A Renovated and Expanded Hood Museum Opens Its Doors

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Over the weekend, the community had its first chance to explore the new museum.

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Hood Museum of Art
Director of the Hood John Stomberg speaks with museum visitors in front of Tightrope: Infatuation, a 2015 work by Ethiopian artist Elias Sime. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00) 
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The wait is over. This past weekend, after more than seven years of planning and three years of construction, Dartmouth celebrated the dedication of the expanded 鈥 and opened its doors to the public.

鈥淭oday the Hood once again commits to sharing its art generously,鈥 , the Virginia Rice Kelsey 1961s Director of the Hood, told a standing-room only crowd of 350 friends and contributors to the $50 million project at the in Alumni Hall on Friday afternoon.

Every detail in the revitalized museum was gleaming for its opening days. In the Russo Atrium (accessible through the prominent new entrance facing the Green on Wheelock Street and through a connection with the cafe in the 天美影视kins Center for the Arts), visitors are welcomed by an expansive vaulted ceiling and views into the two halves of what Stomberg calls 鈥渢he museum鈥檚 beating heart.鈥 These are the Bernstein Center for Object Study, where students and faculty can engage with objects from the collection in three state-of-the-art-classrooms; and the galleries themselves, to which the museum has added 50 percent more space.

From the atrium, museum-goers enter through the Kaish Gallery, where they are met by Our Journey, an enormous four-panel painting by Nigerian artist Obiora Udechukwu; May Stevens鈥 politically charged 1968 painting Big Daddy Paper Doll; and a number of other contemporary, international, and socially conscious works that Stomberg says 鈥渋mmediately set the tone鈥 for the museum.

鈥淚t says we鈥檙e global, it says we have great respect for artists around the world, and that we鈥檙e interested not just in the name of the artists, but in the actual art itself,鈥 Stomberg says.

Also on the museum鈥檚 first level, visitors will find a student-curated exhibition of photographs acquired by students in several generations of the popular course 鈥淢useum Collecting 101鈥; exhibitions of Japanese prints and African art; and an installation of ancient and premodern art, featuring the six Assyrian reliefs from the palace of Ashurnasirpal II, a centerpiece of the Hood鈥檚 collection of more than 65,000 objects.

Architects Billie Tsien and Tod Williams say their vision for the Hood was 鈥渢he knitting together of spaces,鈥 not simply of the original museum imagined by Charles Moore with the modern new building鈥攁chieved by subtle details such as the orientation of the lighting and oak flooring and the shift from oak baseboards in the original building to aluminum in the new鈥攂ut of materials. The variegations in the off-white external brick, in the grays of the Russo Atrium鈥檚 marble floors, and in the oak of the gallery floor are details that Stomberg says 鈥渟ound really boring, but what it does is it activates the whole space鈥攜our brain is getting excited visually, just by the surroundings.鈥

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Hood Opening
Students explore contemporary African art, including Eric van Hove鈥檚 鈥淰12 Laraki Gearbox,鈥 in the Hood鈥檚 Lathrop Gallery. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00) 

A Community Celebration

Friday鈥檚 dedication ceremony opened with an introduction from Provost Joseph Helble, who spoke of the Hood in the context of Dartmouth鈥檚 teaching and learning mission.

鈥淚 personally see the Hood as a laboratory, a place for experimentation, innovation, and creative tinkering鈥攁 place not just for art and for students of art, but a place where we truly break down the traditional barriers that exist between disciplines,鈥 Helble said.

Helble also noted that on the new front door of the Hood is 鈥渁 land acknowledgement that reads: 鈥楾he Hood Museum of Art is situated upon the ancestral and unceded lands of the Abenaki people.鈥 This acknowledgment reminds us of the significance of place, the continued existence of Indigenous peoples in the museum, and Dartmouth鈥檚 commitment to building respectful relationships with those who call these lands home today.鈥

Arthur Hanchett, a council member of the Koasek Band of the Sovereign Abenaki Nation, called the land acknowledgement 鈥渁 well-received statement. The sentiment attests a commitment everlasting that Dartmouth thrives upon the land of the Abenaki people.鈥

Calling the museum project 鈥渢he first manifestation of the ,鈥 Chair of the Board of Trustees Laurel Richie 鈥81 formally accepted 鈥渢he reimagined Hood Museum of Art on behalf of all of Dartmouth.鈥

鈥淚 walked into the Hood the other day from the Green, and I will say, as I entered through the front door, I got a little emotional,鈥 Richie said. 鈥淚 admit that I was filled with an incredible sense of pride on behalf of Dartmouth.鈥

President Philip J. Hanlon 鈥77 thanked the many members of the community who contributed to the project, singling out the family鈥攕everal of whom were present鈥攐f the museum鈥檚 namesake, the late Harvey Hood, Class of 1918. 鈥淭o all members of the Hood family, we cannot thank you enough for your enduring legacy and all you鈥檝e done and continue to do for Dartmouth,鈥 President Hanlon said.

