Saint Mary's College Museum of Art


Saint Mary's College Museum of Art is an art and ethnographic museum located on the campus of Saint Mary's College of California, a private Catholic college in Moraga, California, established in 1863 and administered by the De La Salle Brothers. The museum owns the largest collection of paintings by California landscape artist [William William Keith (artist)|Keith (artist)|William Keith]. The museum is a member of the North American Reciprocal Museum Association and is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums.

History

The first museum on the Saint Mary's College of California campus was the William Keith Gallery, founded by professor Brother Fidelis Cornelius Braeg in 1934. The gallery exhibited an extensive collection of paintings by William Keith, a California landscape artist and friend of John Muir. Brother Cornelius wrote a 900-page, two-volume biography of Keith, working closely with the artist's widow, Mary McHenry Keith, a lawyer and social justice advocate known for her work in the women's suffrage and animal rights movements.
In 1977, the museum reopened as the Hearst Art Gallery, after an expansion funded by the Hearst Art Foundation. Exhibitions included ethnographic materials and artwork of California and the American West.
In 2011, after another expansion, the gallery was renamed Saint Maryʼs College Museum of Art. The renovated museum's inaugural exhibition was The Comprehensive Keith: A Centennial Tribute, marking 100 years since the death of William Keith.

Collections

The permanent collection comprises more than 5000 objects, many grouped in special collections. Pre-eminent among these is the William Keith Collection, the most comprehensive collection of the artist's work, with over 200 objects, including paintings and archival materials.
The California Collection includes works from the 19th century to the present day with a special focus on artists of the San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California, including works by Morris Graves, Helen Hyde, Gregory Kondos, Maurice Logan, Roi Partridge, Louis Siegriest, Raimonds Staprans, Wayne Thiebaud, and Frank Van Sloun. The Alberti Collection of European prints and works on paper includes works by Marc Chagall, Pablo Picasso, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri Matisse, and Käthe Kollwitz
Other collections include the Social Justice & Political Prints Collection; the American Photography Collection; the African Art Collection; the Asian, Oceanic, and Indigenous Peoples of the Americas Collection; and the Religious Collection, with works from the Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque eras related to the Catholic church.

Exhibitions

According to its website, "The museum rotates exhibitions twice a year, showcasing the permanent collection, traveling exhibitions, and emerging California artists." All exhibitions and public programs are free and open to the public, and the facility is ADA accessible.
Works from the collection also rotate on view in the campus library, chapel, public spaces, and offices, with sculptural works on the grounds and in gardens.
Some exhibitions since the museum's rechristening in 2011 include: