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The '''Norton Museum of Art''' | The '''Norton Museum of Art''' sits at 1450 South [[South Dixie Highway|Dixie Highway]] in [[West Palm Beach]], [[Florida]]. It's Florida's largest art museum, housing a world-class collection spanning American, European, Contemporary, and Asian art alongside an impressive photography wing. Ralph Hubbard Norton (1875–1953) and his wife Elizabeth Calhoun Norton (1881–1947) founded the museum in 1941. Norton ran the Acme Steel Company in Chicago and built his fortune there. The museum's guiding mission: "to preserve for the future the beautiful things of the past." The institution expanded significantly over the decades, culminating in a landmark $100 million renovation by Pritzker Prize-winning architect [[Norman Foster]] of [[Foster + Partners]]. It reopened February 9, 2019. By 2003, the Norton had surpassed the [[John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art]] in Sarasota to become Florida's largest museum. | ||
== Founding and Early History == | == Founding and Early History == | ||
Ralph Hubbard Norton | Ralph Hubbard Norton headed the Acme Steel Company in Chicago. That wealth, combined with a genuine passion for art sparked by trips to the Art Institute of Chicago, drove his collecting starting in the 1920s through his death in 1953. He and Elizabeth initially bought pieces to decorate their home. But Norton's interest deepened. He wanted art for its own sake and assembled a significant collection of paintings and sculptures. | ||
In | In 1935, Norton semi-retired. The couple spent increasing time in the Palm Beaches, and they started thinking seriously about their collection's future. They decided to establish their own museum in West Palm Beach, giving South Florida its first major art institution. | ||
Construction began in 1940 on the Norton Gallery and School of Art between South Olive Avenue and South Dixie Highway. Norton hired [[Marion Sims Wyeth]] from the firm Wyeth, King & Johnson to design it. The structure featured a frieze and two bronze sculptures by [[Paul Manship]]. This Art Deco building opened to the public on February 8, 1941. | |||
The Nortons' collection at opening was impressive: excellent modern American and European paintings, works on paper, and Old Master pieces. Ralph kept adding to it until 1953. The works he and Elizabeth donated form the core of what you see today. His use of an endowment was remarkably innovative for the time, ensuring the museum's stability in perpetuity. The [[Florida Artists Hall of Fame]] inducted him in 1994. | |||
== The Permanent Collection == | == The Permanent Collection == | ||
Today the Norton's permanent collection comprises more than 8,900 works across five curatorial departments: European, American, Asian, Contemporary, and Photography. It's internationally recognized for depth and quality. | |||
The '''American Art''' collection | The '''American Art''' collection is the institution's historical foundation. Nearly 1,000 works span the 18th century through 1960, in paintings, sculpture, and works on paper. Norton himself started with American art, and his original purchases still anchor the collection. The strongest periods are the early 20th century. He acquired major paintings by [[George Bellows]], [[Charles Demuth]], [[Edward Hopper]], [[Georgia O'Keeffe]], [[Robert Motherwell]], and [[Charles Sheeler]]. Sculptures came from Paul Manship, Theodore Roszak, and William Zorach. Watercolors included work by Charles Burchfield, [[Winslow Homer]], and [[John Marin]]. Since 1954, the endowment has supported major purchases: Stuart Davis's ''New York Mural'' arrived in 1964, and [[Jackson Pollock]]'s ''Night Mist'' in 1971. | ||
The '''European Art''' | The '''European Art''' holdings are equally impressive in range. Spanning 1450 to 1950, they include ''Betrayal'' (1515) by Lucas Cranach I, Peter Paul Rubens' ''Study for the Head of Saint John the Evangelist'' (1611–1612), and Anthony van Dyck's portrait ''Philip, Lord Wharton'' (1639). Impressionist and later Modernist works feature Claude Monet's ''Gardens of the Villa Moreno, Bordighera'' (1884), Paul Gauguin's ''Christ in the Garden of Olives'' (1889), and Giorgio de Chirico's ''The Sailors' Barracks'' (1914). The collection also showcases significant paintings and sculptures by Constantin Brancusi, Georges Braque, Marc Chagall, [https://biography.wiki/a/Henri_Matisse Henri Matisse], and [https://biography.wiki/a/Pablo_Picasso Pablo Picasso]. | ||
The | The collection started with three particularly strong areas: Chinese bronzes and jades, European paintings (especially 19th-century French works), and American paintings and sculpture. Over 7,000 works now include European Impressionists, Modern Masters, American art from 1900 onward, extensive works on paper, and rich sculpture holdings. The travelling exhibitions have earned international recognition. Chinese pieces showcase carved jades and bronze vessels. Contemporary holdings embrace art from the 1960s onward. | ||
A significant gift arrived in 2018. Howard and Judie Ganek donated more than 100 contemporary works, including pieces by [https://biography.wiki/a/Damien_Hirst Damien Hirst], Anselm Kiefer, Sigmar Polke, Ed Ruscha, Kara Walker, Donald Judd, Matthew Barney, Nan Goldin, Cindy Sherman, Lorna Simpson, and Pipilotti Rist, among others. | |||
