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A City Grows: Get a sense of the rapid changes in early Minneapolis by viewing old photographs of the city taken between 1870 and 1890, from the collections of the Minnesota Historical Society. What looks different from today? What looks familiar?
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Postcard from Minneapolis: The first image in this feature comes from a postcard sent by someone in Minneapolis around 1915. Imagine you had visited the museum on its opening day. What might you have written on the postcard?
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To Their Credit: Museum labels can tell the story of how an art collection has grown. You can learn how the museum got an object from the “credit line,” a phrase telling whether the artwork was a gift from somebody or purchased with money given by somebody. The first part of an object’s “accession number” (its unique ID number) tells what year the object was added to the collection. (For example, object 14.2 came to the museum in 1914.) Browse through a selection of art from the MIA and compare credit lines and accession numbers. How many different people are named? Can you tell from the credit line why a gift was made? (A “bequest” is a gift given when someone dies.) How long has the museum owned the artwork?
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Adding On: Architects have a special challenge when they are adding on to an old building. Can a new design reflect parts of the original building but still be true to its own time? Compare the fronts of the 1915 museum and the 2006 expansion. What elements do they have in common? How are they different? Create your own design for the next museum expansion.
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A Temple of Art |
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Massive marble columns. Gleaming blocks of stone. Walls the length of a city block. A sense of the city’s pride bursts from this postcard of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts from about 1915. Just a few decades earlier, Minneapolis had been barely more than a large town. Thanks to the success of its flour mills and the railroads, it exploded in size. It grew from 47,000 people in 1880 to 129,000 people in 1885. But with the city’s commercial success, people wondered how to avoid the “gross materialism” that could come with such a boom. Art was the answer, some said. “Industry without art is brutality,” proclaimed a Tribune newspaper editorial in 1882. In 1883, fourteen men and eleven women formed the Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts, devoted to building an “art culture” in Minneapolis. They dreamed of a “temple for art and music” with galleries, an art school, and an orchestra hall. At first the Society rented rooms in the public library downtown. They had a single room for exhibitions and owned six works of art. By 1911 the Society’s members had raised enough money to build their own building—though not the whole project pictured on this postcard. Only the center section of this view was ever built. |
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A Grand Vision |
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The original plan for the Minneapolis Institute of Arts was ambitious. It was designed by the most famous architectural firm of the day, McKim, Mead and White. The museum was to extend the full length of the block on 24th Street. Wings along Third Avenue and Stevens Avenue would house an “orchestra hall” and an “architectural hall.” The classical style recalled grand European buildings, from the monuments of ancient Rome to the palaces of French kings. The MIA was designed to be built in sections, as money was raised. The full project would have cost two million dollars at the time. The Society had raised $520,180 by 1911. With that money they built the central part of the art museum, about one-seventh of the whole design. They planned to add the wings for music and architecture later. Since it opened in 1915, the museum has expanded four times, in 1926, 1974, 1998, and 2006. With the 2006 addition, it finally fills the entire block along 24th Street and extends down Stevens Avenue. It spans an area equal to seven and a half football fields. A visitor will walk almost a mile to see all the galleries. |
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Galleries Full of Gifts |
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Construction of the new museum began in 1913. But a very important part of the project was still missing: world-class art to display in the galleries. The Society of Fine Arts had hoped to attract the city’s largest private art collection, owned by the lumberman T. B. Walker. But Mr. Walker wanted a museum closer to downtown and eventually opened his own museum, today’s Walker Art Center. The first director of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Joseph Breck, had only a few thousand dollars to spend on art in 1913. That was a slim budget even in those days. Then in February of 1914, everyone got a big surprise. The Society’s president, mill owner William Hood Dunwoody, suddenly died. Without telling anyone of his plans, he had left the Society a fund of one million dollars for the purchase of art. Gifts of money and artwork from others quickly followed. Today the museum has nearly 100,000 works of art in its collection. About 5 percent of the art is on view in the galleries at any given time. The rest is kept in storerooms where temperature and humidity are carefully controlled. (Much of that art can be damaged by light and cannot be displayed for long periods.) Now, the 2006 expansion has added 40 percent more gallery space to the museum. Hundreds of treasures have come out of storage—and the museum has room to add art to its collection for years to come. |
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Behind the Scenes |
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As the museum has grown, so has the number of people needed to keep it running. In 1923, twenty-seven people worked at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Even so, the new director, Russell Plimpton, sometimes found himself washing dishes at receptions. In 2006, the museum has 256 employees and 474 volunteers. Here are some of the jobs in the museum today:
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A Museum for the People |
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The opening of the museum in on January 7, 1915, was a triumph for the members of the Society of Fine Arts. Three thousand people came to the opening night party. The newspaper the next day described it as “one of the most brilliant social events of the winter.” But the opening of the museum was not just an event for socialites. Over 12,000 people visited the new museum on its first day. That was the most people ever to visit an American museum outside New York City in a single day. And as the newspaper noted, “comparatively few automobiles were drawn up before the MIA, most visitors being of the unpretentious sort who walk or ride streetcars.” Over 80,000 visitors had passed through the museum by the end of the month. The Minneapolis Institute of Arts continues its mission of serving the people of Minnesota. Around 500,000 people visit every year. There is no charge to get in; this is one of the few free museums in the country. And these days, the Internet allows millions more people around the world to enjoy the collection of art that was just a dream a century ago. |
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