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Шаблон:Other uses of Шаблон:Use Canadian English Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox museum The Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO; Шаблон:Lang-fr) is an art museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located in the Grange Park neighbourhood of downtown Toronto, on Dundas Street West. The building complex takes up Шаблон:Convert of physical space, making it one of the largest art museums in North America and the second-largest art museum in Toronto, after the Royal Ontario Museum. In addition to exhibition spaces, the museum also houses an artist-in-residence office and studio, dining facilities, event spaces, gift shop, library and archives, theatre and lecture hall, research centre, and a workshop.

It was established in 1900 as the Art Museum of Toronto and formally incorporated in 1903. The museum was renamed the Art Gallery of Toronto in 1919, before it adopted its present name, the Art Gallery of Ontario, in 1966. The museum acquired the Grange in 1911 and later undertook several expansions to the north and west of the structure. The first series of expansions occurred in 1918, 1924, and 1935, designed by Darling and Pearson. Since 1974, the gallery has undergone four major expansions and renovations. These expansions occurred in 1974 and 1977 by John C. Parkin, and 1993 by Barton Myers and KPMB Architects. From 2004 to 2008, the museum underwent another expansion by Frank Gehry. The museum complex saw further renovations in the 2010s by KPMB and Hariri Pontarini Architects.

The museum's permanent collection includes over 120,000 works spanning the first century to the present day.[1] The museum collection includes a number works from Canadian, First Nations, Inuit, African, European, and Oceanic artists. In addition to exhibits for its collection, the museum has organized and hosted a number of travelling art exhibitions.

History

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A south view of the first expansion building in 1922

The museum was founded in 1900 as the Art Museum of Toronto by a group of private citizens and members of the Toronto Society of Arts.[2][3] The institution's founders included George A. Cox, Lady Eaton, Sir Joseph W. Flavelle, J. W. L. Forster, E. F. B. Johnston, Sir William Mackenzie, Hart A. Massey, Professor James Mavor, F. Nicholls, Sir Edmund Osler, Sir Henry M. Pellatt, George Agnew Reid, Byron Edmund Walker, Mrs. H. D. Warren, E.R. Wood, and Frank P. Wood.[4]

The museum's incorporation was confirmed by the Government of Ontario three years later by legislation,[3] in An Act respecting the Art Museum of Toronto in 1903. The legislation provided the museum with expropriation powers in order to acquire land for the museum.Шаблон:Sfn Before the museum moved into a permanent location, it held exhibitions in rented spaces belonging to the Toronto Public Library near the intersection of Brunswick Avenue and College Street.[5]

The museum acquired the property it presently occupies shortly after the death of Harriet Boulton Smith in 1909, when she bequeathed her historic 1817 Georgian manor, The Grange, to the gallery upon her death.[6][7] However, exhibitions continued to be held in the rented spaces at the Toronto Public Library branch until June 1913, when The Grange was formally opened as the art museum.[5] In 1911, ownership of The Grange, and the surrounding property was formally transferred to the museum.[8] Shortly afterwards, the museum signed an agreement with the municipal government of Toronto to maintain the grounds south of The Grange as a municipal park.[8]

In 1916, the museum drafted plans to construct a small portion of a new gallery building designed by Darling and Pearson in the Beaux-Arts style.[5] Excavation of the new facility began in 1916. The first galleries adjacent to The Grange were opened in 1918. In the next year, the museum was renamed the Art Gallery of Toronto, in an effort to avoid confusion with the Royal Ontario Museum, itself also an art museum.[9] In 1920, the museum also allowed the Ontario College of Art to construct a building on the grounds. The museum was expanded again in 1924, with the opening of the museum's sculpture court, its two adjacent galleries, and its main entrance on Dundas Street.[9] The museum was expanded again in 1935 with the construction of two additional galleries.[9] Portions of the 1935 expansions were financed by Eaton's.[8]

In 1965, the museum saw its collection of European and Canadian artworks expand, with the acquisition of 340 works from the Canadian National Exhibition.Шаблон:Sfn During the mid-1960s, the director of the museum, William J. Withrow, pushed to have the museum designated as a provincial museum, in an effort to gain further provincial funding for the institution.[10] In 1966, the museum changed its name to the Art Gallery of Ontario, in order to reflect its new mandate to serve as the provincial art museum.Шаблон:Sfn

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The museum's exterior façade in 1960

In the 1970s, the museum embarked on another expansion of its gallery space,[9] with its first phase completed with the opening of the Henry Moore Sculpture Centre on October 26, 1974. Although the museum planned on expanding its Canadian exhibits in its second phase of expansions, the creation of a centre dedicated to a non-Canadian artists drew criticism from Canadian Artists' Representation, and threatened to protest the opening of the centre.Шаблон:Sfn

The museum was expanded again in 1993, which saw the Шаблон:Convert of new space and Шаблон:Convert of renovations—usable space, increasing the preexisting floorspace by 30 per cent. The expansion saw the renovation of 20 galleries and the construction of 30 galleries.[11] In 1978, the museum's staff was unionized under the Ontario Public Service Employees Union.[10]

During the 1990s, the museum drafted plans that would have seen the development of a pedestrian mall from University Avenue to the art gallery.Шаблон:Sfn However, conflicting developments on adjacent properties, lack of support from the City of Toronto government, and the eventual development of another renovation plan by architect Frank Gehry saw the museum's plans for a pedestrian mall abandoned in the early 2000s.Шаблон:Sfn

