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Seattle Art Museum

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Profil

Once the downtown SAM opened (with a breathtaking exhibition of Dale Chihuly's glass works), the original building closed for renovation. It reopened in 1994 as the Seattle Asian Art Museum , a showcase for the museum's world-renowned Asian collections and a community hub for Asian culture. From the start, the two facilities were deeply linked. In addition to sharing management and staff resources, the museum encouraged visitors to view both venues within one week for the price of one admission ticket-a practice that continues to this day.

With its success as a vibrant museum in two locations, museum leaders began to envision a third venue that could showcase outdoor sculpture, including remarkable works collected by local museum supporters. With that in mind, SAM, in partnership with the national land-conservation organization the Trust for Public Land, purchased the last remaining undeveloped property on Seattle's central waterfront in December 1999. Then-mayor Paul Schell applauded SAM's vision for a free park that would be "a place where residents and visitors can appreciate the beauty of our city and be inspired by artistic genius. It will be a legacy for our children, and for generations to come."

The waterfront property, which eventually grew to a nine-acre park, opened in early 2007 as the Seattle Art Museum's Olympic Sculpture Park-named by generous supporters Jon and Mary Shirley for its exquisite views over Elliott Bay of the Olympic Mountains. The park, designed by Weiss/Manfredi, immediately gained international attention, with seminal works by Richard Serra, Alexander Calder, Claes Oldenburg, Louise Bourgeois and other artists.

While the sculpture park was in development, SAM trustees adopted a plan to expand the downtown facility. They couldn't pass up the opportunity to collaborate on an adjacent building that would serve as Washington Mutual Bank's world headquarters and allow for a multi-phase expansion of SAM. Brad Cloepfil of Portland's Allied Works Architecture designed

a light-filled, open facility

that connects seamlessly to the 1991 Venturi building. A unique arrangement with Washington Mutual enables SAM to occupy the new building in phases, from the 118,000 sq. ft. expansion that debuted in spring 2007-including additional gallery and public spaces, a new restaurant and an expanded store-to an eventual total of 300,000 square feet. Combined with the Venturi building, the future downtown SAM will someday occupy 450,000 sq. ft.



Künstler der Galerie bzw der Sammlung

Laylah Ali    
Ghada Amer    
Chiho Aoshima    
Charles Avery    
Max Beckmann    
Cecily Brown  Cecily Brown freereport  Cecily Brown quickreport
Delia Brown    
Kristin Calabrese    
Will Cotton    
Karin Davie    
Sue de Beer  Sue de Beer freereport  
Inka Essenhigh  Inka Essenhigh freereport  Inka Essenhigh quickreport
Anna Gaskell  Anna Gaskell freereport  
Jitka Hanzlová    
Zhang Huan  Zhang Huan freereport  
Brad Kahlhamer  Brad Kahlhamer freereport  
Karen Kilimnik  Karen Kilimnik freereport  Karen Kilimnik quickreport
Willem de Kooning  Willem de Kooning freereport  
Justine Kurland    
Roy Lichtenstein  Roy Lichtenstein freereport  Roy Lichtenstein quickreport
Malerie Marder    
Cameron Martin    
Julie Mehretu  Julie Mehretu freereport  Julie Mehretu quickreport
Isamu Noguchi    
Jackson Pollock  Jackson Pollock freereport  
Mel Ramos    
Pipilotti Rist  Pipilotti Rist freereport  
Ruth Root    
Mark Tobey    
Sue Williams    
Lisa Yuskavage  Lisa Yuskavage freereport  



 

Kontaktinfos

Seattle Art Museum
University Street 100
WA 98101 Seattle (USA)

Tel: +1 206 654 3100
Fax: +1 206 654 3135
webmaster@seattleartmuseum.org
www.seattleartmuseum.org

Öffnungszeiten:
Tu/We 10-17h, Th-Su 9-21h

What's On

SAM Next: Mika Tajima
16/07/2011 - 17/06/2012
Mika Tajima