DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS REOPENS AFTER MAJOR RENOVATION
DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS REOPENS AFTER MAJOR RENOVATION
By Stephen May
DETROIT, MICH. â After more than six and a half years of renovation and expansion work, the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) reopens November 23, on the heels of a grand opening gala celebration that was called the âhottest party of the year.â The nearly $160 million project included major infrastructure upgrades to the historic Beaux-Arts building, renovations to the South and North Wings and construction of a 31,282-square-foot addition designed by Michael Graves.
The resulting 35,000 square feet of new exhibition space â a 30 percent increase that brings the museumâs total to 150,000 square feet â facilitates display of more than 5,000 works from the DIAâs fine permanent collection, plus additional areas to showcase special exhibitions.
The DIA is thus now able to exhibit more of its holdings as well as offering new programming to provide insights into the arts. A complete reinstallation of galleries, in which paintings, works on paper, sculpture and decorative arts are displayed simultaneously, seeks to provide visitors with a more comprehensive and engaging experience of the museumâs holdings, which total some 60,000 works of art.
The DIAâs British-born director, Graham W.J. Beal, saw the building project as an ideal opportunity to reinstall the prestigious collection in new, integrated ways that help visitors better relate to and understand the art. It looks as though he has succeeded.
âThe driving principle behind the reinstallation,â museum officials observe, âis the primacy of the art objects themselves. The galleries are presented in a series of multiple, simultaneous exhibitions, each drawn from the extraordinary scope and caliber of the DIAâs collection, to convey the history of art and the stories of world culture.â
Because the DIAâs aging facilities were overdue for restoration and because the museum was unable to show stellar works from its encyclopedic holdings due to a lack of space, this renovation/expansion seems to avoid pitfalls associated with some of the many similar art museum renovations going on around the country. Works exhibited are first-rate and look better in integrated galleries. Focus remains on what is in the building, not the building itself.
What a collection this museum has to show off! The centerpiece remains Diego Riveraâs fascinating âDetroit Industryâ mural, created in 1932â1933, a series of frescoes on the walls of the central courtyard that pay tribute to the dignity of working men of all races and the technologically advanced machines on which they worked in the 1930s.
Rivera was originally commissioned to paint just two of the largest panels, but he was so intrigued by Detroit and the Ford Motor Companyâs Rouge industrial complex that he suggested painting murals on all four walls. It took eight months for Rivera to complete the 27 panels. Edsel Ford, president of both the Detroit Arts Commission and Ford Motor Company, funded the project for $20,899.
The cycle combines the artistâs fascination with industrial design, his admiration for North American engineering and his empathy for working people. Images on two long walls, for example, depict a Model-T assembly line and engine block plant. Vertical panels on each side of the west entrance to the court show a worker (a generalized likeness of Rivera) and an engineer (a composite of Henry Ford and Thomas A. Edison).
The âDetroit Industryâ fresco cycle is widely regarded as the finest example of Riveraâs murals in the United States. He considered it the most successful work of his career. Well-preserved and still brilliant in color, this fascinating, complex composition continues to convey powerful messages.
The museumâs American collection, ranging from early colonial times to the present, is highlighted by Rembrandt Pealeâs enormous (nearly 12 by 24 feet) âThe Court of Death,â 1820, which depicts in graphic images the forms of death man brings upon himself through his own follies. Pealeâs âSelf Portraitâ and his father Charles Willson Pealeâs affectionate portrait of his brother, James Peale, an accomplished miniaturist, are also notable.
Within its expanded space, there is additional room for display of colonial portraits, including superb examples by John Singleton Copley and Thomas Sully, as well as Copleyâs iconic âWatson and the Shark.â Other early American standouts include Benjamin Westâs horrifying rendering of the destruction of human kind, âDeath on a Pale Horseâ and Washington Allstonâs depiction of a damsel on horseback fleeing an unseen evil, âThe Flight of Florimell.â
There are important landscapes by Americans, especially the Hudson River School, such as Albert Bierstadt, Thomas Cole and Jasper Cropsey, and Frederic Churchâs dramatic volcano, âCotopaxi.â Also notable are a classic seascape by Martin Johnson Heade and a beautiful painting of Venice by Thomas Moran.
Other American highlights include James McNeill Whistlerâs perceptive âSelf Portraitâ and his celebrated âNocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket,â which ignited his famous legal brouhaha with critic John Ruskin, and John Singer Sargentâs sensitive âMosquito Nets.â
Additional masterworks are by George Bellows, George Caleb Bingham, Mary Cassatt, William Merritt Chase, Thomas Eakins, Childe Hassam and Winslow Homer. Works by these artists and others are presented in the context of the DIAâs rich holdings in American furniture, silver, ceramics, glass and other decorative arts.