In 1996, Canadian multi-media artist Jubal Brown vandalized Raoul Dufy's Harbor at le Havre in the Art Gallery of Ontario by deliberately vomiting primary colours on it.[12]

Under the direction of then-CEO Matthew Teitelbaum, the museum embarked on a Шаблон:CAD (later increased to Шаблон:CAD) redevelopment plan by Frank Gehry in 2004, called Transformation AGO. Although Gehry was born in Toronto, the redevelopment of the museum complex would be his first work in Canada. The project initially drew some criticism. As an expansion, rather than a new creation, concerns were raised that the structure would not look like a Gehry signature building,[13] and that the opportunity to build an entirely new gallery, perhaps on Toronto's waterfront, was being squandered. During the course of the redevelopment planning, board member and patron Joey Tanenbaum temporarily resigned his position over concerns about donor recognition, design issues surrounding the new building, as well as the cost of the project. The public rift was subsequently healed.[14]

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Construction for the Frank Gehry redesign of the museum complex in February 2008

Kenneth Thomson was a major benefactor of Transformation AGO, donating much of his art collection to the gallery (providing large contributions to the European and Canadian collections), in addition to providing Шаблон:CAD towards the renovation, as well as a Шаблон:CAD endowment.[15] Thomson died in 2006, two years before the project was complete.

In 2015, the Canadian Jewish News reported 46 paintings and sculptures in the museum's possession held "a gap in provenance," with the history of their ownership from the years 1933 and 1945 having disappeared, coinciding with the Third Reich's existence.[16] The museum publishes spoliation research on its public website.[17]

In 2018, the museum formally changed the name of Emily Carr's 1929 The Indian Church painting to Church at Yuquot Village in an effort to remove culturally insensitive language from the title of works in its collection.[18] A note next to the painting provides the original name of the piece and explains Carr's use of the term was with keeping in "the language of her era".[18] The museum has also reviewed the titles of several other works on a case-by-case basis, as items from the Canadian collection are rotated from its exhibit, or from its storage.[19]

In May 2019, the museum revised its admission model, offering free entry to visitors 25 years of age and under and a Шаблон:CAD pass for all others, which provides admission to the museum for the entire year.[20]

The painting, Still Life with Flowers by Jan van Kessel the Elder, was restituted to the heirs of Dagobert and Martha David in 2020, after the museum confirmed the item's provenance and that the David family was forced to sell the item during the Second World War. Following its forced sale, the painting was resold to a Canadian, who later donated the piece to the Art Gallery of Ontario in 1995.[21][22][23]

Selected exhibitions since 1994

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Advertisement for King Tut: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs exhibition hosted in 2009
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Advert on a structural pillar for the last week of the Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée Picasso Paris exhibition hosted in 2012

The Art Gallery of Ontario has hosted and organized a number of temporary and travelling exhibitions in its galleries. A select list of exhibitions since 1994 include: Шаблон:Col div

  • From Cézanne to Matisse: Great French Paintings from The Barnes Foundation (1994)
  • The OH!Canada Project (1996)
  • The Courtauld Collection (1998)
  • Treasures from the Hermitage Museum, Russia: Rubens and His Age (2001)
  • Voyage into Myth: French Painting from Gauguin to Matisse, from the Hermitage Museum (2002)
  • Turner, Whistler, Monet: Impressionist Visions (2004)
  • Catherine the Great: Arts for the Empire – Masterpieces from the Hermitage Museum, Russia (2005)
  • Emily Carr: New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon (2007)
  • Drawing Attention: Selected Works on Paper from the Renaissance to Modernism (2009)
  • King Tut: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs (2009)
  • Rembrandt/Freud: Etchings from Life (2010)
  • Julian Schnabel: Art and Film (2010)
  • Maharaja: The Splendour of India's Royal Courts (2010)
  • Drama and Desire: Artists and the Theatre (2010)
  • At Work: Hesse, Goodwin, Martin (2010)
  • The Shape of Anxiety: Henry Moore in the 1930s (2010)
  • Black Ice: David Blackwood Prints of Newfoundland (2011)
  • Abstract Expressionist New York (2011)
  • Haute Culture: General Idea (2011)
  • Chagall and the Russian Avant-Garde: Masterpieces from the Collection of the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (2011)
  • Jack Chambers: Light, Spirit, Time, Place and Life (2012)
  • Iain Baxter&: Works 1958–2011 (2012)
  • Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée Picasso Paris (2012)
  • Berenice Abbott: Photographs (2012)
  • Frida & Diego: Passion, Politics and Painting (2012)
  • Francis Bacon and Henry Moore: Terror and Beauty (2014)
  • Vija Celmins: To Fix the Image in Memory (2019)
  • Jean-Michel Basquiat: Now's The Time (2015)
  • J. M. W. Turner: Painting Set Free (2015)
  • Outsiders: American Photography and Film, 1950s–1980s (2016)
  • The Idea of North: The Paintings of Lawren Harris (2016)
  • Theaster Gates: How to Build a House Museum (2016)
  • Small Wonders: Gothic Boxwood Miniatures (2016)
  • Mystical Landscapes: Masterpieces from Monet, Van Gogh and More (2016)
  • Toronto: Tributes + Tributaries, 1971–1989 (2016)
  • Every. Now. Then. Reframing Nationhood (2017)
  • Rita Letendre: Fire & Light (2017)
  • Free Black North (2017)
  • Guillermo del Toro: At Home with Monsters (2017)
  • Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors (2018)
  • Mitchell/ Riopelle: Nothing in Moderation (2018)
  • Tunirrusiangit: Kenojuak Ashevak and Tim Pitsiulak (2018)
  • Mickalene Thomas: Femmes Noires (2018)
  • Rebecca Belmore: Facing the Monumental (2018)
  • Anthropocene (2018)
  • Impressionism in the Age of Industry: Monet, Pissarro and more (2019)
  • Brian Jungen Friendship Centre (2019)
  • Early Rubens (2019)
  • Hito Steyerl: This is the future (2019)

