retrieved 2019-01-28.
  4. ^ a b c Pogrebin, Robin (23 September 2016). "Buffalo Museum, Ready to Expand, Raises Money at Breakneck Pace". The New York Times. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  5. ^ a b c "Our History | Albright-Knox". www.albrightknox.org. Retrieved 2019-01-28.
  6. ^ "Edward B. Green | Albright-Knox". www.albrightknox.org. Retrieved 2019-01-28.
  7. ^ "Campus History Timeline". Buffalo AKG-Museum. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  8. ^ a b Julia Halperin (October 22, 2014), Buffalo's jewel-box art museum to grow Archived 2014-10-23 at the Wayback Machine The Buffalo News.
  9. ^ "OMA Selected for Buffalo's Albright-Knox Art Gallery Expansion". ArchDaily. 2016-06-07. Retrieved 2020-03-15.
  10. ^ "OMA/Shohei Shigematsu". buffaloakg.org. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  11. ^ Sheets, Hilarie M. (2022-11-21). "New York Times Buffalo Museum to Reopen in May". The New York Times. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  12. ^ a b c d e White, Katie (2023-06-23). "Buffalo AKG Art Museum Has Cut the Ribbon on a Major Overhaul—Guided by Major Input From Its Community". art.net.com. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  13. ^ queenseyes (2023-04-10). "Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. Town Square @ Buffalo AKG Art Museum". buffalorising.com. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  14. ^ Randall, Mike (2023-06-12). "As Buffalo AKG Art Museum prepares for the future, she is the caretaker of their past". wkbw.com. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  15. ^ "Buffalo AKG-Museum: Our Collection". buffaloakg.org. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  16. ^ Dixon, Delaina (2023-07-21). "How New Communal Space at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum Hopes To Help Eradicate The City's Racial Divide". ebony.com. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  17. ^ "Jeffrey E. Gundlach Building at Buffalo AKG Art Museum opens". spectrumlocalnews.com. Retrieved 2023-11-27.
  18. ^ Blackley Glynn, Michelle (June 23, 2023). "'The people's art': Newly shaped AKG opens in Buffalo". Niagara Frontier Publications. Retrieved 2023-11-27.
  19. ^ "A New Museum Network Is Focusing On the Monuments Men's Long-Overlooked Postwar Cultural Contributions". Artnet News. 2021-06-17. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  20. ^ Tessa Solomon (January 12, 2024). "Buffalo AKG Art Museum Employees Set to Vote on Unionizing". ART News.
  21. ^ Matt Glynn (January 12, 2024). "Buffalo AKG Art Museum workers set to vote on unionizing". Buffalo News.
  22. ^ "International Exhibition of Pictorial Photography | Buffalo AKG Art Museum".
  23. ^ Michael Brenson (July 27, 1988), Media Artist Named To Represent U.S. At '90 Venice Biennale The New York Times.
  24. ^ a b Randy Kennedy (March 14, 2007), Buffalo's Pain: Giving Up Old Art to Gain New The New York Times.
  25. ^ Michael Brenson (October 18, 1987), When America Put Its Stamp On World Painting The New York Times.
  26. ^ "Clyfford Still Collection | Buffalo AKG Art Museum".
  27. ^ "History of Albright-Knox Art Gallery", Albrightknox.org Archived 2008-12-18 at the Wayback Machine, 23 September 2008
  28. ^ Bowley, Graham (25 April 2017). "Marisol Estate is Given to the Albright-Knox Art Gallery". The New York Times.
  29. ^ Colin Dabkowski (August 24, 2013), Albright-Knox buys mammoth painting by German artist Anselm Kiefer The Buffalo News.
  30. ^ "Collection Highlights". Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  31. ^ "Artemis" fetches a staggering sum" The Buffalo News, 7 June 2007 Accessed 3 September 2008;
  32. ^ "Albright-Knox rakes it in", Art In America, September 2007.
  33. ^ Mission Creep: Albright-Knox Belatedly Releases Its Complete Deaccession List Lee Rosenbaum, "Mission Creep: Albright-Knox Belatedly Releases Its Complete Deaccession List" Arts Journal]
  34. ^ "The War Against the Albright-Knox". Archived from the original on February 1, 2010. Retrieved March 2, 2010.
  35. ^ "Re-examining deaccessioning at the Albright - Modern Art Notes". Archived from the original on November 23, 2008. Retrieved March 2, 2010.
  36. ^ "Hours & Admission". Buffalo AKG Art Museum. Retrieved February 6, 2024.
  37. ^ Carol Vogel (January 14, 2013), Buffalo's Albright-Knox Gets a Director from Much Farther North The New York Times.
  38. ^ Kevin West (November 2007), In With The New - With contemporary art booming out of control, how can museums afford to play? Archived 2014-01-16 at the Wayback Machine W.
  39. ^ Colin Dabkowski (October 9, 2013), Albright-Knox gets $11 million bequest from ex-board member, Peggy Pierce Elfvin Buffalo News.
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