Monterey Museum of Art facts for kids
Monterey Museum of Art
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Established | 1959 |
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Location | 559 Pacific Street, Monterey, California 93940 |
Visitors | Daily 11:00 am – 5:00 pm, Wednesday closed |
The Monterey Museum of Art (MMA) an art museum located in Monterey, California. It was founded in 1959 as a chapter of the American Federation of Arts. The Monterey Museum of Art collects, preserves, and interprets the art of California from the nineteenth century to the present day. Notable holdings celebrate the heritage of Northern and Central California, and especially for early California images from the Carmel Art Colony.
The museum operates two facilities, one at 559 Pacific Street and the other at 720 Via Mirada (La Mirada). The Pacific Street location has eight galleries and houses the administrative and curatorial offices, and the Buck Education Center consisting of classrooms, a library and the Youth Gallery. In 1983, the Monterey Museum of Art acquired the historic estate of La Mirada, whose history reflects the heritage of the Monterey area. La Mirada was expanded with modern galleries and is used to present traveling exhibitions from other institutions, highlights of the museum's permanent collection that include masters of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and significant emerging artists of today such as Ingrid Calame.
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Exhibitions
MMA presents approximately twenty exhibitions annually. These include thematic exhibitions selected from the permanent collection, presentations of local artists and major traveling exhibitions from other institutions. In addition to the museum's exhibitions, it presents educational programs that reach thousands of area youth annually, docent programs, classes, lectures and workshops, curatorial tours and public events such as a free Community Day organized for families. Other local institutions, including Monterey Peninsula College, Monterey Institute of International Studies, the Defense Language Institute and California State University Monterey Bay frequently use the museum as a resource for classes.
Permanent collections
The museum's permanent collection consists of more than 14,000 objects in the following areas: early California painting (1875–1945), photography, contemporary art (1945–present), Asian art and American art (1875–1945). Highlights of the museum's collection include works by Armin Hansen, William Ritschel, Joan Miró, Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso, as well as that of world-renowned photographers Edward Weston and Ansel Adams.
Early California painting
Notable artists, represented in the museum, who worked in California in the late 19th and early 20th centuries:
- Jules Tavernier
- E. Charlton Fortune
- Evelyn McCormick
- Gottardo Piazzoni
- Francis McComas
- William Ritschel
- Armin Hansen
Photography
Photographers represented in the permanent collection:
- Carleton Watkins
- William Henry Jackson
- Anne Brigman
- Johan Hagemeyer
- Edward Weston
- Brett Weston
- Ansel Adams
- Imogen Cunningham
- Wynn Bullock
- Charles Sheeler
- Aaron Siskind
- Irving Penn
- Sally Mann
- Garry Winogrand
Contemporary art
Contemporary art holdings:
- Nathan Oliveira
- David Park
- Roland Petersen
- Henri Matisse
- Pablo Picasso
- Salvador Dalí
- Alexander Calder
- Ilya Bolotowsky
- Larry Rivers
- James Rosenquist
- Wayne Thiebaud
Asian art
Asian art collection including textiles, woodblock prints, jade and lacquer objects, and ceramics from Japan, China and Korea.
American art
American Art holdings from the 19th century to 1945.
- Thomas Eakins
- John Sloane
- Childe Hassam
- Oscar Bluemner
- Stanton Macdonald-Wright
- Rockwell Kent
- Grant Wood
- David Alfaro Siqueiros
- Rufino Tamayo