Шаблон:Col div end

Museum complex

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The museum complex includes two buildings, The Grange (right foreground), and the main building expansion to the north and west of it

The museum's property was acquired in 1911 when The Grange and the surrounding property south of Dundas Street were bequeathed to the institution by Harriet Boulton Smith. The Grange manor was reopened to serve as the museum's building in 1913. Since its opening, the museum underwent several expansions to the north, and west of The Grange. Expansions to the museum were opened in 1918, 1926, 1935, 1974, 1977, 1993, and 2008.[5]

The museum complex takes up Шаблон:Convert of physical space,[5] and is made up of two buildings, The Grange, and the main building expansion, built to the north, and west of The Grange. After the main building's redevelopment in 2008, the museum complex has Шаблон:Convert of dedicated gallery space.[24]

In addition to the complex, the museum also owns the land directly south of The Grange, Grange Park. The land is maintained as a municipal park in perpetuity by the Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation Division, as a result of an agreement between the museum and the City of Toronto.[25][26]

The Grange

Шаблон:Main

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The Grange and its western wings

The Grange is a historic manor built in 1817 and is the oldest portion of the museum complex. The building is two-and-a-half storeys tall, and built from stone, brick-on-brick cladding, and wood and glass detailing.[8] Although it was designed in a Neoclassical style, it retains the symmetrical features of Georgian-styled buildings, found in Upper Canada before the War of 1812.[8] The building was initially used as a private residence, with its previous owners having altered the property several times before its re-purposing into an art museum. This includes the addition of a west wing in the 1840s and another wing to the west in 1885.[8] Although the museum expanded the complex in the decades after acquiring the property, The Grange itself saw little work done to it for the next half-century. As a part of its 1967–1973 expansion project, the museum restored The Grange to its 1830s configuration and repurposed the building into a historic house.[8] The Grange was operated as a historic house until it was later repurposed by the museum as an exhibition space and members' lounge.

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The Norma Ridley Members' Lounge inside The Grange

The building was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1970.[5] The building was later designated by the City of Toronto government as "The Grange and Grange Park" in 1991 under the Ontario Heritage Act.[5] In 2005, the City of Toronto government, and the museum entered a heritage easement agreement,[5] which requires designated interior and exterior elements of The Grange to be retained for perpetuity.[27]

Main building

Situated directly north and west of The Grange, the main building was opened to the public in 1918 and has undergone several expansions and renovations since opening.Шаблон:Sfn Plans for the "main building" to the north of The Grange originated in 1912 when the architectural firm Darling and Pearson submitted their expansion plans for the north of The Grange.[28] Due to The Grange's location, and historic value, the expansion plans were limited along the southern portions of the museum's property; as the museum wanted to preserve The Grange's southern façade and the municipal park south of the building.Шаблон:Sfn

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Walker Court in 1929. The sculpture court was opened three years earlier in 1926.

The expanded plan featured 30 viewing halls, all of which would surround one of three open courtyards, an English landscape garden, an Italian garden, and a sculpture courtyard.Шаблон:Sfn The design was largely modelled after another building designed by Darling and Pearson, the Royal Ontario Museum.Шаблон:Sfn The designs by Darling and Pearson were intended to be implemented in three phases, although the plans for the final design phase were abandoned by the mid-20th century.Шаблон:Sfn Construction for the first phase began in 1916 and was completed in 1918.[5]Шаблон:Sfn The first phase featured an expansion wing adjacent to The Grange, that had three galleries.Шаблон:Sfn

The second phase of the design was opened in 1926. It included half of the sculpture court (later named Walker Court) to the north of the 1918 wing, two additional galleries flanking the sculpture court, and an entrance to the north.Шаблон:Sfn The exterior façade of the 1926 expansion was only made of bricks and stucco. No serious designs were planned for the exterior facade of the 1926 expansion, as the museum envisioned that the exterior facade would eventually be enclosed in stone by future expansions.Шаблон:Sfn Further expansions to the east and the west of the building was completed in 1935.Шаблон:Sfn However, as the third phase of expansion was never embarked on, the "temporary facade" to the north remained the same until the early 1990s.Шаблон:Sfn

Late-20th century expansions

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Western façade of the main building from Beverley Street, prior to the 2004–2008 redevelopment. The western portion of the building opened in 1977.

