Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art is located near the Cornell University Arts quad in Ithaca, New York. It is most well known for its controversial concrete facade, its collection which includes two windows from Frank Lloyd Wright's Darwin D. Martin House and more than 30,000 other works.
Its fifth floor observation level houses the museum's extensive Asian collection.
[edit] Architecture
The Johnson Museum of Art was designed by architect I.M. Pei in 1973. It can be characterized by its top two floors, which cantilever over the open aired sculpture garden. It was designed so that it would not block the view of Cayuga Lake, and offers a panoramic view of the same from its fifth floor. It also houses a room for meetings.
An essay that Pei's firm wrote about the building can be found here. It explains some of the challenges raised by the building's location: the top of Libe Slope and at the very end of the "Stone Row" formed by McGraw, Morrill, and White Halls.
[edit] External links
- Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, official Cornell University website.
- Cornell University Image Collections (with photos from museum).
- Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Artcom.com.
- "Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art", Life in Ithaca blog (April 8, 2005).