Sunday, April 21, 2013
Cleveland Museum of Art - Cleveland, Ohio
Cleveland Museum of Art exterior |
I was an AFS exchange student in Cleveland in 1977 and a memorable highlight of the week was traveling to the Museum for my art history class. These days it's looking a little different.
The Museum was built in 1916 by local architects Hubbell and Benes as a Greek revival pavilion situated at the head of a park, overlooking a lake. Subsequent additions, including an education wing by Marcel Breuer, obscured the plan of the original structure creating a warren of spaces.
The New York firm of Rafael Viñoly Architects, won the commission in 2001, with the expansion and renovation finally reopening to the public January 2013.
The plan was to restore focus to the original 1916 building, "conceiving of it as a “jewel” set within a continuous ring of expansion space that includes the renovated Breuer building. The other additions were demolished to make way for a vast, indoor, sunlit piazza, topped by a curving canopy of glass and steel around which the entire museum is newly organized".
It's now a welcoming space to be, particularly on a winter's day.
entry to Gallery One on the lower level |
restaurant and seating beyond the bamboo planting |
http://www.clevelandart.org/gallery-one
the interactive Collection Wall |
new gallery space |
ArtLens |
preschool education space |
Teacher resource links for US curriculum
http://www.clevelandart.org/learn/in-the-classroom/connie-towson-ford-teacher-resource-center
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