Noguchi_Museum

Noguchi Museum

Noguchi Museum

Museum in Queens, New York


The Noguchi Museum, chartered as The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, is a museum and sculpture garden in the Long Island City section of Queens, New York City, designed and created by the Japanese American sculptor Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988). Opening on a limited basis to the public in 1985, the museum and foundation were intended to preserve and display Noguchi's sculptures, architectural models, stage designs, drawings, and furniture designs. The two-story, 24,000 square feet (2,200 m2) museum and sculpture garden, one block from the Socrates Sculpture Park, underwent major renovations in 2004 allowing the museum to stay open year-round.[1]

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Museum entrance

History

To house the museum, in 1974 Noguchi purchased a photogravure plant and gas station located across the street from his New York studio, where he had worked and lived since 1961.[2] The Isamu Noguchi Garden Museum opened to the public in 1985 on a seasonal basis.[3] At the time, it was the first such museum to be established by a living artist in America.[3]

In 1999, the Foundation Board approved a $13.5 million capital master plan to address structural concerns, ADA and NYC Building Code compliance and create a new public education facility. During renovation, the museum relocated to a temporary space in Sunnyside, Queens, and held several thematic exhibitions of Noguchi's work.[4] In February 2004, the museum was formally chartered as a museum, and granted 501(c)(3) public charity status. The Noguchi Museum reopened to the public at its newly renovated space in June 2004. The museum building continued to suffer from structural issues into the early 2000s and a second $8 million stabilization project was begun in September 2008.[5] As a result, there are now 12 galleries and a gift shop within the museum.

In 2022, the museum was awarded $4.5 million in capital funding, $1.5 million of which came from Mayor Eric Adams and the rest from Queens Borough president Donovan Richards.[6] The funds will be used for a restoration of the artist's original 1959 living and studio space situated opposite the museum as well as for a new two-story, 6,000-square-foot building adjacent to the studio to house the museum's collection and archival material.[7]

Tree of Heaven

Until March 26, 2008, a 60-foot (18 m)-tall 75-year-old Tree of Heaven (Ailanthus altissima) was a prominent centerpiece of the sculpture garden at the museum. The tree was spared by Noguchi when in 1975 he bought the building which would become the museum and cleaned up its back lot. "[I]n a sense, the sculpture garden was designed around the tree", said a former aide to Noguchi, Bonnie Rychlak, who later became the museum curator. By early 2008, the tree was found to be dying and threatened to crash into the building, which was about to undergo an $8.2 million renovation. The museum hired the Detroit Tree of Heaven Woodshop, an artists' collective, to use the wood to make benches, sculptures and other amenities in and around the building.[8]

Programs

Exhibition

The museum celebrated the 25th anniversary of its opening with the exhibition On Becoming an Artist. Isamu Noguchi and His Contemporaries, 1922 - 1960, which open from November 17, 2010, to April 24, 2011[9]

Other artists whose work have been featured include Koho Yamamoto.

Education

The New York State Council on the Arts has recognized the museum's educational program, Art for Families, as a stellar example of a community outreach program, and Art for Tots as a “superb approach” in making young children comfortable in a museum setting.[citation needed]

Isamu Noguchi Award

Since 2014, the Isamu Noguchi Award has been given annually “to individuals who share [museum founder] Noguchi’s spirit of innovation, global consciousness, and East-West exchange.” Recipients have included:

Directors

See also


References

  1. Glueck, Grace (May 10, 1985). "Noguchi and his Dream Museum". The New York Times. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
  2. Vogel, Carolyn (June 8, 2004). "The Renovated Noguchi Museum Is Friendlier but Still Discreet". The New York Times. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
  3. "Sinking Noguchi Museum gets $8M". New York Daily News. March 21, 2008. Retrieved May 17, 2012.
  4. Collins, Glen (March 27, 2008). "A Tree that Survived a Sculptor's Chisel is Chopped Down". The New York Times. Retrieved May 17, 2012.
  5. Kimberly Chou (15 May 2014), Sculptor's Honors Cubed Wall Street Journal.
  6. Andrew R. Chow (5 February 2018), Noguchi Museum Hires New Director New York Times.

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