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Frederick R Weisman Art Museum

Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum
Weisman Art Museum.jpg
As viewed from the west, from the Washington Avenue Bridge
Established 1934 (1934)
Location East Bank, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Coordinates 44°58′22″N 93°14′17″W / 44.97278°N 93.23806°W / 44.97278; -93.23806Coordinates: 44°58′22″N 93°14′17″W / 44.97278°N 93.23806°W / 44.97278; -93.23806
Type Art museum
Collection size 20,000+
Visitors Frank Gehry
Director Lyndel King
Public transit access Coffman Memorial Union, Metro Transit/SouthWest Transit
Website wam.umn.edu

The Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum is an art museum located on the University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis. A teaching museum for the university since 1934, the museum is named for Frederick R. Weisman, and was designed by Frank Gehry. Often called a "modern art museum," the 25,000+ image collection has large collections of Marsden Hartley, Alfred Maurer, Charles Biederman, Native American Mimbres pottery, and traditional Korean furniture.

Frederick R. Weisman was a Minneapolis native who became well known as an art collector in Los Angeles, and died in 1994. There is another Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art on the campus of Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. Additionally, there is the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation, the Los Angeles estate designed to serve as a showcase for his personal collection of 20th-century art. When he opened the art collection at his Los Angeles estate to the public, he wanted to share the experience of living with art— rather than the usual, more formal protocol of seeing art in a gallery or museum.

The Weisman Foundation estate, located in the Holmby Hills area of Los Angeles, is a two-story Mediterranean Revival house designed in the late 1920s by Los Angeles architect Gordon B. Kaufmann. The Weisman home exhibits the fine craftsmanship characteristic of the period, including custom decorative treatments on the walls and ceilings. Today the Foundation estate, annex, and surrounding gardens is made accessible to the public by appointment only on guided tours.

The museum's building, designed by architect Frank Gehry, was completed in 1993. The stainless steel skin was fabricated and installed by the A. Zahner Company, a frequent collaborator with Gehry's office.


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