![]() Babies from Grafik des Kapitalistischen Realismus (Graphics of Capitalist Realism) portfolio Konrad Lueg 1968 |
![]() "Blue Plate Special" John Waters 2011 |
![]() Starfighter from Grafik des Kapitalistischen Realismus (Graphics of Capitalist Realism) portfolio Wolf Vostell 1968 |
![]() Magic Window Cleaner II from Grafik des Kapitalistischen Realismus (Graphics of Capitalist Realism) portfolio K. H. Hödicke 1968 |
![]() Terminal Clusters Ree Morton 1974 |
![]() Still alive (I) Kris Martin 2010 |
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Explore Collections Exploring the Walker Collections
Our internationally acclaimed collection of modern and contemporary visual art, which grows each year through new acquisitions, includes more than 11,000 works. Spanning a diverse range of media that includes painting, sculpture, film, video, photography, and works on paper, the Walker's permanent collection is augmented by more than 800 holdings in the Ruben/Bentson Film and Video Study Collection; more than 1,200 artists' books; hundreds of working drawings, models, and other preparatory materials in the Visual Arts Study Collection; and thousands of documents and records in the Walker Art Center Archives. These diverse holdings reflect the Walker's unique multidisciplinary offerings in the visual, performing, and media arts of our time. This site is a resource for all things related to the Walker's collections, from information about on-site exhibitions and recent acquisitions to digital representations of our holdings. Over the next couple of years, we will be expanding collections.walkerart.org to include material related to "collections" in the broadest sense, from accessioned works of art and the library's holdings of artist's books to our film/video collections, archives, and performing arts commissions. Walker Art Center Collections
Walker Collections on FlickrHistory and Overview The Walker's permanent collection has its origins in the mid-1870s with acquisitions made by lumber magnate Thomas Barlow Walker, who built an eclectic personal collection ranging from European paintings and sculpture to Asian porcelains, Chinese jade carvings, and Southwest Indian artifacts. In the 1940s, the Walker's focus on contemporary art began with the acquisition of works by important artists of the day, including sculptures by Pablo Picasso, Henry Moore, and Alberto Giacometti and paintings by Edward Hopper, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Franz Marc. During the 1960s, the Walker formalized its commitment to contemporary art, and works by young artists such as Andy Warhol, Chuck Close, George Segal, Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, and Claes Oldenburg were acquired; this commitment to nurturing artists early in their careers continues today. The highlights of these collections are numerous. Within the visual arts holdings of some 11,000 objects, there are Minimalist sculptures and paintings, including seven by Donald Judd, three by Dan Flavin, and two each by Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, and Agnes Martin; these are augmented by drawings and prints in which the same artists explore their ideas on paper. There is a rich representation of the Italian Arte Povera movement, with works by eight of its major figures, and a concentration of paintings by the mid-century Japanese Gutai group--both unusual choices for an American museum. A large number of artists--including Matthew Barney, Robert Gober, Ellsworth Kelly, Sherrie Levine, Claes Oldenburg, and Andy Warhol--are represented in depth, offering viewers an extended assessment of each career. Editioned works are a strong focus: there are more than 500 objects by the wide-ranging international group known as Fluxus, 500 multiples by influential German artist Joseph Beuys, and concentrations of prints and multiples by Katharina Fritsch, Sigmar Polke, and Rirkrit Tiravanija. The Walker has the only complete archives of graphic works by Jasper Johns and Robert Motherwell, as well as hundreds of prints from the archives of Tyler Graphics Workshop, which collaborated with such masters as Helen Frankenthaler, Joan Mitchell, and Frank Stella. The Visual Arts Study Collection contains models, working drawings, and other preparatory materials related to objects within the larger holdings. Within the Ruben/Bentson Film and Video Study Collection, one finds nearly 800 titles, including an unusually rich group of experimental films from the 1960s and 1970s by Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage, Bruce Conner, Paul Sharits, and many others, as well as the complete catalogue of films by William Klein and a clutch of rare early-20th-century films from the Soviet Union. The Walker holds more than 1,200 artists' books and multiples as well as ada'web, an early and historically significant archive of Internet-based art. In the performing arts, choreographers Trisha Brown, Merce Cunningham, and Bill T. Jones together account for 21 residencies and 38 performances over five decades, and have been commissioned to make 11 new works--a significant contribution to the development of contemporary dance and an immeasurable enrichment of this community's cultural life. In recent years, the Walker has tended to collect around the edges of the obvious, distinguishing itself by embracing hybrid or otherwise unclassifiable works that might fall between the cracks in more traditional institutions. Requires Flash (place your non flash content here.)
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Walker Collection News “The Quiet Revolutionary”: Honoring Librarian Rosemary Furtak Julie Caniglia ![]() Last week we celebrated a beloved colleague, Rosemary Furtak, who retired recently after a 29-year career at the Walker. Countless curators, scholars, writers, artists, designers, and others—both inside and outside the art center—have a special fondness for the Walker Library, which houses more than 35,000 publications in a wonderfully hushed, secluded underground space. This is thanks [...] Read More From the Archives: Jud Nelson’s Hefty 2-Ply Jill Vuchetich ![]() On view through May 27 as a part of Lifelike, the 1,500-pound Hefty 2-Ply made quite a splash when it first landed at the Walker in 1981. The Walker commissioned Jud Nelson in 1979 to make a piece for its permanent collection; it took nearly two years to carve it from marble. Known for his depictions of everyday [...] Read More International Women’s Day: Leading Ladies in the Walker’s Collection Brooke Kellaway ![]() With registrar Joe King and registration technician Evan Reiter we took a trip to art storage to see the first 5 works by women to enter the Walker’s collection. June Corwine Still Life (1945) Oil on canvas Accessioned May, 1946 [...] Read More Chuck Hits the Road Abi Sebaly ![]() Chuck Close’s Big Self Portrait (1967-1968), which is featured in the Lifelike exhibition, also recently made a sojourn (in postcard form) to Nepal and India. His presence incited a few double-takes and queries from the locals – Who is this smoking guy? Do you worship him? Close said of his portraits in 1970, ”I am not trying to make facsimiles of photographs. Neither [...] Read More In the Shop
![]() Bits & Pieces Put Together to Present a Semblance of a Whole: Walker Art Center Collections A primer on contemporary art, the Walker's catalogue captures the institution's multidisciplinary history and reflects many of its commissions and extensive collections of paintings, sculptures, prints, photography, design, film/video, new media, and performing arts. The 616-page volume includes some 350 artist entries coauthored by the Walker's curators and alumni as well as contributions from a select group of novelists, poets, and critics. $45 ($40.50 Walker members) |