Another series of expansion was undertaken by the museum during the 1970s, as a part of a new three-phased expansion plan; with its first two phases designed by John C. Parkin.Шаблон:Sfn The first phase of the expansion was completed in 1974, which saw the restoration of the Grange, and the opening of the Henry Moore Sculpture Centre,Шаблон:Sfn a centre which Moore helped design.Шаблон:Sfn Moore choose the dimensions for the centre, the colour of the floor and the walls, and saw the installation of a skylight in the centre, in order to allow more natural light into the gallery.Шаблон:Sfn The centre saw little alteration to its design during the museum's expansion in the early 2000s, with the exception of a Шаблон:Convert opening, providing access to the Galleria Italia.Шаблон:Sfn

The second phase saw the opening of several new galleries adjacent to Beverley Street in 1977.Шаблон:Sfn The third phase of expansion planned by the museum was delayed until August 1986, when it announced a competition for Ontario-based architects to design the museum's southwest, and northern extension on Dundas Street to cover the "temporary façade".Шаблон:Sfn A seven-member panel eventually selected a design by Barton Myers.Шаблон:Sfn The architectural firm KPMB Architects was contracted to complete the expansion, which opened in 1993.Шаблон:Sfn The expansion in 1993 saw Шаблон:Convert of new space built, and the construction of 30 new galleries.[11] After the expansion and renovations in 1993, the museum complex had approximately Шаблон:Convert of interior space.[5]

2004–2008 redevelopment

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The South Gallery Block from Grange Park

From 2004 to 2008, the museum's building underwent a Шаблон:CAD redevelopment, led by Canadian-born architect Frank Gehry. Gehry was commissioned to expand and revitalize the museum, not to design a new building; as such, one of the challenges he faced was to unite the disparate areas of the building that had become "a bit of a hodgepodge" after six previous expansions dating back to the 1920s.[29] The redevelopment plans was the first design by Gehry to not feature a highly contorted structural steel frame for the building's support system.[30]

The exterior fronting on Dundas Street was changed as a part of the redevelopment; with the front entrance moved to the north, aligning with Walker Court, and the installation of a Шаблон:Convert glass and wood projecting canopy known as the "Galleria Italia".[31] The roof of Walker's Court was also redeveloped, with steel truss girders installed, and glued laminated timber used to support the glass-panelled roof, which provides Шаблон:Convert of skylight for the courtyard. The southern portion of the museum building also saw redevelopment, with the construction of a five-storey South Gallery block, and a protruding spiral staircase that connects the fourth and fifth levels of the block.[31] The exterior facade of the South Gallery Block includes glass and custom-made titanium panels, and like the Dundas Street fronting, is supported by glued laminated timber.[31] The new addition required the demolition of the postmodernist wing by Myers and KPMB Architects. Шаблон:Multiple image Wood was used extensively during the redevelopment, with woodwork needing to be done for the museum's hardwood floor, information kiosk, ticket booth, security booth, and the stairs inside the building, including a spiral staircase in Walker Court.[31] The facings of the booths, staircases, and the hardwood floor is made of Douglas fir trees.[32]

The redeveloped building opened in November 2008, with the transformation increasing the museum's total floor area by 20 per cent for a total of Шаблон:Convert; as well as increasing the art viewing space by 47 per cent.[30][5] An event space called Baillie Court occupies the entirety of the third floor of the south tower block.

Galleria Italia

The Galleria Italia is a Шаблон:Convert glass, steel, and wood projecting canopy at the fronting of Dundas Street, also acting as a viewing hall on the second level of the building. The galleria was named in recognition of a $13 million contribution by 26 Italian-Canadian families of Toronto, a funding consortium led by Tony Gagliano, a past President of the museum's Board of Trustees.

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One of two "tears" on the canopy, which make it appear like the building's façade is being torn off.

Both ends of the glass and wood canopy extend past the building forming "tears", providing the appearance that the building's façade has been pulled off the building. The Galleria Italia is made out of Шаблон:Convert glued laminated timber and glass gallery space atop the Dundas Street walkway.[31] Approximately 1,800 glued laminated timber pieces were used on the facade of the Galleria Italia; and 2,500 timber connectors.[33]

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The interior of the Galleria Italia, where its extensive use of timber as a building material is prominent.

The galleria is composed of two layers, with the inner layer formed by 47 vertical radial arches, each of which increases in spacing between one another as it approaches the main entrance.[33] The radials provide lateral support against the wind for the outer layer, a glued laminated timber mullion grid, as it transfers the weight to the floor. Both of these sit on a steel frame, which supports the galleria.[33] The mullion grid itself is attached to sliding bearings that allow its curtain wall to adjust to changes in temperature, without compromising the integrity of the wood.[33] Most of the timber was made of Douglas fir trees, from a manufacturer based in Penticton, British Columbia.[32] Each piece of timber is unique, given that the galleria's design featured slants that increased in width incrementally, and whose curvatures were changing throughout its length.[34]

The galleria uses 128 steel horizontal beams to prevent the radials from contorting.[34] Given that the museum is typically maintained at 50 per cent relative humidity, the steel used to support the glued laminated timber required a galvanized finish to prevent corrosion.[30]

Reception for 2000s redevelopment
Файл:AGO Walker Court 2022.jpg
Walker Court after the 2004 to 2008 redevelopment. The redevelopment saw walkways and staircases "threaded" through the courtyard.

