The Guggenheim exhibits modern and contemporary painting and sculpture in one of the most famous buildings in the world, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Its collection of 20th-century European modern masters is famous, serving as one basis of its new expansion program. As it remolds itself as an international museum, the Guggenheim now shows much more contemporary art, and has even done encyclopedic exhibits of the traditional arts of China and Africa.
The Guggenheim has one of the largest collections of Wassily Kandinsky's paintings in the world. Paul Klee, Franz Marc, Robert Delaunay, Marc Chagall and Fernand Léger are among other modern masters featured in the permanent collection. The Justin K. Thannhauser Foundation Collection of Modern Art is particularly strong in Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works. An ongoing series of exhibitions draws on the permanent collection of more than 6,000 works as well as loans from other institutions. Lectures, concerts, dance performances and poetry readings are also offered.
Solomon R. Guggenheim was the fourth of seven brothers from an old New York family with a financial empire based in mining. In the 1920s he began collecting the work of avant-garde artists. As the fame of his collection grew, he opened his apartment to the art world and began lending works for exhibition. In 1937 the Guggenheim Foundation was created, opening two years later as the Guggenheim Collection of Non-Objective Paintings. In 1943 Wright was commissioned as the architect for a new museum. However, due to the museum's controversial design—and New York's conservative building codes—it would be 16 years before the museum would open.
A 10-story tower designed by Gwathmey Siegel & Associates was added in 1992. Offices were moved underground so the entire Wright building was fully accessible to the public for the first time. The tower—with its four floors of galleries and fifth-floor sculpture terrace—allows many more artworks to be shown from the permanent collection.
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Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective
Fri, June 29, 2012 – Wed, Oct 3, 2012 This comprehensive mid-career survey features over 70 color photographs and five video installations by the Dutch artist Rineke Dijkstra.
Fri, May 11, 2012 – Wed, June 13, 2012 Learning Through Art, the pioneering arts-education program of the Guggenheim Museum, presents "A Year with Children 2012," an exhibition that showcases selected artworks by New York City public-school students in grades two to six.
Kandinsky at the Bauhaus, 1922–1933
Ongoing While he was teaching at the Bauhaus in Germany, geometric shapes came to play a dominant role in Russian abstract painter Kandinsky’s pictorial vocabulary. This intimate presentation features paintings and works on paper from a prolific period of his career.