== Building and Architecture == | == Building and Architecture == | ||
The Norton | The Norton's eight-decade architectural story reflects growth, adaptation, and reinvention. When built in 1941, it was an elegant series of Art Deco-inspired single-story pavilions arranged around a central courtyard. [[Marion Sims Wyeth]]'s original design established an east-west axial layout that would guide future expansions. | ||
The | The 1990s brought the first major expansion. A successful fundraising campaign supported a renovation and expansion more than doubling the original footprint. Centerbrook Architects and Planners designed the project, completed in January 1997. Early 2000s saw another expansion. The Gail and Melvin Nessel Wing opened March 8, 2003, after two years of work. This "art first" expansion increased gallery space by seventy-five percent, allowing continuous display of the American, Chinese, Contemporary, and European collections plus Photography. The Nessel Wing featured fourteen new galleries and an elegant enclosed courtyard for educational and social events. [[Dale Chihuly]] created a glass ceiling installation. A cantilevered spiral staircase and three-story atrium completed the design, evoking the institution's artistic mission. | ||
=== The Foster + Partners Expansion (2019) === | === The Foster + Partners Expansion (2019) === | ||
After eight years and $100 million in renovation and expansion work, London-based Foster + Partners transformed the museum. It reopened February 9, 2019 following seven months of closure. The project added 59,000 square feet: new galleries, education spaces, public areas, and the first sculpture garden, all by Lord Norman Foster of Foster + Partners. | |||
Foster is | Foster is renowned for the Apple headquarters in California, the Gherkin in London, and Beijing's airport. His firm focused on restoring the clarity of Wyeth's 1941 vision. Foster explained: "The revitalization of the Norton is rooted in revealing and enhancing the original spirit of the building. Over the years, the museum had lost its sense of identity in the neighborhood. The entrance had been moved to a side road, and there was no presence of a museum. The new design redefines the museum's relationship with its surroundings by providing a main entrance on the original central axis, while creating new event and visitor spaces that will transform the museum into the social heart of the community." | ||
Two elements inspired Foster's redesign: an existing banyan fig tree and Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen's ''Typewriter Eraser, Scale X'' sculpture from 1999. Both shaped how the architect reoriented the museum's entrance and overall layout. The new west-facing forecourt features a 43-foot-high metal canopy with scalloped cutouts framing the towering tree. The shaded hollow creates an embedded reflecting pool that surrounds the massive sculpture. | |||
The renovation added 12,000 square feet of | The renovation added 12,000 square feet of galleries, new classrooms, a restaurant, a 210-seat auditorium, and the sculpture garden. The Pamela and Robert B. Goergen Garden replaced what was once a parking lot and the old entrance. This outdoor space, Foster's first public garden project, displays rotating sculptures. The Norton expansion represents just phase one of a Foster + Partners master plan that will eventually transform the entire 6.3-acre campus. | ||
== Programs and Awards == | == Programs and Awards == | ||
The Norton | The Norton's public programming is extensive and varied. Lectures & Conversations, Art After Dark, Special Performances, Art Classes and Workshops, Families & Teens, Students & Teachers, and the Artist in Residence Program all run regularly. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, with Sunday openings at 11 a.m. Art After Dark programming extends Friday nights. | ||
=== Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) === | === Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) === | ||
The Norton launched Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) in 2011. This annual exhibition series celebrates living female painters and sculptors with solo shows. The Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund/MLDauray Arts Initiative provides support. The museum has organized exhibitions for British painter Jenny Saville (2011), American painter Sylvia Plimack Mangold (2012), British sculptor Phyllida Barlow (2013), Swedish sculptor Krista Kristalova (2014), and African-born, L.A.-based painter Njideka Akunyili Crosby (2016), among others. RAW 2024 featured work by Rose B. Simpson, a member of the Santa Clara Pueblo in New Mexico. | |||
=== Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers === | === Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers === | ||
In 2012 | In 2012 came the Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers. This biennial international award honors photographers on the field's leading edge who haven't yet had a solo museum exhibition. Beth Rudin DeWoody, a prominent collector and longtime Norton supporter, created the prize to honor her father Lewis Rudin, the late New York City real estate developer. Winners receive $20,000. Argentine-born, Los Angeles-based artist Analia Sabin won in 2012. Israeli artist Rami Maymon took the 2014 prize. New York-based artist Elizabeth Bick won in 2016. | ||
