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ProfileThe development of the Rhode Island School of Design and its museum is tied to Rhode Island's emergence after the Civil War as the most heavily industrialized state in the Union and to the growing desire for better design in manufacturing. With the region's prosperity based on the production of silverware, jewelry, machine tools, steam engines, files, screws, and textiles, leading manufacturers as well as civic leaders felt the need for industrial-arts education and exposure to examples of fine art. Even before the war, the Rhode Island Art Association, chartered in 1854, determined "to establish in Providence a permanent Art Museum and Gallery of the Arts and Design." In the absence of either state funding or private donations, however, the creation of a design school and art museum in Rhode Island did not occur until 1877. Faced with a choice between erecting a drinking fountain in Roger Williams Park or founding a school of design-the latter proposed by Helen Adelia Rowe Metcalf (1830-1895)-the Rhode Island Women's Centennial Commission in that year voted to establish the Rhode Island School of Design by allocating to it the modest $1,675 remaining from its fund-raising for the Women's Pavilion at the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. CHARTER RISD's Act of Incorporation listed three objectives-instruction, career training, and "the general advancement of public art education by the collection of and exhibition of works of art." The language of its revised (1893) charter expressed the school's close alliance with industry: it sought to instruct "artisans in drawing, painting, modeling, and designing, that they may successfully apply the principles of Art to the requirements of trade and manufacture." From the outset, works of art served as models for instruction, first in classrooms and, as the collection grew, in a separate museum structure. Today, as throughout its history, the RISD Museum is an integral part of Rhode Island School of Design and the principal art museum for the city, state and southeastern New England.
represented artists |
Contact InformationThe RISD MuseumBenefit Street 224 RI 02903 Providence (USA)
Opening Time: Tu-Su 10-17h |
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