The completed expansion received wide acclaim, notably for the restraint of its design. An editorial in The Globe and Mail called it a "restrained masterpiece", noting: "The proof of Mr. Gehry's genius lies in his deft adaptation to unusual circumstances. By his standards, it was to be done on the cheap, for a mere $276 million. The museum's administrators and neighbours were adamant that the architect, who is used to being handed whole city blocks for over-the-top titanium confections, produce a lower-key design, sensitive to its context and the gallery's long history."[35] The Toronto Star called it "the easiest, most effortless and relaxed architectural masterpiece this city has seen".[36]

Critics also noted Gehry's ability to reinvigorate older structures, with The Washington Post commenting "Gehry's real accomplishment in Toronto is the reprogramming of a complicated amalgam of old spaces. That's not sexy, like titanium curves, but it's essential to the project."[13] The architecture critic of The New York Times wrote: "Rather than a tumultuous creation, this may be one of Mr. Gehry's most gentle and self-possessed designs. It is not a perfect building, yet its billowing glass facade, which evokes a crystal ship drifting through the city, is a masterly example of how to breathe life into a staid old structure. And its interiors underscore one of the most underrated dimensions of Mr. Gehry's immense talent: a supple feel for context and an ability to balance exuberance with delicious moments of restraint. Instead of tearing apart the old museum, Mr. Gehry carefully threaded new ramps, walkways and stairs through the original."[37]

2010s and 2020s renovations and expansions

The museum opened the Weston Family Learning Centre in October 2011, designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects. The Шаблон:Convert space is an exploration art centre, featuring a hands-on centre for children, a youth centre, and an art workshop and studio.[38] Several months later, in April 2012, the museum opened the David Milne Study Centre, which was designed by KPMB Architects.[39][40][41] The cost to build the David Milne Study Centre cost the museum approximately C$1 million.[42] The South Entrance and lounge outside the library, also designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects, was opened in July 2017.[43] The renovated and renamed J. S. McLean Centre for Indigenous & Canadian Art[44] opened in July 2018.

In 2022, Selldorf Architects was contracted by the museum to design a new gallery space for contemporary art.[45][46] The proposed expansion, later named the Dani Reiss Modern and Contemporary Gallery, would add Шаблон:Convert to the building, and would be the building's seventh major expansion.[47]

Permanent collection

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The Tannenbaum Centre for European Art veiwing hall, one of several areas used to exhibit's the museum's European art.

AGO's permanent collection saw significant growth in the late 20th and early 21st century. The museum's permanent collection grew from 3,400 works in 1960 to 10,700 in 1985.[10] As of March 2021, the AGO's permanent collection holds over 120,000 pieces, representing many artistic movements and eras of art history.[1] The museum's collection is organized into several "collection areas," which typically encompass works from a specific art form, artist, benefactor, chronological era, or geographic locale. Until the early 1980s, works collected for the museum's collection were primarily Canadian or European artists.Шаблон:Sfn Its collection has since expanded to include artworks from the Indigenous peoples in Canada, and other cultures from around the world.

The museum's African collection includes 95 artworks, most of which originate from the 19th century Sahara.[48] Exhibited at a permanent gallery on the second floor of the museum,[48] most of the pieces in the African collection were gifted to the museum by Murray Frum, with the first pieces donated to the museum in 1972.[49] The museum also has several Ethiopian Orthodox manuscripts and artworks, although these works form a part Thomson Collection of boxwoods and ivories.[50]

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Snuff bottles from the museum's Kenneth Thomson collection

In 2002, the museum was bequeathed 1,000 works by Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islanders artists.[51] Some of these items are exhibited at a gallery on the second floor of the museum. In 2004, Kenneth Thomson donated over 2,000 works from his collection to the museum.[52] Although the majority of the Thomson collection is made up of works by Canadian or European artists, the collection also includes works created by artists in other parts of the world.

Canadian

The museum includes an extensive collection of Canadian art, from pre-Confederation to the 1990s.[53] Most of the museum's Canadian art is exhibited on the second floor, with 39 viewing halls dedicated to exhibiting 1,447 pieces from the museum's Canadian collection.Шаблон:Sfn The wing includes the 23 viewing halls of the Thomson Collection of Canadian Art, and the 14 viewing halls of J.S. Mclean Centre for Indigenous & Canadian Art.Шаблон:Sfn Canadian works are also exhibited in the David Milne Centre and the visible storage area in the museum's concourse.

Файл:Mail Boat Landing at Quebec by Cornelius Krieghoff, 1860.jpg
Mail Boat Landing at Quebec by Cornelius Krieghoff (1860). It is one of 145 works by Krieghoff in the Thomson Collection of Canadian Art.

The galleries of the Thomson Collection of Canadian Art provide an in-depth look at the works of individual artists, whereas the other viewing halls of organized around later thematic issues.Шаблон:Sfn The Thomson Collection was donated to the museum by Kenneth Thomson in January 2004.[54] The collections features nearly 650 paintings and works by Canadian artists; 250 of which were created by Tom Thomson;[54] 145 works by Cornelius Krieghoff;[52] 168 works by David Milne,[42] and others by the Group of Seven. Nearly two-thirds of the collection was re-framed in preparation for their installation into the viewing halls.[54]

In addition to the Thomson Collection of Canadian Art, works by David Milne are also housed in the David Milne Study Centre.[42] The centre was opened in 2012, and features computer terminals linked to the Milne Digital Archives and televisions which play films on Milne's life.[42] The centre houses works and 230 other artifacts belonging to Milne, including diaries, journal, and paint boxes. Most of the Milne artifacts were gifted to the museum by Milne's son in 2009.[42]

The J.S. McLean Centre for Indigenous & Canadian Art exhibits 132 from Canadian and indigenous artists.[55] Approximately 40 percent of works presented in the centre were created by Indigenous artists.[55] The McLean Centre for Indigenous and Canadian Art is Шаблон:Convert,[56] with 14 viewing halls.Шаблон:Sfn Three of these galleries are dedicated to exhibiting Inuit art, whereas one is dedicated to exhibiting contemporary First Nations art.[56]

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The West Wind by Tom Thomson (1917). The Canadian collection includes several works by Thomson.

