Newark Museum

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Newark Museum
Established 1909
Location 49 Washington Street
Newark, New Jersey, USA
Director Mary Sue Sweeney Price[1]
Public transit access Washington Park Station (Newark Light Rail)
Website newarkmuseum.org

The Newark Museum is the largest museum in New Jersey, USA. It holds fine collections of American art, decorative arts, and arts of Asia, Africa, the Americas, and the ancient world. Its extensive collections of American art include works by Hiram Powers, Thomas Cole, John Singer Sargent, Frederick Church, Mary Cassatt, Edward Hopper, Georgia O'Keeffe, Joseph Stella and Frank Stella.

The museum was organized in 1909 by master Newark librarian John Cotton Dana. The kernel of the museum was a collection of Japanese prints, silks, and porcelains assembled by a Newark pharmacist.

Originally located on the fourth floor of the Newark Public Library, the museum moved into its own purpose-built structure in the 1920s after a gift by Louis Bamberger. Since then, the museum has expanded several times, to the south into the former YMCA, to the north into the 1885 Ballantine House, and in 1990, to the west into an existing acquired building. At that time much of the museum, including the new addition, was redesigned by Michael Graves.

In addition to its extensive art collections, The Newark Museum is dedicated to natural science. It includes a mini-zoo with over 100 live animals, the Dreyfuss Planetarium and the Victoria Hall of Science which highlights some of the museum's 70,000 specimen Natural Science Collection.

The Newark Museum's Tibetan galleries are considered among the best in world. The collection was purchased from Christian missionaries in the early twentieth century. The Tibetan galleries have an in-situ Buddhist altar that the Dalai Lama has consecrated.

[edit] Light Rail service

The Newark Light Rail line opened on July 17, 2006. The southbound line of this extension includes a station on Broad Street that brings patrons to the museum from all the rail lines now serving Newark Broad Street Station and Newark Penn Station.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ "The Newark Museum Makes Key Strategic Moves in Major Reorganization of Board" (press release). The Newark Museum. February 21, 2007.