== COVID-19 and Recent History == | == COVID-19 and Recent History == | ||
The Norton | The Norton closed for eight months in 2020 due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]] and reopened in November with new exhibits and safety measures. Since then it's continued expanding its collection and programming, solidifying its role as a cultural anchor in [[Palm Beach County]]. | ||
The museum's address is 1450 South Dixie Highway, [[West Palm Beach]], FL 33401. | The museum's address is 1450 South Dixie Highway, [[West Palm Beach]], FL 33401. Visit norton.org or call (561) 832-5196 for visitor information. | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
Latest revision as of 21:05, 23 April 2026
The Norton Museum of Art sits at 1450 South Dixie Highway in West Palm Beach, Florida. It's Florida's largest art museum, housing a world-class collection spanning American, European, Contemporary, and Asian art alongside an impressive photography wing. Ralph Hubbard Norton (1875–1953) and his wife Elizabeth Calhoun Norton (1881–1947) founded the museum in 1941. Norton ran the Acme Steel Company in Chicago and built his fortune there. The museum's guiding mission: "to preserve for the future the beautiful things of the past." The institution expanded significantly over the decades, culminating in a landmark $100 million renovation by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Norman Foster of Foster + Partners. It reopened February 9, 2019. By 2003, the Norton had surpassed the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota to become Florida's largest museum.
Founding and Early History
Ralph Hubbard Norton headed the Acme Steel Company in Chicago. That wealth, combined with a genuine passion for art sparked by trips to the Art Institute of Chicago, drove his collecting starting in the 1920s through his death in 1953. He and Elizabeth initially bought pieces to decorate their home. But Norton's interest deepened. He wanted art for its own sake and assembled a significant collection of paintings and sculptures.
In 1935, Norton semi-retired. The couple spent increasing time in the Palm Beaches, and they started thinking seriously about their collection's future. They decided to establish their own museum in West Palm Beach, giving South Florida its first major art institution.
Construction began in 1940 on the Norton Gallery and School of Art between South Olive Avenue and South Dixie Highway. Norton hired Marion Sims Wyeth from the firm Wyeth, King & Johnson to design it. The structure featured a frieze and two bronze sculptures by Paul Manship. This Art Deco building opened to the public on February 8, 1941.
The Nortons' collection at opening was impressive: excellent modern American and European paintings, works on paper, and Old Master pieces. Ralph kept adding to it until 1953. The works he and Elizabeth donated form the core of what you see today. His use of an endowment was remarkably innovative for the time, ensuring the museum's stability in perpetuity. The Florida Artists Hall of Fame inducted him in 1994.
The Permanent Collection
Today the Norton's permanent collection comprises more than 8,900 works across five curatorial departments: European, American, Asian, Contemporary, and Photography. It's internationally recognized for depth and quality.
The American Art collection is the institution's historical foundation. Nearly 1,000 works span the 18th century through 1960, in paintings, sculpture, and works on paper. Norton himself started with American art, and his original purchases still anchor the collection. The strongest periods are the early 20th century. He acquired major paintings by George Bellows, Charles Demuth, Edward Hopper, Georgia O'Keeffe, Robert Motherwell, and Charles Sheeler. Sculptures came from Paul Manship, Theodore Roszak, and William Zorach. Watercolors included work by Charles Burchfield, Winslow Homer, and John Marin. Since 1954, the endowment has supported major purchases: Stuart Davis's New York Mural arrived in 1964, and Jackson Pollock's Night Mist in 1971.
The European Art holdings are equally impressive in range. Spanning 1450 to 1950, they include Betrayal (1515) by Lucas Cranach I, Peter Paul Rubens' Study for the Head of Saint John the Evangelist (1611–1612), and Anthony van Dyck's portrait Philip, Lord Wharton (1639). Impressionist and later Modernist works feature Claude Monet's Gardens of the Villa Moreno, Bordighera (1884), Paul Gauguin's Christ in the Garden of Olives (1889), and Giorgio de Chirico's The Sailors' Barracks (1914). The collection also showcases significant paintings and sculptures by Constantin Brancusi, Georges Braque, Marc Chagall, Henri Matisse, and Pablo Picasso.
The collection started with three particularly strong areas: Chinese bronzes and jades, European paintings (especially 19th-century French works), and American paintings and sculpture. Over 7,000 works now include European Impressionists, Modern Masters, American art from 1900 onward, extensive works on paper, and rich sculpture holdings. The travelling exhibitions have earned international recognition. Chinese pieces showcase carved jades and bronze vessels. Contemporary holdings embrace art from the 1960s onward.