Works in the Mclean Centre are organized around larger thematic issues relating to Canadian history, as opposed to chronologically.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn As a result, works from indigenous and Canadian artists are presented together to showcase the reciprocal influences and conflict between the two.[55] An example of such thematic presentation is evident in how the museum exhibits Tom Thomson's The West Wind. When the painting was exhibited at the Mclean Centre, it was presented with Anishinaabe pouches adjacent to it, showcasing how two peoples viewed northern Ontario at that time.Шаблон:Sfn Text that accompanies works in the centre are presented in three languages, English, French, and either Anishinaabemowin or Inuktitut.[55] The walls along the primary entry point into the McLean Centre are marked by small projectile points from arrows, spears, and knives from 9,000 BCE to 1,000 CE. The projectiles form a part of an art installation instead of an ethnographic or archeological display.Шаблон:Sfn

Landscape paintings from Canadian artists were among the first to be acquired for the museum's collection.Шаблон:Sfn The museum's Canadian collection has works from several Canadian artists, including Jack Bush, Paul-Émile Borduas, Kazuo Nakamura, and members of the Group of Seven.[53] The museum has more than 300 works by David Milne; 168 of which were donated to the museum as a part of the Thomson Collection of Canadian Art.[42] The museum also has nearly 150 works from A. Y. Jackson, although most of it is in storage.[57] The collection also features works from Canadian sculptors Frances Loring, Esmaa Mohamoud,[58] and Florence Wyle.[53]

The museum also has a large collection of Inuit artworks. The 1970s saw the first Inuit artwork added to the museum's collection; with the Art Gallery of Ontario acquiring the Sarick Collection, the Isaacs Reference Collection, and the Klamer Collection during the 1970s and early 1980s.Шаблон:Sfn In 1988, the museum formed the Inuit Collections Committee to maintain and grow the collection.Шаблон:Sfn The collection includes 2,800 sculptures, 1,300 prints, 700 drawings and wall hangings from Inuit artists.[51] 500 of these works are exhibited at the Inuit Visible Storage Gallery,Шаблон:Sfn opened in 2013.[59]

Conversely, the museum did not acquire its first First Nations artwork until 1979, acquiring a piece by Norval Morrisseau for its contemporary collection.Шаблон:Sfn The Art Gallery of Ontario did not acquire First Nations art until the late 1970s, to prevent overlap between the AGO's permanent collection and the permanent collections of the Royal Ontario Museum, which already had a collection of First Nations art.Шаблон:Sfn The early 21st century saw the museum increase the representation of First Nations art in its Canadian-centred galleries, including the R. Samuel McLaughlin Gallery.Шаблон:Sfn First Nations artists whose works are featured in the museum's collection include Charles Edenshaw, and Shelley Niro.[51]

Contemporary

Файл:AGO Level 4 exhibit 2022.jpg
An exhibit hall on the fourth floor of the south gallery block. Exhibits on the upper three levels of the block house contemporary art exhibits.

The museum's contemporary art collection contains works from international artists from the 1960s to the present and Canadians from the 1990s to the present.[60] The collection also extends to installations, photography, graphic art (such as concert, film, and historic posters), film and video art, and even minimalist music. Works from these collections are exhibited in several centres and galleries throughout the museum, including the Vivian & David Campbell Centre for Contemporary Art which comprise the upper three levels of the south gallery block, and the Galleria Italia.

The museum's contemporary collection includes several works by Canadian artists, General Idea, Brian Jungen, Liz Magor, Michael Snow, and Jeff Wall.[60] The museum's contemporary collection also has works by international artists in the Arte Povera, conceptualism minimalism, neo-expressionism, pop art, and postminimalism movements.[60] Artists from these movements whose works are included in the museum's collection include Jim Dine, Donald Judd, Mona Hatoum, Pierre Huyghe, John McCracken, Claes Oldenburg, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Gerhard Richter, Richard Serra, Robert Smithson, Andy Warhol, and Lawrence Weiner.[60]

The museum also features a permanent exhibition of Yayoi Kusama's Infinity Mirror Room – Let's Survive Forever in one of the viewing halls of the Signy Eaton Gallery.[61] The permanent Infinity Room was purchased in 2018 for C$2 million, after the success of a larger multi-room Kusama and Infinity Mirror Room travelling exhibit held in the same year. The permanent Infinity Room was opened in May 2019.[61]

European

Файл:Scale model of HMS Hogue-AGO-IMG 7814.JPG
Scale model of Шаблон:HMS on display in the museum's concourse.

The museum has a large collection of European art ranging from 1000 CE to 1900 CE,[62] Items from the museum's European collection are exhibited in several viewing halls throughout the museum. The Tannenbaum Centre for European Art and its viewing halls are located on the ground floor. Paintings and sculptures from the Thomson Collection of European Art are exhibited on the ground floor, while the ship models from the Thomson collection are exhibited in the museum's concourse.

