THE SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION AND ARTSTOR SHARE IMAGES FROM THE 
GUGGENHEIM'S PERMANENT COLLECTION FOR EDUCATIONAL USE

The Guggenheim Museum's holdings are now available for more than 1,400 museums, 
K-12 schools, community colleges, and universities worldwide

(New York, NY) May 22, 2012 - The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and ARTstor 
have released more than 750 images of major artworks from the Guggenheim's 
permanent collection, available in the ARTstor Digital Library. Forthcoming 
additions will include another 10,000 images of artworks, exhibition 
installation views, and architectural photographs of the various Guggenheim 
museums in New York, Bilbao, Venice, and Berlin.

The treasures in the collection include modern and contemporary art by Louise 
Bourgeois, Paul C?zanne, Marc Chagall, Willem de Kooning, Paul Klee, Robert 
Mapplethorpe, Claes Oldenburg, Cindy Sherman, and Vincent van Gogh, among many 
others. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation's collection joins more than one 
million digital images in the arts, architecture, humanities, and sciences 
currently included in the ARTstor Digital Library, from partners such as the 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Berlin State Museums, and 
R?union des Mus?es Nationaux.

"The Guggenheim is pleased to join ARTstor in sharing the breadth and diversity 
of the Guggenheim Foundation's collection and archives with the educational 
community," stated Nancy Spector, Deputy Director and Chief Curator, Solomon R. 
Guggenheim Museum. "Education has been a central mandate of the Guggenheim 
since its founding in 1937. Through this collaboration, the museum further 
expands its reach by providing digital access to works in our collection, 
documentation of major exhibitions, and architectural photography of the Frank 
Lloyd Wright and Frank Gehry buildings."

Christine Kuan, ARTstor's Chief Curatorial Officer and Vice President for 
External Affairs, states: "These important images from the Guggenheim's superb 
collections will be widely taught and studied via ARTstor Digital Library's 
network of educational and scholarly users-impacting current and future 
generations of students, scholars, curators, and researchers around the world 
for many years to come."

Since its inception in 1937, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation has been a 
preeminent institution for the collection, preservation, and research of modern 
and contemporary art. The global network, which began in the 1970s when the 
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, was joined by the Peggy Guggenheim 
Collection, Venice, has since expanded to include several other museums, 
prominently the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. The Guggenheim Museum, designed by 
Frank Lloyd Wright, is home to a renowned collection of Impressionist, 
Post-Impressionist, early modern, and contemporary art, while the Peggy 
Guggenheim Collection houses one of the most important holdings of early 
20th-century European and American art in Italy. The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 
designed by Frank Gehry, features a permanent collection that spans from the 
mid-20th century to the present day, concentrating on post-war painting and 
sculpture in America and Europe.

The ARTstor Digital Library provides 1.4+ million images in the arts and 
sciences and a Workspace to search, browse, present, and save images both 
online and offline for teaching and research purposes. ARTstor is a nonprofit 
501(c)3 organization with a mission to further education and scholarship 
through digital technologies. For more information, visit 
artstor.org<http://artstor.org/>.

PRESS CONTACT: Giovanni Garcia-Fenech, Communications Manager, giovanni.garcia 
at artstor.org<mailto:giovanni.garcia at artstor.org> or 212 500 2404

# # #

Giovanni Garcia-Fenech
Communications Manager
ARTstor
151 East 61st Street
New York, NY 10065
212.500.2404 tel
212.500.2401 fax
giovanni.garcia-fenech at artstor.org<mailto:giovanni.garcia-fenech at 
artstor.org>
artstor.org<http://www.artstor.org>
facebook.com/ARTstor<http://www.facebook.com/ARTstor>
artstor.org/blog<http://artstor.wordpress.com/>

Reply via email to