The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
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The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), is an art museum located in the
Houston Museum District The Houston Museum District is an association of 19 museums, galleries, cultural centers and community organizations located in Houston, Texas, dedicated to promoting art, science, history and culture. The Houston Museum District currently inc ...
of Houston, Texas. With the recent completion of an eight-year campus redevelopment project, including the opening of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building in 2020, it is the 12th largest art museum in the world based on square feet of gallery space. The permanent collection of the museum spans more than 6,000 years of history with approximately 70,000 works from six continents.


Facilities

The MFAH's permanent collection totals nearly 70,000 pieces in over of exhibition space, placing it among the larger art museums in the United States. The museum's collections and programs are housed in nine facilities. The Susan and Fayez S. Sarofim Campus encompasses 14 acres including seven of the facilities, with two additional facilities, Bayou Bend and Rienzi ( house museums) at off site locations. The main public collections and exhibitions are in the Law, Beck, and Kinder buildings. The Law and Beck buildings have over of exhibition space.


The Susan and Fayez S. Sarofim Campus

* Caroline Wiess Law Building – the original neo-classical building was designed in phases by architect
William Ward Watkin William Ward Watkin (January 21, 1886 – June 24, 1952) was an architect primarily practicing in Houston, Texas. He was the founder of the Architecture Department of Rice University in 1912, and remained on the Rice faculty until his death ...
. The original Caroline Wiess Law building was constructed in 1924 and the east and west wing were added in 1926. The Robert Lee Blaffer Memorial Wing was designed by Kenneth Franzheim and opened to the public in 1953. The new construction included significant structural improvements to several existing galleries—most notably, air conditioning. Two subsequent additions, Cullinan Hall and the Brown Pavilion, designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe were built in 1958 and 1974 respectively. This section of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston campus is the only Mies-designed museum in the United States. The Caroline Wiess Law building provides an ideal space in which to exhibit temporary and traveling exhibitions, as well as installations of Islamic art, Pacific Island and Australian art, Asian art, Indonesian gold artworks, and Mesoamerican and sub-Saharan African art. Of special interest is the Glassell Collection of African Gold, the largest assemblage of its kind in the world. Also the Nidhika and Pershant Mehta Arts of India, the only space in Houston for Indian Arts Culture. * Audrey Jones Beck Building – Opened to the public in 2000, the Beck Building was designed by
Rafael Moneo José Rafael Moneo Vallés (born 9 May 1937) is a Spanish architect. He won the Pritzker Prize for architecture in 1996, the RIBA Royal Gold Medal in 2003 and La Biennale's Golden Lion in 2021. Biography Born in Tudela, Spain, Moneo studied at ...
, a Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate. The museum Trustees elected to name the building after Audrey Jones Beck in honor of the large collection she had donated to the museum several decades prior. In addition to traveling exhibitions and rotating temporary shows of photography, prints and drawings on the lower levels, the building displays the permanent collections of antiquities, European, and American art up to 1900, including the Impressionist. * Nancy and Rich Kinder Building – In 2012, the museum selected Steven Holl Architects to design a expansionPei-Ru Keh (January 19, 2015)
Steven Holl Architects' dramatic expansion design for The Museum of Fine Arts in Houston
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Wallpaper Wallpaper is a material used in interior decoration to decorate the interior walls of domestic and public buildings. It is usually sold in rolls and is applied onto a wall using wallpaper paste. Wallpapers can come plain as "lining paper" (so ...
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that primarily holds galleries for art after 1900. Opened to the public in November 2020, the new building occupies a two-acre site north of the Caroline Wiess Law Building. The new MFAH building is adjacent to Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden and an expanded Glassell School of Art. In addition to a theater, restaurant, café, and seven small gardens and reflecting pools inset along the building's perimeter, the 237,213 square-foot Kinder building increases the museums overall exhibition space by nearly 75 percent. In 2021
The Bastion Collection
opene
Le Jardinier
a contemporary French restaurant emphasizing the highest-quality, seasonal ingredients from Michelin-starred chef Alain Verzeroli, and Italian-inspire
Cafe Leonelli
* The Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden – was designed by US-born artist and landscape architect
Isamu Noguchi was an American artist and landscape architect whose artistic career spanned six decades, from the 1920s onward. Known for his sculpture and public artworks, Noguchi also designed stage sets for various Martha Graham productions, and severa ...
and opened in 1986. The Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden houses more than twenty-five works by artists from the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries from the MFAH and other major collections. * Glassell School of Art – founded in 1979 and designed by architect S. I. Morris, the Glassell School of Art offers programs under the Studio School for Adults. The Glassell School of Art serves as the teaching wing of the MFAH, with a variety of classes, workshops, and educational opportunities for students diverse in age, interests, experience, and needs. In 2014, Steven Holl designed a new L-shaped building for the school, featuring a ramped amphitheatre that leads up to a walkable rooftop garden. In addition to opening onto Noguchi's sculpture garden and providing added outdoor space for programs and performances, the building also sits atop an extensive underground parking garage. The school offers classes at the Studio School for Adults and the Glassell Junior School, as well as Community Bridge Programs, special programs for youths, and the Core Artist-in-Residence Program. * Central Administration and Glassell Junior School of Art Building – The building, opened in 1994 and designed by Texan architectural designer Carlos Jimenez, houses the museum's administrative functions as well as the Glassell Junior School. The MFAH is the only museum facility in the United States that has a special building dedicated solely to art classes for children. *The Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation Center for Conservation – is a 37,864-square-foot conservation center designed by Lake-Flato Architects that was completed in 2018. It is home to conservation labs and studios located above the museum's parking garage. It is not open to the public.