Post-1945 American painting is represented by canvases by Stuart Davis, de Kooning, Frankenthaler, Kelly, Lichtenstein, Motherwell, Rauschenberg, Warhol and Andrew Wyeth.
Among the more than 400 objects in the African American collection are works by Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Beuford Delaney, Sam Gilliam, Jacob Lawrence, Gordon Parks, Martin Puryear, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Carrie Mae Weems and Hale A. Woodfruff.
The 22 gouaches that comprise Lawrenceâs âJohn Brownâ series are among 35,000 prints, drawings, photographs, posters and artistâs books in the wide-ranging Graphic Arts collection. There are also more than 2,000 sketches by Thomas Cole; a comprehensive set of prints by Sloan; a large selection of Twentieth Century works on paper (by the likes of Matisse, Miro and Picasso), and numerous watercolors by German Expressionists.
European paintings run the gamut from works by Fra Angelico, Bellini (âMadonna and Childâ), Canaletto, Caravaggio and Bruegel (âThe Wedding Danceâ), to Rembrandt (âThe Visitationâ), Rubens and Van Dyck (âA Family Portraitâ).
In the late Twentieth Century, William Adolphe Bouguereauâs sentimental depiction of two adolescent girls communing in the woods, âThe Nut Gatherers,â was voted the most popular work in the museum and it retains its popularity today.
The DIA also boasts works by Constable, Ingres, Cezanne (âMont Sainte-Victoireâ), Courbet (âBather Sleeping by a Brookâ), Degas, Gaugin (âSelf Portraitâ), Monet, Renoir (âSeated Batherâ) and Seurat. Vincent van Goghâs familiar âSelf-Portrait,â acquired in 1922, was the first van Gogh to enter a US public collection. Another treasure is Van Goghâs iconic âPortrait of Postman Roulin.â
Among the new installations are Seventeenth Century European baroque objects in galleries featuring âArt as Theater.â This presentation implements director Bealâs concept of making the subject more meaningful for viewers by focusing on the theatricality inherent by displaying paintings and sculpture of that period together.
The DIA was one of the first art museums to display work created by Native Americans, which had hitherto been consigned to natural history institutions, and has since compiled an impressive trove. There are American Indian religious artifacts, ceremonial garments and wool blankets, as well as objects from tribes in North, Central and South America.
The DIA can display sculpture from ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome to Donatello and Bernini to Auguste Rodinâs âThe Thinkerâ and Henry Mooreâs âReclining Figure.â
European ivories, enamels and stained glass, and French porcelain, furniture, silver and tapestries are on view in the âFashionable Livingâ gallery. Here, Eighteenth Century decorative arts have been installed according to the time of day they were used by their original owners.
The museum is strong in Middle Eastern, Islamic and Asian art, with holdings spanning more than 6,000 years. The Middle East trove reflects artistic achievements from early Mesopotamia to Islamic decorative arts. The Asian collection â 2,600 objects in all â is particularly rich in works from China, Japan, Korea and India.
Nearly 100 cultures are represented in the African collections, including examples from nomadic peoples, centuries-old kingdoms, West Africa, Benin and Yoruba artists. Central and East African art features ceremonial headdresses and royal thrones, royal masks and an Ethiopian Christian triptych and textiles.
The 180,000-volume Research Library continues to serve the museumâs art historical needs. The DIA continues its tradition of hosting special exhibitions with two inaugural shows: âJulie Mehretu: City Sitings,â on view through March 30, and âThe Best of the Best: Prints, Drawings and Photographs from the D.I.A. Collection,â on view through March 2.
A dozen monumental paintings by Mehretu, who was born in Ethiopia, raised in Michigan and now lives in New York City, document her innovative, expansive take on contemporary urban existence. âThe Best of The Bestâ features more than 100 selected gems from the DIAâs graphic collection, which numbers 35,000 objects from 1500s Europe to today. Among the highlights are Michelangeloâs double-sided chalk and pen and ink drawing of 1508 with decorative schemes for the Sistine Chapel ceiling, and Charles Sheelerâs 1939 image, âWheels,â an icon of the world of photography.
The DIA has come a long way since its founding as the Detroit Museum of Art in 1885. Renamed the Detroit Institute of Arts, it moved to its current site on Woodward Avenue in 1927, occupying a new Beaux-Arts building designed by Paul Cret. After World War II, to handle its expanding collection, the South Wing was added in 1966 and the North Wing opened in 1971, both designed in a contrasting modernist style by Gunnar Birkets.
With its recent expansion and renovation, the DIA is poised to regain its lofty place among Americaâs great art museums. With its world-class collection housed in grand new and expanded facilities, the future looks bright for the museum.
