American Folk Art Museum
- Date:
- 1963 - present
- Areas Of Involvement:
- folk arts
American Folk Art Museum, art museum in Manhattan, New York, dedicated to the collection, exhibition, and study of American folk art and outsider art.
(Read Sister Wendy’s Britannica essay on art appreciation.)
Since its first incarnation in 1961—when it was known as the Museum of Early American Folk Arts—the museum has focused on collecting, displaying, and studying works in a variety of media created by self-taught American artists and artisans. It carried out this mission to critical acclaim under difficult circumstances and at changing venues. The institution was renamed the Museum of American Folk Art in 1966 and the American Folk Art Museum in 2001, when it moved to a new purpose-built location in Midtown Manhattan. The museum occupied that facility until 2011, when it sold the building to its neighbour, the Museum of Modern Art. The collection returned to the museum’s remaining branch in Lincoln Square, Manhattan, the location it had occupied in 1989–2001.
(Read Glenn Lowry’s Britannica essay on "Art Museums & Their Digital Future.")
The museum’s permanent collection includes fine art and Americana dating from the 17th century to contemporary times, with objects ranging from weather vanes to more-traditional fine art, such as paintings, drawings, and photographs. Textiles, quilts, sculptures, and other three-dimensional pieces offer insights into various elements of American cultural heritage. A focal point of the 20th-century collection is the work of Henry Darger, a Chicago folk artist who produced more than 30,000 pages of text and 300 watercolours, many more than 9 feet (2.7 metres) long. Darger worked in total obscurity until just before his death in 1973.