The European Collection includes the Margaret and Ian Ross Collection, which features several bronze sculptures and medals, with a particular emphasis on Baroque art from Italy.[62] The museum's collection of European paintings and sculptures was further bolstered in January 2004, after the museum acquired the Thomson Collection of European Art.[54] The Thomson Collection of European Art includes over 900 objects, including 130 ship models.[52]

Файл:Rubens - Massacre of the Innocents - Art Gallery of Ontario 2.jpg
Massacre of the Innocents by Peter Paul Rubens (1611). The painting, which was the most expensive painting when it was purchased in 2002, was donated to the museum in 2004.

The Thomson Collection of European Art includes the world's largest holding of the Gothic boxwood miniatures, featuring 10 carved beads and two altarpieces.[63][64] Other works featured in the Thomson Collection for European Art includes Massacre of the Innocents by Peter Paul Rubens.[65] The painting was acquired by Ken Thomson in 2002 for C$115 million,[65] at the time the most expensive Old Master work sold at an art auction.[66]Шаблон:Notetag Thomson intended for the work to serve as the centrepiece for the collections he donated to the museum in 2004.[65] When the museum reopened in 2008, the painting was installed in a blood-red, low-lit room in the Thomson Collection for European Art.[65] The room featured no other paintings, with the only lighting in the room directed towards the work.[65] The painting remained at that location until 2017 when it was placed in a gallery with other works from the European collection.[65]

In 2019, the museum acquired the painting Iris Bleus, Jardin du Petit Gennevilliers by Gustave Caillebotte for more than C$1 million.[67] The painting is the second work by Caillebotte to enter the permanent collections of a Canadian art museum.[67] The museum's European collection also includes major works by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Giovanni del Biondo, Edgar Degas, Thomas Gainsborough, Paul Gauguin, Frans Hals, Claude Monet, Angelo Piò, Nino Pisano, Rembrandt, Auguste Rodin, and James Tissot.[62]

Modern

Файл:Art Gallery of Ontario (38694091041).jpg
Sculptures on display in the Joey & Toby Tanenbaum Sculpture Atrium

The museum's modern art collection includes works from Americans, and Europeans from the 1900s to the 1960s,[68] Works by Canadian artists during that period are typically exhibited as a part of its Canadian collection, as opposed to the museum's modern art collection. Works from the modern art collection are exhibited in several centres and galleries throughout the museum, including the Joey & Toby Tanenbaum Sculpture Atrium, the Henry Moore Sculpture Centre, and several other galleries on the ground floor of the museum.

Файл:AGO Henry Moore Sculpture Centre Room 251 2022.jpg
Sculptures on display in the Henry Moore Sculpture Centre, which exhibits several works by Henry Moore.

The museum is home to the largest public collection of works by Henry Moore, most of which is held in the Henry Moore Sculpture Centre.[69] The museum dedicated approximately Шаблон:Convert of space to the sculptor, which includes the Henry Moore Sculpture Centre, and related galleries including the Irina Moore Gallery.Шаблон:Sfn Moore donated 300 pieces,[10] nearly his entire personal collection, to the museum in 1974.[68] The donation originated from a commitment made by Moore on December 9, 1968, to donate a significant portion of his work to the Art Gallery of Ontario, contingent that the museum builds a dedicated gallery to exhibit his works.Шаблон:Sfn In addition to the works donated by Moore, the museum also purchased another piece, Two Large Forms, from the sculptor in 1973.Шаблон:Sfn The sculpture was originally placed at the museum's northeast façade, near the intersection of Dundas and McCaul streets.Шаблон:Sfn However, the museum later relocated the sculpture to Grange Park nearby in 2017 as part of the park's renovation.

The museum's modern collection also includes works by Pierre Bonnard, Constantin Brâncuși, Marc Chagall, Otto Dix, Jean Dubuffet, Jacob Epstein, Helen Frankenthaler, Alberto Giacometti, Natalia Goncharova, Arshile Gorky, Barbara Hepworth, Hans Hofmann, Franz Kline, Henri Matisse, Fernand Léger, Joan Miró, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Ben Nicholson, Pablo Picasso, Gino Severini, and Yves Tanguy.[68]

Photography

Файл:Linnaeus Tripe - Madura. The Great Pagoda, Mootoo Alaghur and East Gopurum from Tank - Google Art Project.jpg
Madura Шаблон:Sic. The Great Pagoda, Mootoo Alaghur and East Gopurum from Tank, by Linnaeus Tripe (1858), part of the museum's photography collection.

In 2019, the Art Gallery of Ontario had a photography collection of 70,000 photographs dating from the 1840s to the present.[70] The photograph collection includes 495 photo albums from the First World War.[70] Items from this collection are exhibited in two viewing halls on the ground floor.

