American Art Starts Here: PAFA Refreshed, Reloaded

Dates:
September 10, ongoing

Location:
Historic Landmark Building


How do you build upon one of the great collections of American art? And how can such familiar art appear transformed and enlivened? That was the challenge undertaken this summer by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA), where its curatorial team, which includes a trio of experts in eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first century art, collaborated to rethink the themes and layouts of the galleries through 1950. The result is dynamic new juxtapositions, thematic groupings, recent acquisitions, and resuscitated gems that will challenge and delight visitors. Collection strengths such as history painting, early American landcape, trompe l’oeil still-lifes, American impressionism, art by Robert Henri and The Eight, and Philadelphia modernism has been given special attention. Important works of Surrealism and early Abstract Expressionism pulled from PAFA’s holdings will likely surprise viewers familiar with our nineteenth-century holdings. After the initial rotation opens this September, periodic changes will place works such as Winslow Homer’s Fox Hunt and other treasures in new contexts, and curator of contemporary art, Julien Robson, will make use of the historical collection to reveal the links between past and present.

Curators:
Anna Marley, Curator of Historical American Art
Robert Cozzolino, Curator of Modern Art
Julien Robson, Curator of Contemporary Art

Press:
Click here to read Edward Sozanski's review in The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Click here to read an article about this exhibition in Antiques and Fine Art Magazine. (PDF)