A significant gift arrived in 2018. Howard and Judie Ganek donated more than 100 contemporary works, including pieces by Damien Hirst, Anselm Kiefer, Sigmar Polke, Ed Ruscha, Kara Walker, Donald Judd, Matthew Barney, Nan Goldin, Cindy Sherman, Lorna Simpson, and Pipilotti Rist, among others.
Building and Architecture
The Norton's eight-decade architectural story reflects growth, adaptation, and reinvention. When built in 1941, it was an elegant series of Art Deco-inspired single-story pavilions arranged around a central courtyard. Marion Sims Wyeth's original design established an east-west axial layout that would guide future expansions.
The 1990s brought the first major expansion. A successful fundraising campaign supported a renovation and expansion more than doubling the original footprint. Centerbrook Architects and Planners designed the project, completed in January 1997. Early 2000s saw another expansion. The Gail and Melvin Nessel Wing opened March 8, 2003, after two years of work. This "art first" expansion increased gallery space by seventy-five percent, allowing continuous display of the American, Chinese, Contemporary, and European collections plus Photography. The Nessel Wing featured fourteen new galleries and an elegant enclosed courtyard for educational and social events. Dale Chihuly created a glass ceiling installation. A cantilevered spiral staircase and three-story atrium completed the design, evoking the institution's artistic mission.
The Foster + Partners Expansion (2019)
After eight years and $100 million in renovation and expansion work, London-based Foster + Partners transformed the museum. It reopened February 9, 2019 following seven months of closure. The project added 59,000 square feet: new galleries, education spaces, public areas, and the first sculpture garden, all by Lord Norman Foster of Foster + Partners.
Foster is renowned for the Apple headquarters in California, the Gherkin in London, and Beijing's airport. His firm focused on restoring the clarity of Wyeth's 1941 vision. Foster explained: "The revitalization of the Norton is rooted in revealing and enhancing the original spirit of the building. Over the years, the museum had lost its sense of identity in the neighborhood. The entrance had been moved to a side road, and there was no presence of a museum. The new design redefines the museum's relationship with its surroundings by providing a main entrance on the original central axis, while creating new event and visitor spaces that will transform the museum into the social heart of the community."
Two elements inspired Foster's redesign: an existing banyan fig tree and Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen's Typewriter Eraser, Scale X sculpture from 1999. Both shaped how the architect reoriented the museum's entrance and overall layout. The new west-facing forecourt features a 43-foot-high metal canopy with scalloped cutouts framing the towering tree. The shaded hollow creates an embedded reflecting pool that surrounds the massive sculpture.
The renovation added 12,000 square feet of galleries, new classrooms, a restaurant, a 210-seat auditorium, and the sculpture garden. The Pamela and Robert B. Goergen Garden replaced what was once a parking lot and the old entrance. This outdoor space, Foster's first public garden project, displays rotating sculptures. The Norton expansion represents just phase one of a Foster + Partners master plan that will eventually transform the entire 6.3-acre campus.
Programs and Awards
The Norton's public programming is extensive and varied. Lectures & Conversations, Art After Dark, Special Performances, Art Classes and Workshops, Families & Teens, Students & Teachers, and the Artist in Residence Program all run regularly. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, with Sunday openings at 11 a.m. Art After Dark programming extends Friday nights.
Recognition of Art by Women (RAW)
The Norton launched Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) in 2011. This annual exhibition series celebrates living female painters and sculptors with solo shows. The Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund/MLDauray Arts Initiative provides support. The museum has organized exhibitions for British painter Jenny Saville (2011), American painter Sylvia Plimack Mangold (2012), British sculptor Phyllida Barlow (2013), Swedish sculptor Krista Kristalova (2014), and African-born, L.A.-based painter Njideka Akunyili Crosby (2016), among others. RAW 2024 featured work by Rose B. Simpson, a member of the Santa Clara Pueblo in New Mexico.
Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers
In 2012 came the Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers. This biennial international award honors photographers on the field's leading edge who haven't yet had a solo museum exhibition. Beth Rudin DeWoody, a prominent collector and longtime Norton supporter, created the prize to honor her father Lewis Rudin, the late New York City real estate developer. Winners receive $20,000. Argentine-born, Los Angeles-based artist Analia Sabin won in 2012. Israeli artist Rami Maymon took the 2014 prize. New York-based artist Elizabeth Bick won in 2016.
COVID-19 and Recent History
The Norton closed for eight months in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and reopened in November with new exhibits and safety measures. Since then it's continued expanding its collection and programming, solidifying its role as a cultural anchor in Palm Beach County.
The museum's address is 1450 South Dixie Highway, West Palm Beach, FL 33401. Visit norton.org or call (561) 832-5196 for visitor information.
References
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