The museum has an increasing permanent collection of nearly 11,000 works. The collection includes American and European paintings, drawings, photographs, prints, and sculpture; contemporary European, American, and Japanese studio ceramics; Asian ceramics, paintings, jades and prints; and objects from ancient African, European, Near Eastern, and American cultures.
The European collection features Old Master paintings, 19th-century paintings, prints and drawings, and 20th-century photographs and ceramics. Its non-Western holdings include works by Fernando Botero and Yinka Shonibare, collections of Japanese woodcuts, Asian sculpture and ceramics, African sculpture, and Peruvian ceramics. There is also an adjoining sculpture garden with works by Lipton and Bonnie Collura.
At the previous Curtin Road location is a massive pair of bronze lion's paws that flank the building's front steps. Modeled by sculptor Paul Bowden in 1993, they playfully evoke the traditional lion statues that flank Beaux-arts buildings, such as the New York Public Library, and also pay tribute to Penn State's mascot, the Nittany Lion.[1]
The museum's permanent photographic collection includes an array of hidden mother photographs, which became popular in the early 2010s as interest in such photographs spread on the internet.[2]
History
The University Art Museum's original building was a Brutalist "box," containing three galleries, that opened in 1972.[3]Post-modernist architect Charles Willard Moore greatly expanded the building in 1993, converting the "box" into a 150-seat auditorium, and wrapping eleven new galleries around it. He created a lively entrance plaza, reminiscent of his Piazza d'Italia (1978) in New Orleans, Louisiana, adding multiple levels and a graduated arcade of brick arches resting on cartoon Tuscan columns. The museum was renamed to honor James and Barbara Palmer, who initiated the campaign to expand the building in 1986 with a $2 million gift.
The museum's founding director was William Hull, for whom one of the galleries is named. The current director is Erin M. Coe.
The Friends of the Palmer Museum of Art was founded in 1974 to aid in fund-raising and public outreach. The museum has a Friends Leadership Council as well as a National Advisory Council.
In summer and fall 2023, the museum moved to a new, 73,000-square-foot facility at the Arboretum at Penn State which has new educational spaces and nearly twice the amount of current exhibition space.[4]
The new state-of-the-art Palmer Museum of Art is located at 650 Bigler Road in The Arboretum at Penn State. The innovative building designed by Allied Works with landscape design by Reed Hildebrand features first-time education and study spaces, flexible event spaces, and nearly twice as much gallery space, allowing for expanded student, faculty, and public access to its collection. The free-admission Museum strives to be a welcoming, inclusive, and vibrant forum for authentic arts experiences, cultivating meaningful dialogue about today’s most potent ideas and pressing concerns.