In 2017, the museum acquired 522 photographs by Diane Arbus, providing the museum the largest collection of Arbus's photographs outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.[71] In June 2019, the museum acquired the Montgomery Collection of Caribbean Photos, which includes 3,500 historic photographs of the Caribbean from the 1840s to 1940s.[72] The collection was acquired by the museum for $300,000, most if which was provided by 27 donors from Toronto's Caribbean community.[72] The Montgomery Collection is the largest collection of its kind outside the Caribbean.[72] Other photographers whose works are featured in the collection include Edward Burtynsky, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Robert J. Flaherty, Suzy Lake, Arnold Newman, Henryk Ross, Josef Sudek, Linnaeus Tripe, and Garry Winogrand.[70]

Prints and drawings

Файл:Dog Cariole Rindisbacher 1825.png
A drawing by Peter Rindisbacher (1825), part of the museum's prints and drawings collection

The museum's prints and drawings collection includes more than 20,000 prints, drawings, and other works on paper, from the 1400s to the present day. This collection usually is displayed little at a time with revolving exhibitions. However, the collection is viewable by appointment at the museum's Marvin Gelber Print and Drawing Study Centre.[73]

The collection includes the largest and most significant body of works from Betty Goodwin, with a bulk of the works given to the gallery by the artist.[74] In 2015, the museum was bequeathed 170 drawings, prints, and sculptures by Käthe Kollwitz.[75] The prints and drawings collection also includes drawings by David Blackwood, François Boucher, John Constable, Greg Curnoe, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, Thomas Gainsborough, Paul Gauguin, Wassily Kandinsky, Michelangelo, David Milne, Pablo Picasso, Egon Schiele, Michael Snow, Walter Trier, Vincent van Gogh, and Frederick Varley; and prints by Ernst Barlach, James Gillray, Francisco Goya, Käthe Kollwitz, Henry Moore, Robert Motherwell, Rembrandt, Thomas Rowlandson, Stanley Spencer, James Tissot, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and James McNeill Whistler.[73]

Library and archives

The Art Gallery of Ontario also houses the Edward P. Taylor Library & Archives. The library and archives are open to the public and require no entrance fee.[76] However, access to the museum's archives, and its special collections requires a scheduled appointment.[77] The library also serves as the adjunct art history library for OCAD University.[78]

Library

Файл:Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon at AGO, Toronto 10.jpg
Work tables at the Edward P. Taylor Library & Archives, the art gallery's library and archives

The general collections of the library reflect the permanent collection of works of art and the public programs of the Art Gallery of Ontario, containing over 300,000 volumes for general art information and academic research in the history of art.[77] The library serves as a reference library; materials in the collections do not circulate. Holdings encompass western art in all media from the medieval period to the 21st century; the art of Canada's indigenous peoples including Inuit art; and African and Oceanian art.

The library additionally comprises Canadian, American and European art journals and newspapers; over 50,000 art sales and auction catalogues (late 18th century to current); 40,000 documentation files on Canadian art and artists, and international contemporary artists; and multimedia, digital and microform collections. Materials may be searched on the online catalogue.[79] The Library & Archives also produces pathfinders and bibliographies for collections research, such as the Thomson Collection Resource Guide to the large collection of works of art donated by benefactor and collector Kenneth Thomson.[80]

The library's rare books collection includes art historical sourcebooks from the 17th century to the present; British Neoclassical folios of the 18th century; catalogues raisonnés; British and Canadian illustrated books and magazines; travel guides, particularly Baedekers, Murrays, and Blue Guides; French art sales catalogues from the late 18th century to the mid-20th century; and artists' books.

Archives

The museum's archives document the history of the institution since its establishment in 1900, as well as The Grange since 1820. Series include exhibition files, publicity scrapbooks (documenting Gallery exhibitions and all other activity), architectural plans, photographs, records of the Gallery School, and correspondence (with art dealers, artists, collectors, and scholars). Because of the regularity with which artists' groups held exhibitions at the Gallery, the archives are a resource for research into the activities of the Group of Seven, the Canadian Group of Painters, the Ontario Society of Artists, and others.

The Art Gallery of Ontario's special collections are one of the most important concentrations of archival material on the visual arts in Canada. In over 150 individual fonds and collections, ranging in date from the early 19th century to the present day, the Special Collections document with primary source material artists, art dealers and collectors, artist-run galleries, and other people and organizations that have shaped the Canadian art world, as well as the Tom Thomson Catalogue Raisonné files.[81]

Programs

Artist-in-residence

AGO operates an artist-in-residence program, granting selected artists access to its facilities, a stipend covering materials and living costs, and a dedicated studio, the Anne Lind AiR Studio in the Weston Family Learning Centre.[82][83] Artists-in-residence are invited to create new work and ideas, and to use all media, including painting, drawing, photography, film, video, installation, architecture and sound.[84] The program is the first of its kind to be established at a major Canadian art gallery.[82]

Past artists-in-residences have included:

Шаблон:Div col

Online presence

The AGO was the first Canadian museum included in the Google Art Project (later renamed Google Arts & Culture), where 166 pieces from the permanent collection are available for viewing, including works by Paul Gauguin, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Tom Thomson, Emily Carr, Anthony van Dyck, and Gerhard Richter. Currently, there is no "street view" option to tour the museum online.[94][95]

Selected works

Canadian collection

Шаблон:Gallery Шаблон:Gallery

European collection

Шаблон:Col div

Шаблон:Col div end Шаблон:Gallery Шаблон:Gallery

Modern and contemporary collections

Шаблон:Gallery Шаблон:Gallery

See also

Шаблон:Portal

Notes

Шаблон:Notefoot

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Further reading

Шаблон:Refbegin

Шаблон:Refend

External links

Шаблон:Museums and galleries in Toronto Шаблон:Toronto landmarks Шаблон:Provincial museums of Canada Шаблон:Group of Seven Шаблон:Frank Gehry Шаблон:Tom Thomson Шаблон:Authority control

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