The Detroit Institute of Arts is at 5200 Woodward Avenue. For information, 313-833-7900 or www.dia.org.
Detroit Institute Of Arts
Reopens After Major Renovation
New Space For An Old Collection
At The Detroit Institute Of Arts
Renovation Completed At
The Detroit Institute Of Arts
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This newly installed British Gallery places paintings in the context of their era with contemporary furnishings and decorative art.
In the Garden, Mary Cassat⦠-
American expatriate artist Mary Cassatt, who exhibited with the French Impressionists, is best known for her endearing depictions of mothers and children, such as âIn the Garden,â a 1904 pastel.
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This striding âDragon of Marduk,â circa 604â562 BC, made of molded, glazed brick, decorated a gate of the city of Babylon. Dedicated by King Nebuchadnezzar to Ishtar, the goddess of love and war, it is one of several objects from Mesopotamia in the DIA collection.
Mask of Raven, Wil⦠-
This fierce-looking âMask of Raven,â measuring 10¼ by 12¼ inches, is by Willie Seaweed (1873â1967), a Kwakiuti Indian. It is part of the DIAâs collection of Native American art.
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Even before its renovation, the DIAâs 1927 building, designed by architect Paul Cret, was an impressive structure housing a world-class art collection. The addition of a new wing adds to the grandeur of the already impressive DIA, joining the original building and North and South wings.
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Flemish painter Peter Bruegel the Elderâs lively âThe Wedding Dance,â circa 1566, conveys his fascination with and ability to capture scenes of peasant life in his native land.
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The DIAâs collection of early American furniture includes this exquisite âAmerican Specimen Table,â 1818â1822, made of rosewood, with a marble top, ormolu mounts and brass moldings.
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This sleek, modernist piece with floral decorations, âRozane âDella Robbiaâ Vase,â was designed by Frederick Hurten Rhead for the Roseville Pottery Company. It is a standout among the DIAâs American decorative arts holdings.
Evening by the Sea, Sc⦠-
âEvening by the Sea,â 1919, was painted by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, a founder of a group of rebellious young German artists who called themselves âDie Bruckeâ (âThe Bridgeâ). Embracing concepts of primitive art, they emphasized brilliant color, crude drawing and figural distortions.
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A highlight of the museumâs African American collection is Augusta Savageâs small, painted plaster sculpture, the poignant âGamin,â circa 1930.
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The DIAâs Asian art collection showcases this rare Korean âHead of Buddha,â late Eighth/early Ninth Century. Made of cast iron and almost 2 feet in height, it was likely part of a huge seated figure in a temple.
Madonna and Child, Giov⦠-
The DIAâs strong collection of Italian Renaissance art includes Giovanni Belliniâs âMadonna and Child,â 1508, a devotional painting characterized by careful draftsmanship and the astute coloring associated with Venetian artists.
McSorleyâs Bar, Joh⦠-
From the DIAâs collection of Ashcan School images is John Sloanâs celebrated âMcSorleyâs Bar,â 1912, a scene from a Manhattan neighborhood saloon populated by a range of male, urban humanity. The museum also boasts a comprehensive collection of Sloanâs graphic work.
Modigliani â Girl in a Wh⦠-
The Twentieth Century collection of art is highlighted by âGirl in a White Blouse,â circa 1915, by Italian-born Amedeo Modigliani.
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This odd-looking painted and varnished plaster sculpture, âMoonmad,â 1944, was created by Surrealist star Max Ernst by pouring plaster into molds of tools and kitchen utensils. It stands 38½ inches tall.
Seated Woma⦠-
The DIA collections include paintings and works on paper by Pablo Picasso, the Spanish seminal figure in Twentieth Century art. In this large (57½ by 45 inches) painting, âSeated Woman,â 1960, he utilized stylistic distortions in portraying Jacqueline Roque on a large Louis XV armchair, just prior to their marriage.
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In many ways the external symbol of the DIA, Auguste Rodinâs iconic âThe Thinker,â 1904, representing Dante, the central figure in the sculptorâs monumental âThe Gates of Hell,â for years has graced the Woodward Avenue entrance to the museum.
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Vincent van Goghâs iconic âSelf Portrait,â painted in bright Impressionist colors during a relatively happy period in his life in 1887, was the first painting by the artist to enter a US museum collection, in 1922.
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During the course of his second career in England, American expatriate John Singleton Copley painted three versions of âWatson and the Shark,â this one in 1782. The paintings are dramatic recreations of an incident in Havana harbor when a young British seaman, who later became Lord Mayor of London, lost a leg to a shark before his mates could rescue him.
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Paintings, furniture and decorative arts are arrayed around this American gallery in the renovated DIA. This is characteristic of reorganized rooms that display examples of work in several fields within a certain time period.