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Expansion of the Gallery
By 1890 the gallery had outgrown Renwick’s red brick building.
Stymied by neighbors who would not sell their property to allow
the gallery to expand at the original site, the Trustees bought
a lot a few blocks away at 17th Street and New York Avenue. Architect
Ernest Flagg was commissioned to design a Beaux-Arts building to
house both the museum and the school. Ground was broken on June
26, 1893 and the finished building opened to the public on January
8, 1897; by this time the collection included more than 700 works
of art. The old building was sold to the U.S. Government in 1901,
and is now part of the Smithsonian Institution.
Up until this time, the gallery had only been able to display
its permanent collection supplemented by loans from artists and
private collectors. The increased space of the new building allowed
the museum to pursue other activities such as special temporary
exhibitions. The popularity of such shows led to the establishment
in 1907 of the nationally recognized Biennial Exhibitions of Contemporary
American Painting. These large exhibitions and their generous prizes
attracted the attention of major American artists including Childe
Hassam, John Singer Sargent, Willard D. Metcalf, Edward W. Redfield,
Gari Melchers, Edward Hopper, and William M. Paxton. The gallery
capitalized on these opportunities to expand its American collection.
Significant additions to the gallery’s holdings came during
the 1920s and 1930s through the generosity of several major American
collectors. In 1925 Senator William Andrews Clark of Montana bequeathed
his extensive collection of European art, including almost 200
paintings, sculptures, tapestries, rugs, antiquities, stained glass
windows, and a Louis XVI-era salon. Architect Charles Platt designed
a new wing to house this collection, which was built with funds
donated by the Clark family. The Clark Wing was completed in 1928.
The Clark Wing housing this collection, built using funds donated
by the Clark family, was
opened to the public in 1928. Further additions came through a
bequest from Edward and Mary Walker in 1937, including French Impressionist
works by Renoir, Monet, and Pissaro. As a result, the gallery’s
collection came to include a fine selection of European art, although
in general the Trustees have continued to restrict purchases to
the work of American artists.
More recent additions to the collection include the Gordon Parks
Collection of Photographs, the Evans-Tibbs Collection of African
American Art, and the Edelson Collection of European Avant-Garde
Photography.
Throughout its remarkable history, the Corcoran Gallery of Art
has responded to changes in American life and art while responding
to its founder’s admonition that the institution be used “for
the purpose of encouraging American Genius.” It is a tribute
to William Wilson Corcoran’s vision that the gallery and
school continue to find new ways to respond to this challenge.
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