Other facilities

*
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens, located in the River Oaks community in Houston, Texas, United States, is a facility of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) that houses a collection of decorative art, paintings and furniture. Bayou Bend i ...
– features a collection of American decorative art and furniture. The Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens, former home of Life Trustee Ima Hogg, was designed by architect John F. Staub in 1927. Miss Hogg donated the property to the MFAH in 1957, followed, in 1962, by the donation of its collection of paintings, furniture, ceramics, glass, metals, and textiles. Bayou Bend was officially dedicated and opened to the public in 1966. Situated on of formal and woodland gardens five miles (8 km) from the main museum campus, the historic house museum documents American decorative and fine arts from the seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries. * Rienzi – the MFAH house museum for European decorative arts, Rienzi was donated to the MFAH by Carroll Sterling Masterson and
Harris Masterson III Harris "Harry" Masterson III (1914-1997) was a philanthropist from Houston, Texas. Masterson was born in Houston in 1914. He received a Bachelor of Arts from Rice University in 1955. Masterson made contributions to the arts scene in Houston. Master ...
in 1991. The residence, named for
Rienzi Johnston Rienzi Melville Johnston (September 9, 1849February 28, 1926) was an American journalist and politician. He edited the ''Houston Post'' from 1885 to 1919, and served a 29-day term in the United States Senate in January 1913 after the resignation ...
, Mr. Masterson's grandfather, is situated on in Homewood Addition, surrounded by Houston's River Oaks neighborhood. The structure was designed in 1952 by John F. Staub, the same architect who designed
Bayou Bend Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens, located in the River Oaks community in Houston, Texas, United States, is a facility of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) that houses a collection of decorative art, paintings and furniture. Bayou Bend is ...
. Completed in 1954, Rienzi served as both a family home and a center for Houston civic and philanthropic activity from the 1950s through the mid-1990s. After Mr. Masterson's death, the MFAH transformed the home into a museum and subsequently opened it to the public in 1999.


