William Benton Museum of Art

William Benton Museum of Art
William Benton Museum of Art - University of Connecticut
Established 1967
Location 245 Glenbrook Road, Storrs, Connecticut, United States
Coordinates 41°48′31″N 72°15′10″W / 41.8086°N 72.2528°W / 41.8086; -72.2528Coordinates: 41°48′31″N 72°15′10″W / 41.8086°N 72.2528°W / 41.8086; -72.2528
Type Art museum
Director Nancy Stula
Owner University of Connecticut
Website benton.uconn.edu

The William Benton Museum of Art is a public fine arts museum located on the University of Connecticut's main campus in Storrs, Connecticut. The Benton houses a permanent collection of over 6,500 artistic works and hosts special exhibitions, concerts, campus art walks, and other events. The Museum is named in honor of prominent U.S. senator and university trustee William Benton. The Benton also houses The Beanery cafe and a gift store. Admission to the museum is free for all.[1]

Constructed in 1920 and used for twenty years as UConn's main dining hall, the Benton opened officially as an art museum in 1967. The museum building is designed in the Collegiate Gothic style and is one of the core campus buildings in the University of Connecticut Historic District-Connecticut Agricultural School, which is listed on the National Registry of Historic Places.[2]

The Benton's collection originated with former Connecticut Agricultural College president Charles Lewis Beach, who began the college's art collection, bequeathed his personal collection of American art to the college in 1933, and left a trust fund for the college to continue acquiring art.[3] Developed over the ensuing decades, the museum's permanent collection includes works by Childe Hassam, Henry Ward Ranger, Emil Carlson, Charles Harold Davis, Ernest Lawson, Ellen Emmet Rand, Guy Wiggins, Mary Cassatt, Thomas Hart Benton, Fairfield Porter, George Bellows, Gustav Klimt, Rembrandt Peale, Georges Braque, Edward Burne-Jones, Reginald Marsh, Käthe-Kollwitz, Arthur Bowen Davies, Maurice Prendergast, and Kiki Smith. The collection is strongest in modern and American art, but some works date to the Renaissance, and exhibits are highly diverse.[4]

References

  1. "About the Museum - William Benton Museum of Art". Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  2. "About the Museum - William Benton Museum of Art". Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  3. Mark J. Roy (1997). "A Piece of UConn History / Beach". Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  4. Douglas P. Clement (2013). "At UConn's Benton Museum, Mary Cassatt, Yes, But Also Contemporary Art from India and the Diaspora". Connecticut Magazine. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
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