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San Diego Museum of Art

1450 El Prado, San Diego, CA, 92101
(619) 232-7931 - Venue Website

As San Diego County's first and largest art institution, the San Diego Museum of Art (SDMA) provides access to original art works of the highest caliber and is thus the community's primary resource for enjoying and learning about art. Whether in conjunction with the Museum's collections or a major travelling exhibition, special guided tours, classes, lectures, concerts and other related programs allow museum visitors to gain a deeper appreciation and understanding of the art on display.

Though the Museum's collections are encyclopedic in nature, with pieces ranging in date from 5,000 B.C. to 2001 A.D., SDMA is perhaps best known for its collection of Spanish old master paintings. The sculptural details on the building's façade, designed in the mid-1920s before the collection was formed, anticipated the Museum's strength in Spanish works by Murillo, Zurbaran, Ribera, Catena and El Greco. The Museum currently owns one or more paintings by each of these masters. This aspect of the collection was established early in the institution's history thanks to the donations of Anne R. and Amy Putnam during the 1930s and 1940s. In addition to the artists listed above, the Putnams also furnished the Museum with important works by Italian masters Giorgione, Giotto, Veronese, Luini, Canaletto, and Guardi. Works by Rubens, Hals, van Dyck, and van Ruisdael, also donated by the Putnams, represent the Northern European School.

Additional gifts and museum purchases later in the century have rounded out the collection of European art with examples by all the major French Impressionists, the Barbizon School, and French Academic painters, not to mention works by modern masters Matisse, Dufy, Beckman, and Modigliani.

The American collection has flourished over the past three-quarters century as well. In addition to paintings and decorative arts dating back to the colonial era, the collection of American art features works by Durand, Cassatt, Inness, Eakins, and Chase. Meanwhile, several works by Georgia O'Keeffe, works by the "Ash Can" school artists, and paintings by modernists Dove and Avery are just a few of the highlights from the Museum's collection of early twentieth-century American art. These works of American modernism provide a nice complement to SDMA's fine collection of European modern art, with examples by Dali, Magritte, Rivera, Miró, Calder, Moore, and Hepworth.

The collection of Asian art numbers over 4,000 objects and is, in fact, the largest area of the Museum's holdings. These include, among other objects: Buddhist sculptures from China, Japan, India, and South Asia; Chinese bronzes, jades, ceramics, and paintings; Japanese woodblock prints; and the largest collection of South Asian paintings outside of India, donated by Edwin Binney 3rd in 1990.

Recently, the Museum has made significant acquisitions of contemporary and Latin American art as it strives to build those important areas of the collection and to provide a bridge between existing collection strengths. Many of these works of art, along with hundreds of other important selections from the Museum's collections, are featured in a new museum catalogue, the first significant publication on SDMA's collections in more than ten years.

The Museum's collections are maintained by curators Julia Marciari-Alexander (Deputy Director for Curatorial Affairs), John Marciari (European art), Sonya Quintanilla (Asian art), who have developed special thematic presentations in the galleries, incorporating old favorites and works rarely put on display with works provided by outside lenders.

While providing the community with new opportunities to explore its collections in greater depth, the Museum hosts many traveling exhibitions that bring great art from other parts of the nation and the rest of the world to the region's doorstep.

With each of these exhibitions, the visitor's experience and understanding of the art is enriched through free guided tours by docents, curators, and the Museum's education staff; interactive computer kiosks; related concerts and films, and lectures by noted experts in the field. The Museum also provides brochures, wall texts, and guided tours in both Spanish and English for most of its exhibitions. In addition, virtual tours of the Museum's collections are available via the internet at www.sdmart.org.

- www.sdmart.org

Tags: museum, art
Venue Type: Museum / Planetarium
Neighborhood: Balboa Park
Hours: Tuesday-Sunday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Thursdays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
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1450 El Prado, San Diego, CA, 92101
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