History

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) is the oldest art museum in Texas. In 1917, the museum site was dedicated by the Houston Public School Art League (later the Houston Art League) with the intention of becoming a public art museum. The first museum building was opened to the public in 1924. The original building, designed by Houston architect William Ward Watkin in the Greek Neoclassical style, is the first art museum built in Texas. Today the MFAH encompasses three buildings, the Caroline Wiess Law, Audrey Jones Beck, and Nancy and Rich Kinder buildings, that house its primary collections and temporary exhibitions; two decorative arts house museums; The Glassell studio art school; a sculpture garden; a facility for conservation, storage and archives; and an administrative building with the Glassell Junior school of Art. Prior to the opening of the permanent museum building in 1924, George M. Dickson bequeathed to the collection its first important American and European oil paintings. In the 1930s, Houstonian Annette Finnigan began her donation of antiquities and Texas philanthropist Ima Hogg gave her collection of avant-garde European prints and drawings. Ima Hogg's gift was followed by the subsequent donations of her Southwest Native American and
Frederic Remington Frederic Sackrider Remington (October 4, 1861 – December 26, 1909) was an American painter, illustrator, sculptor, and writer who specialized in the genre of Western American Art. His works are known for depicting the Western United Stat ...
collections during the 1940s. The same decade witnessed the 1944 bequest of eighty-three
Renaissance The Renaissance ( , ) , from , with the same meanings. is a period in European history The history of Europe is traditionally divided into four time periods: prehistoric Europe (prior to about 800 BC), classical antiquity (800 BC to AD ...
paintings, sculptures and works on paper from renowned New York collectors Edith and Percy Straus. Over the next two decades, gifts from prominent Houston families and foundations concentrated on European art from the fifteenth to twentieth centuries, contemporary painting and sculpture, and African, Oceanic and Pre-Columbian art. Among these are the gifts of Life Trustees
Sarah Campbell Blaffer Sarah Campbell Blaffer (née Campbell; August 27, 1885 May 13, 1975) was an American philanthropist and contributor to the art collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. She inherited two fortunes based on oil money – one from her father ...
,
Dominique de Menil Dominique de Menil (née Schlumberger; March 23, 1908 – December 31, 1997) was a French-American art collector, philanthropist, founder of the Menil Collection and an heiress to the Schlumberger Limited oil-equipment fortune.Helfenstein, Josef ...
and Alice N. Hanzsen as well as that of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation. Augmented by museum purchases, the permanent collection numbered 12,000 objects by 1970. The MFAH collection nearly doubled from 1970 to 1989, fueled by continued donations of art along with the advent of both accession endowment funding and corporate giving. In 1974, John and Audrey Jones Beck placed on long-term loan fifty Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masterpieces, augmenting the museum's already strong Impressionist collection. This collection would never leave the MFAH, formally entering its holdings in 1998 as a gift of Life Trustee Audrey Jones Beck. The collection is permanently displayed in the building that bears her name. On the heels of the Cullen Foundation's funding of the MFAH's first accessions endowment in 1970, the Brown Foundation, Inc., launched a challenge grant in 1976 that would stay in effect for twenty years raising funds for both accessions and operational costs in landmark amounts and providing incentive for additional community support. Also in 1976, the photography collection was established with Target Stores’ first corporate grant to the museum. Today the museum is the sixth-largest in the country.Rebecca S. Cohen (April 9, 2011)
Replacing a Museum Director Who Was a Rare Find
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New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid ...
''.
In 2001, the MFAH, established the International Center for the Arts of the Americas (ICAA), the leading research institute for 20th-century Latin American and Latino art. The ICAA has been a pioneer in collecting, exhibiting and researching the diverse artistic production of Latin American and Latinx communities, including artists from Mexico, Central and South America, the Caribbean, and artists of Latin American descent living and working in the United States. Through the ICAA, the MFAH brought a long-term transformation in the appreciation and understanding of Latin American and Latinx visual arts in the United States and abroad.Hilarie M. Sheets (November 13, 2020)


Collection

With approximately 70,000 works of art, the largest part of the museum's collection lie in the areas of Italian Renaissance painting, French Impressionism, photography, American and European decorative arts, African and pre-Columbian gold, American art, and post-1945 European and American painting and sculpture. Other facets of the collection include African-American art and Texas painting. Emerging collection interests of modern and contemporary Latin American art, including the artwork of all Texas Latino artists, Asian art, and Islamic art continue to strengthen the museum's collection diversity. As a result of its encyclopedic collection, the museum ranks nationally among the top ten art museums in attendance. Since 2019 Hossein Afshar Collection, one of the world's most distinguished private collections of Persian art, is on loan to MFAH. The museum has organised two exhibitions of this collection.


Claim for restitution

In 2021 the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art, Monuments Men Foundation announced that it had located a painting from the collection of Max Emden in the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH). According to the foundation, the painting by
Bernardo Bellotto Bernardo Bellotto (c. 1721/2 or 30 January 172117 November 1780), was an Italian urban landscape painter or ''vedutista'', and printmaker in etching famous for his ''vedute'' of European cities – Dresden, Vienna, Turin, and Warsaw. He was th ...
, called ''The Marketplace at Pirna'', had an inaccurate provenance that concealed the history of the painting.  After the MFAH refused to restitute the painting the Emden heirs filed a lawsuit in the Southern District of Texas. The museum, which had rejected the Emden heirs’ claims since 2007, disagreed with the characterization of the painting as having been subject to a forced or duress sale due to Nazi persecution. MFAH director Gary Tinterow stated that Emden sold the painting voluntarily and, that after consulting provenance and legal experts, “we concluded that we had good title.” The museum also states that the Bellotto is one of multiple nearly identical versions by the artist, and was bought by Samuel H. Kress in 1952 and later donated to the museum in 1961.


