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Moses Myers House

323 E. Freemason St.
Open Saturday and Sunday

Noon–5 p.m.

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Reading Room
Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.–5 p.m.
Closed May 17-19, 2024

About the Myers House

The oldest Jewish home in America open to the public as a museum offers a glimpse of the life of an early 19th century merchant family.
More about the house

About the Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Art Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

Located in Norfolk

One Memorial Place,
Norfolk, VA
Get Directions

While You're Here

Visit our Museum Shop
and Zinnia Cafe.

Perry Glass Studio

A state-of-art facility on the Museum’s campus. See a free glassmaking demo Tuesdays–Sunday at noon. Like what you see? Take a class with us! More about the Studio

The Myers House

The home of the first permanent Jewish residents of Norfolk, this historic house offers a glimpse of the life of a wealthy early 19th-century merchant family.
More about the house

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the Library

Wedding & Event Rentals

The perfect place for your big day or special event. Get the details

Field Trips

Field trips are available for groups of 60 or fewer. More about field trips

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Visit one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

About the Chrysler

Our story spans well over 100 years. See where we began, how we grew, and where we're going. Explore our history

News and Announcements

See what's happening at the Museum, read Chrysler Magazine, and find our Media Center. Read now

Location

One Memorial Place
Norfolk, VA 23510

Location

245 Grace Street
Norfolk, VA 23510
757-333-6299

Always Free Parking

Get Directions

Visiting Artist Series

Bringing the world’s top glass art talent to Hampton Roads
Find out more

Studio Team

Meet the brilliant minds behind the Studio.
See the team

Give the Chrysler Experience

Share everything you love about the Chrysler Museum with a gift membership. Perfect for everyone on your list.

The Masterpiece Society

Learn about this innovative group of museum supporters.
Meet the Masterpiece Society

Planned Giving

Help ensure the long-term success of the Museum.
Learn about planned giving

Moses Myers House

323 E. Freemason St.
Open Saturday and Sunday

Noon–5 p.m.

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Reading Room
Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.–5 p.m.
Closed May 17-19, 2024

About the Myers House

The oldest Jewish home in America open to the public as a museum offers a glimpse of the life of an early 19th century merchant family.
More about the house

About the Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Art Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

Located in Norfolk

One Memorial Place,
Norfolk, VA
Get Directions

While You're Here

Visit our Museum Shop
and Zinnia Cafe.

Perry Glass Studio

A state-of-art facility on the Museum’s campus. See a free glassmaking demo Tuesdays–Sunday at noon. Like what you see? Take a class with us! More about the Studio

The Myers House

The home of the first permanent Jewish residents of Norfolk, this historic house offers a glimpse of the life of a wealthy early 19th-century merchant family.
More about the house

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the Library

Wedding & Event Rentals

The perfect place for your big day or special event. Get the details

Field Trips

Field trips are available for groups of 60 or fewer. More about field trips

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Visit one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

About the Chrysler

Our story spans well over 100 years. See where we began, how we grew, and where we're going. Explore our history

News and Announcements

See what's happening at the Museum, read Chrysler Magazine, and find our Media Center. Read now

Location

One Memorial Place
Norfolk, VA 23510

Location

245 Grace Street
Norfolk, VA 23510
757-333-6299

Always Free Parking

Get Directions

Visiting Artist Series

Bringing the world’s top glass art talent to Hampton Roads
Find out more

Studio Team

Meet the brilliant minds behind the Studio.
See the team

Give the Chrysler Experience

Share everything you love about the Chrysler Museum with a gift membership. Perfect for everyone on your list.

The Masterpiece Society

Learn about this innovative group of museum supporters.
Meet the Masterpiece Society

Planned Giving

Help ensure the long-term success of the Museum.
Learn about planned giving

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January 8, 2015

Chrysler Collection Expands Thanks to Record Donor Event

NORFOLK, Va. (Jan. 6, 2015) – Members of the Chrysler’s Mowbray Arch Society have added not just one, but five new works to the Museum collection.

This Museum membership group features more than 300 patrons dedicated to supporting the Chrysler while learning about its permanent collection and promoting its growth. Each December, Society Members gather to hear the Museum’s curators and director present works of art they seek to add to the Chrysler’s world-class holdings.

The 2014 Art Purchase Dinner presentations and discussions were enthusiastic, as always. Typically, the Society selects one work for purchase, while additional works may be acquired through sufficient fundraising. The most recent event and subsequent efforts met with exceptional success.

