American Visionary Art Museum

museum, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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Also known as: AVAM
Quick Facts
Date:
1995 - present
Areas Of Involvement:
outsider art

American Visionary Art Museum (AVAM), landmark museum in Baltimore, Maryland, displaying works by self-taught artists whose aesthetic sensibilities are personal rather than developed from an existing cultural tradition.

(Read Sister Wendy’s Britannica essay on art appreciation.)

The mission of AVAM is to collect and display the work of self-taught artists. Although many of these artists are sometimes characterized as folk artists, AVAM deliberately avoids folk art per se, promoting instead artists whose unique creative vision and intuitive approach set them apart from the established or inherited traditions that typify folk art or the academic fine arts. AVAM, located on Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, opened in 1995 as a result of a grassroots movement led by its cofounder, director, and lead curator Rebecca Alban Hoffberger. Having left high school before graduating and having established AVAM without input from the more traditionally educated collectors and scholars of outsider art, she was a controversial figure in the art world.

(Read Glenn Lowry’s Britannica essay on "Art Museums & Their Digital Future.")

The museum’s self-conscious eccentricity and its embrace of the unique, the fantastic, and the avant-garde are reflected in its architecture as well as its collection. AVAM’s main building combines a historical industrial structure with new architectural elements, including an enormous metal staircase cast by artist David Hess. Its exterior is covered in mosaics created by at-risk and underserved youth from the community as part of an apprenticeship program that began in 2000. The main building’s six galleries total some 35,000 square feet (3,250 square metres), displaying some of the 4,000 pieces in the permanent collection as well as temporary exhibitions, which occupy the bulk of the gallery space. The museum space also includes the Tall Sculpture Barn (once a warehouse owned by a whiskey distiller), the Sculpture Plaza, and the Wildflower Garden. In 2004 AVAM developed another sculpture plaza, added an outdoor movie theatre, and renovated a second whiskey warehouse to house a classroom and a meeting space.

Although the museum maintains some continuity through its permanent collection, it regularly appoints guest curators to establish new exhibits.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Alicja Zelazko.