Galleries

Arts of Oceania, Africa, & the Americas = mixed media: ** = painted wood: *** = earthenware Arts of Asia and the Islamic World File:Bian Shoumin (Chinese), Wild Geese Descending on a Sandbank (1730), scroll; ink and color on paper, 132.1 × 70.2 cm., MFA, Houston.jpg,
Bian Shoumin Bian Shoumin (Chinese character, Chinese: 边寿民; 1684–1752; original name Bian Weiqi hinese: 边维祺, courtesy name as Yi-gong (颐公) or Jian-seng (漸僧), sobriquet as Weijian Laoren (苇间老人, or "Old man among Reeds"), is a f ...
, ''Wild Geese on Sandbank'' (1730), ink on paper, 132.1 × 70.2 cm. File:Ganku Kishi - Screen with Tiger - Google Art Project.jpg,
Kishi Ganku Ganku 岸駒 (1749 – January 19, 1839), or more formally Kishi Ku, was a leading Japanese painter of Kyoto and founder of the Kishi school of painting. He is famous for his paintings of tigers. Ganku was born in Kanazawa as Kishi Saeki, studied ...
(Japan), ''Tiger in Landscape'' (1770-1839), ink and watercolor on paper, 171.2 × 372.1 × 1.5 cm. File:Indian, Rama, Lakshmana, and Sita Cooking and Eating in the Wilderness (c. 1820), gouache with gold on paper, 21.6 × 16.5 cm., MFA, Houston.jpg, Indian, ''Rama, Lakshmana, and Sita Cooking and Eating in the Wilderness'' (c. 1820), gouache & gold on paper, 21.6 × 16.5 cm.
Antiquities European and American painting (1400-1899) ll oil on canvas except: ** = tempera & gold leaf on panel; * = oil on panel File:Fra Angelico - Saint Anthony Abbot Shunning the Mass of Gold (MFAH).jpg,
Fra Angelico Fra Angelico (born Guido di Pietro; February 18, 1455) was an Italian painter of the Early Renaissance, described by Vasari in his '' Lives of the Artists'' as having "a rare and perfect talent".Giorgio Vasari, ''Lives of the Artists''. Pengu ...
, ''Saint Anthony Abbot Shunning the Mass of Gold'' ** (c. 1435–1440), 19.7 x 28.1 cm. File:Giovanni di Paolo - Saint Clare Rescuing a Child Mauled by a Wolf - 44.571 - Museum of Fine Arts.jpg, Giovanni di Paolo, ''Saint Clare Rescuing a Child Mauled by a Wolf'' ** (c.1453-1462), 20.628.1 cm. File:Rogier van der Weyden - Virgin and Child - Google Art Project.jpg,
Rogier van der Weyden Rogier van der Weyden () or Roger de la Pasture (1399 or 140018 June 1464) was an early Netherlandish painter whose surviving works consist mainly of religious triptychs, altarpieces, and commissioned single and diptych portraits. He was highly ...
, ''Virgin and Child'' * (after 1454), 31.9 x 22.86 cm. File:Portrait of an Old Woman Hans Memling.jpg,
Hans Memling Hans Memling (also spelled Memlinc; c. 1430 – 11 August 1494) was a painter active in Flanders, who worked in the tradition of Early Netherlandish painting. He was born in the Middle Rhine region and probably spent his childhood in Mainz. He ...
, '' Portrait of an Old Woman'' * (c. 1468–70), 25.6 x 17.7 cm. File:Botticelli Houston 116.jpg, Alessandro Botticelli, ''The Adoration of the Christ Child'' * (c. 1500), 120.7 cm. diameter File:Lucas Cranach d.Ä. - Selbstmord der Lukrezia (1529, Houston).jpg,
Lucas Cranach the Elder Lucas Cranach the Elder (german: Lucas Cranach der Ältere ;  – 16 October 1553) was a German Renaissance painter and printmaker in woodcut and engraving. He was court painter to the Electors of Saxony for most of his career, and is kno ...
, ''The Suicide of Lucretia'' * (1529), 74.9 x 53.9 cm. File:Jacopo Bassano - Christ in the House of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus - Google Art Project.jpg,
Jacopo Bassano Jacopo Bassano (c. 1510 – 14 February 1592), known also as Jacopo dal Ponte, was an Italian painter who was born and died in Bassano del Grappa near Venice, and took the village as his surname. Trained in the workshop of his father, Francesco t ...
, ''Christ in the House of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus'' (c.1577), 98.4 × 126.4 cm. File:Bartolomeo Cavarozzi - Virgin and Child with Angels - Google Art Project.jpg,
Bartolomeo Cavarozzi Bartolomeo Cavarozzi (1587–1625),Francucci, Massimo (2012). "Biographies of Artists", 356 p. In Rossella Vodret (ed.) Caravaggio's Rome: 1600-1630. Vol-II. Skira Editore S.p.A., Milan. 854 pp. occasionally referred to as Bartolomeo Crescenzi, ...
, ''Virgin and Child with Angels'' (c. 1620), 155.3 × 125.1 cm. File:Rembrandt van Rijn - Portrait of a Young Woman - Google Art Project.jpg,