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A community member gets a close-up of 鈥淗ovor,鈥 a sculpture by Ghanaian artist El Anatsui made of aluminum bottle tops and copper wire. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00) 

Exploring the Galleries

At the reception immediately following Friday鈥檚 dedication ceremony, and all day on Saturday, visitors had a chance to explore the museum鈥檚 new galleries, speak with Stomberg and the Hood鈥檚 curatorial staff, and ask questions of architects Tsien and Willams, who were on hand during the weekend.

A single-day record 2,165 visitors attended Saturday鈥檚 open house, which was free and open to the public. Among them was Thomas Knight 鈥22, from Cooperstown, N.Y. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just been such a presence in our lives, seeing those fences up and seeing it in process for so long,鈥 Knight said of the construction project that has been ongoing since before he matriculated this fall. 鈥淲hen I first visited Dartmouth it wasn鈥檛 open, so it just wasn鈥檛 a dimension I was aware of. But now it鈥檚 open, and the collection is so incredible.鈥

He was struck, in particular, by one of the museum鈥檚 more famous paintings: Pablo Picasso鈥檚 Guitar on a Table, which is now on view in an installation of transatlantic art in the second-floor Citrin Gallery. 鈥淭he provenance of this is insane鈥攊t鈥檚 from Gertrude Stein鈥檚 collection! What a cool intersection of visionaries鈥擯icasso and Stein鈥攁nd now it鈥檚 in our museum. That鈥檚 really cool.鈥

In the galleries, community members were delighted to find old friends like Picasso鈥檚 Guitar, Paul Sample鈥檚 Beaver Meadow, Mark Rothko鈥檚 Lilac and Orange Over Ivory, and Perugino鈥檚 Virgin and Child with Saints鈥攁t home and revitalized in their new and refurbished contexts.

They were also enthusiastic about discovering newer acquisitions, including Jeffrey Gibson鈥檚 sculpture WHAT DO YOU WANT? WHEN DO YOU WANT IT?, the centerpiece of an installation of contemporary Native American art, as well as prominent installations of contemporary African and contemporary Aboriginal Australian art, among many other treasures.

A Teaching Museum

Nancy Crumbine, a visiting associate professor who has taught first-year writing at the College for 40 years, says she has been bringing students to the museum for years, working with Kathy Hart, the Barbara C. and Harvey P. Hood 1918 Curator of Academic Programming, to build writing assignments based on looking closely at works of art.

鈥淚鈥檝e really missed working with Kathy while the museum鈥檚 been closed, so I鈥檓 delighted that it鈥檚 open again,鈥 Crumbine says. She鈥檚 also delighted with the new space. 鈥淭he old study space was so confined, it limited what Kathy could do for my students. So this is really terrific.鈥

鈥淭his鈥 is the Bernstein Center, which now can accommodate three classes at time鈥攗p to 6,000 student visits a year鈥攁nd fit almost any work in the collection through the study rooms鈥 12-foot doors.

鈥淚鈥檝e seen students have real breakthroughs in their writing after a visit here, and this new facility will allow that to happen much more easily,鈥 Crumbine says.  

Associate Curator of Academic Programming Amelia Kahl 鈥01 says the Bernstein Center, which has been open since the start of winter term, has 鈥渁lready had classes from a range of different departments and disciplines come in and use the spaces. It鈥檚 been wonderful to see how these spaces facilitate meaningful and exciting engagements with works of art.鈥

For example, Kahl says, a recent art history class used the center to view Jos茅 Clemente Orozco鈥檚 sketches for his mural The Epic of American Civilization, painted on the walls of the reserve reading room in Dartmouth Library鈥檚 Baker Library. 鈥淲e can use the tech in the room to show the Orozco mural on the screen so that they can place those sketches where they would be, before and after actually going to see the Orozco across campus. It really helps them situate those sketches in their contexts,鈥 she says.

Business as Usual

And now the museum begins the business of becoming part of everyday campus life again. Regular hours are Wednesday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Thursday-Friday, 11 a.m.-8:00 p.m., and Saturday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. The museum will be closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. Admission is free and open to the public.

鈥淭he Hood Museum believes that great art changes lives,鈥 Stomberg says. 鈥淲e look forward to sharing that art with you now.鈥

of the Jan. 25 dedication ceremony and a conversation with architects Williams and Tsien.

Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.

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Photo of the new museum entrance
The new entrance of the Hood Museum of Art from Wheelock Street. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00) 

 

Hannah Silverstein