After three rounds of spirited voting at the Dec. 9 event, Society Members agreed to purchase of The Child Canova Modeling a Lion out of Butter by Pinckney Marcius-Simons (1865–1909). Created around 1885, the New York- born artist’s historical genre painting playfully illustrates the rags- to-riches story of one of history’s greatest sculptors.

Set in the kitchen of an 18th-century Italian palace, it depicts 10-year- old Antonio Canova astounding his elders by shaping a large block of butter into a regal statue of a lion. According to legend, this creation of a banquet table centerpiece revealed a child prodigy and launched Canova’s rise to international fame as a master of neoclassical marble carving.

Not content with only one winning selection, Members of the Mowbray Arch Society understood the merits of the other candidates and rose to the challenge of adding them to the Chrysler Collection. Immediately a group of volunteers pulled together to reach out to their fellow Members in what would be a record-setting effort. In a few short days, thanks to their generous pledges, the Museum secured funding to enable the Chrysler to purchase all five works of art presented that evening:

St. Andrew by Kehinde Wiley (American, b. 1977). Heavenly inspiration finds a hip-hop interpretation in this wall-spanning oil and enamel painting by one of today’s leading portraitists. In his signature style, Wiley confounds genre, idiom, and expectations by depicting the apostle, martyred for his faith on an X-shaped cross, as a young African- American man clad in popular urban street fashion. Though thoroughly contemporary, the 2006 canvas resonates with more traditional depictions of Christian saints represented in the Chrysler Collection. With the artist’s profile on the rise, it is no surprise that the painting already was promised to loan for a traveling exhibition. Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic opens at the Brooklyn Museum in February and tours four other U.S. cities before returning the new acquisition to the Chrysler in Fall 2016.

Colorbox II by Jun Kaneko (American, b. Japan 1942). Five columns of stacked sheet glass—each only five inches wide and two inches deep— tower seven feet tall. Kaneko’s kilnformed sculpture builds a rhythmic relationship of surface, pattern, and scale. In this 2008 collaboration with Bullseye Glass, he balances his Eastern heritage with his Western life experience, aiming to erase the space between maker and material. “I want my sculptures to shake the air around them—to stand just like they should be there in that space and in that time.”

Madonna and Child from the Workshop of Hans Klocker (Austrian, active in Europe 1475–1500). The four-foot-tall altarpiece sculpture, delicately carved in mountain pine, dates to ca. 1485–1495, and remarkably retains its rich polychrome and original gilding centuries later. In late Gothic style, the Christ Child holds an apple, a symbol of paradise and sin, and his mother appears as human as holy. The Renaissance sculpture is already on view amid other sacred works from the Irene Leache Memorial Collection gifted to the Chrysler earlier this year.

• The Bois de Boulogne portfolio by Charles Marville (French, 1831– 1879). This collection of photographs depicts 1850s Paris and its newly planned park. Under the patronage of Napoleon III, the onetime royal forest was transformed into a suburban oasis of gardens, streams, and monuments. The Bois quickly became one of the most commonly depicted venues of the age, not only in these 1858–60 landscapes commissioned from the city’s official photographer, but in paintings by many of the world’s leading artists of the 19th century.

“I have been amazed by the outpouring of support for these acquisitions. It really speaks to the confidence that people have in this Museum,” said Erik Neil, director of the Chrysler. “I applaud our curators, led by Jeff Harrison, for presenting such an impressive selection. The Kehinde Wiley painting, in particular, will be a transformative addition to our collection,” he said.

ABOUT THE CHRYSLER MUSEUM AND GLASS STUDIO
The Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk, Va., is one of America’s most distinguished mid-sized art museums with a world-class collection of more than 30,000 objects, including one of the great glass collections in America. The new Chrysler reopened in May 2014 after a transformative expansion, renovation, and collection reinterpretation. The Chrysler Museum Glass Studio, which opened in November 2011, is located at 745 Duke Street, directly across the street from the Museum. The Glass Studio brings the Museum collection to life through free noon glass demonstrations, innovative performances, and educational programs for the public. Classes and workshops at the state-of-the-art facility accommodate both aspiring and master artists working in a variety of glassmaking processes.

Both the Museum and the Glass Studio are open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. Admission is free. For more information on events and programs, call (757) 664-6200.

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