Rembrandt van Rijn Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (, ; 15 July 1606 – 4 October 1669), usually simply known as Rembrandt, was a Dutch Golden Age painter, printmaker and draughtsman. An innovative and prolific master in three media, he is generally consi ...
, ''Portrait of a Young Woman'' * (1633), 65.2 x 48.7 cm File:Matthias_Stom_-_The_Judgment_of_Solomon_-_70.15_-_Museum_of_Fine_Arts.jpg,
Matthias Stom Matthias Stom or Matthias Stomer (c. 1600 – after 1652) was a Dutch, or possibly Flemish, Painting, painter who is only known for the works he produced during his residence in Italy. He was influenced by the work of non-Italian followers of Cara ...
, '' The Judgement of Solomon'', (c.1640), 152.5 × 204.9 cm. File:Jacob van Ruisdael - Landscape with Cornfields - BF.1977.6 - Museum of Fine Arts.jpg,
Jacob van Ruisdael Jacob Isaackszoon van Ruisdael (;  1629 – 10 March 1682) was a Dutch painter, draughtsman, and etcher. He is generally considered the pre-eminent landscape painter of the Dutch Golden Age, a period of great wealth and cultural ach ...
, ''Landscape with Cornfields'' (c. 1670s), 55.2 x 62.8 cm. File:Jan Weenix - Still Life of Game including a Hare, Black Grouse and Partridge, a Spaniel looking on with a Pigeon ... - Google Art Project.jpg,
Jan Weenix Jan Weenix or Joannis Wenix (between 1641/164919 September 1719 (buried)) was a Dutch painter. He was trained by his father, Jan Baptist Weenix, together with his cousin Melchior d'Hondecoeter. Like his father, he painted various subjects, but ...
, ''Still Life of Game including a Hare, Black Grouse, Partridge, Spaniel, and Pigeon in Flight'' (c. 1680), 157.2 × 182.2 cm. File:Canaletto Entrance to the Grand Canal Venice.jpg,
Canaletto Giovanni Antonio Canal (18 October 1697 – 19 April 1768), commonly known as Canaletto (), was an Italian painter from the Republic of Venice, considered an important member of the 18th-century Venetian school. Painter of city views or ...
, '' Entrance to the Grand Canal, Venice'' (c. 1730), 49.5 × 73.7 cm. File:Giovanni Battista Tiepolo - Juno and Luna - BF.1983.4 - Museum of Fine Arts.jpg, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, ''Juno and Luna'' (1735-1745) 213 x 231.1 cm. File:Chardin, Jean-Siméon - The Good Education - Google Art Project.jpg, Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin, ''The Good Education'' (c. 1753), 41.4 × 47.3 cm. File:Angelica Kauffmann, Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus, 1774.jpg, Angelica Kauffmann, ''Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus'' (1774), 63.8 x 90.9 cm. File:Charles Willson Peale - Self-Portrait with Angelica and Portrait of Rachel - B.60.49 - Museum of Fine Arts.jpg,
Charles Wilson Peale Charles Willson Peale (April 15, 1741 – February 22, 1827) was an American painter, soldier, scientist, inventor, politician and naturalist. He is best remembered for his portrait paintings of leading figures of the American Revolution, and ...
, ''Self-Portrait with Angelica and Rachel'' (1782-1785), 91.8 × 68.9 cm. File:Joseph Mallord William Turner, Sheerness as Seen From the Nore (1808), oil on canvas, 104.5 × 149.6 cm., Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.jpg,
Joseph Mallord William Turner Joseph Mallord William Turner (23 April 177519 December 1851), known in his time as William Turner, was an English Romantic painter, printmaker and watercolourist. He is known for his expressive colouring, imaginative landscapes and turbule ...
, ''Sheerness as Seen From the Nore'' (1808), 104.5 × 149.6 cm. File:Francisco de Goya - Still Life with Golden Bream - Google Art Project.jpg, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes, ''Still Life with Golden Bream'' (1808-1812), 44.7 x 62.5 cm. File:Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot - Orphée.jpg, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, ''Orpheus Leading Eurydice from the Underworld'' (1861), 112.3 x 137.1 cm. File:William Bouguereau - The Elder Sister - Google Art Project.jpg,
William-Adolphe Bouguereau William-Adolphe Bouguereau (; 30 November 1825 – 19 August 1905) was a French academic painter. In his realistic genre paintings, he used mythological themes, making modern interpretations of classical subjects, with an emphasis on the female ...
, '' The Elder Sister'' (1869), 130.2 × 97.2 cm. File:John Singer Sargent - Mrs. Joshua Montgomery Sears (Sarah Choate Sears) - Google Art Project.jpg, John Singer Sargent, ''Mrs. Sarah Montgomery Sears'' (1899), 1,476.50 x 968.50 cm.
Impressionism, postimpressionism, and early modern art ll oil on canvas unless noted otherwise File:Pierre-Auguste Renoir - Nature morte au bouquet.jpg, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, ''Nature morte au bouquet'' (1871), 73.7 × 59.1 cm. File:Camille Pissarro - The Goose Girl at Montfoucault (White Frost) - Google Art Project.jpg, Camille Pissarro, ''The Goose Girl at Montfoucault'' (1876), 57.8 × 73 cm. File:G. Caillebotte - Les orangers.jpg,
Gustave Caillebotte Gustave Caillebotte (; 19 August 1848 – 21 February 1894) was a French painter who was a member and patron of the Impressionists, although he painted in a more realistic manner than many others in the group. Caillebotte was known for his early ...
, ''
Les Orangers ' (English title: ''The Orange Trees'') is an oil painting by French impressionist Gustave Caillebotte. The canvas measures . It was acquired by Audrey Jones Beck and was part of a collection that was on a long-term loan to the Museum of Fine Ar ...
'' (1878), 154.9 × 116.8 cm. File:Berthe Morisot - The Basket Chair - Google Art Project.jpg, Berthe Morisot, ''The Basket Chair'' (1882), 61.3 x 75.5 cm. File:Monet Water lilies 1907.jpg,
Claude Monet Oscar-Claude Monet (, , ; 14 November 1840 – 5 December 1926) was a French painter and founder of impressionist painting who is seen as a key precursor to modernism, especially in his attempts to paint nature as he perceived it. Durin ...
, ''
Water Lilies ''Water Lilies'' (or ''Nymphéas'', ) is a series of approximately 250 oil paintings by French Impressionist Claude Monet (1840–1926). The paintings depict his flower garden at his home in Giverny, and were the main focus of his artisti ...
'' (Nympheas) (1907), 92.1 × 81.2 cm. File:Paul Cézanne - Madame Cézanne in Blue - Google Art Project.jpg,
Paul Cézanne Paul Cézanne ( , , ; ; 19 January 1839 – 22 October 1906) was a French artist and Post-Impressionist painter whose work laid the foundations of the transition from the 19th-century conception of artistic endeavour to a new and radically d ...
, ''Madame Cézanne in Blue'' (1888-1890), 74.1 × 61 cm. File:Vincent van Gogh - The Rocks - Google Art Project.jpg, Vincent van Gogh, '' The Rocks'' (1888), 54.9 × 65.7 cm. File:Paul Signac, 1893, The Bonaventure Pine, oil on canvas, 65.7 x 81 cm, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.jpg,
Paul Signac Paul Victor Jules Signac ( , ; 11 November 1863 – 15 August 1935) was a French Neo-Impressionist painter who, working with Georges Seurat, helped develop the Pointillist style. Biography Paul Signac was born in Paris on 11 November 1863. ...
, ''The Bonaventure Pine'' (1893), 65.7 × 81 cm. File:Odilon Redon - Two Young Girls among Flowers - Google Art Project.jpg, Odilon Redon, ''Two Young Girls among Flowers'' (1912), 62.2 x 51.4 cm. File:Ernst Ludwig Kirchner - Moonrise- Soldier and Maiden - Google Art Project.jpg,
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (6 May 1880 – 15 June 1938) was a German expressionist painter and printmaker and one of the founders of the artists group Die Brücke or "The Bridge", a key group leading to the foundation of Expressionism in 20th-century ...
, ''Moonrise: Soldier and Maiden'' (1905), oil on board, 69.9 x: 49.5 cm. File:Vasily Kandinsky - Sketch 160A - 74.140 - Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.jpg, Vasily Kandinsky, ''Sketch 160A'' (1912), 94.9 × 108 cm. File:Piet_Mondrian_-_Composition_with_Grid_^1_-_63.16_-_Museum_of_Fine_Arts,_Houston.jpg, Piet Mondrian, '' Composition with Grid No. 1'' (1918), 80.2 x 49.9 cm. File:Amedeo Modigliani - Léopold Zborowski - Google Art Project.jpg, Amedeo Modigliani, ''Léopold Zborowski'' (c. 1916), 116.2 × 73 cm. File:Chaïm Soutine, The Chicken (c. 1926), oil on canvas, 102.2 × 76.1 cm., Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.jpg,
Chaïm Soutine Chaïm Soutine (13 January 1893 – 9 August 1943) was a Belarusian painter who made a major contribution to the expressionist movement while living and working in Paris. Inspired by classic painting in the European tradition, exemplified by the ...
, ''The Chicken'' (c. 1926), 102.2 × 76.1 cm.


Management

Philippe de Montebello directed the museum from 1969 to 1974.Douglas Britt (December 12, 2010)
Peter Marzio, 67; transformed Houston museum
''
Houston Chronicle The ''Houston Chronicle'' is the largest daily newspaper in Houston, Texas, United States. , it is the third-largest newspaper by Sunday circulation in the United States, behind only ''The New York Times'' and the ''Los Angeles Times''. With i ...
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During the 28-year tenure of Peter Marzio between 1982 and 2010, the Museum of Fine Arts’ yearly attendance increased to roughly two million from 300,000; its operating budget climbed to $52 million from $5 million, and its endowment reached $1 billion (before the 2008 recession dropped its value to about $800 million). The museum's permanent collection more than tripled in size, to 63,000 works from 20,000. In 2010, Marzio was the sixth-highest-paid charity chief executive in the country, with compensation in 2008 of $1,054,939. A year after Peter Marzio died in 2010, Gary Tinterow was appointed as the museum's director.Carol Vogel (December 1, 2011)
Met Veteran Named Director of Houston Art Museum
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New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid ...
''.
Mari Carmen Ramírez is a Puerto Rican Art curator and the Wortham Curator of Latin American Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.


See also

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Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens, located in the River Oaks community in Houston, Texas, United States, is a facility of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) that houses a collection of decorative art, paintings and furniture. Bayou Bend i ...
* Ima Hogg * Samuel Henry Kress *
List of most-visited museums in the United States This is a list of the most-visited museums in the United States in 2020. It is based upon the annual survey of museum attendance by the Art Newspaper published in March 2021, the TEA-AECOM Museum survey, published in September 2021, and some ...
*
List of claims for restitution for Nazi-looted art The list of restitution claims for art looted by the Nazis or as a result of Nazi persecution is organized by the country in which the paintings were located when the return was requested. Australia and New Zealand Austria Belgium Ge ...


Notes


External links

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Photographs from the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
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Portal to Texas History

International Center for the Arts of the Americas at MFAHVirtual tour of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
provided by Google Arts & Culture * {{Authority control Art museums and galleries in Texas Museums in Houston Decorative arts museums in the United States Ludwig Mies van der Rohe buildings Rafael Moneo buildings Modernist architecture in Texas Art museums established in 1900 1900 establishments in Texas Museums of American art Asian art museums in the United States Mesoamerican art museums in the United States FRAME Museums African art museums in the United States