Davis Museum And Cultural Center- Wellesley College  
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Recent Acquisitions
As one of the oldest college museums in America and one placed among the first colleges offering degrees in the history of art, the Davis Museum and Cultural Center has a long history focusing on the importance of the collections in a liberal arts education. From its beginning in 1875, the permanent collection has grown to approximately 8,500 works presenting the creative accomplishments, thoughts, ideas and aspirations of an array of cultures and civilizations over a 3,500 year period.

The DMCC’s collections have been tailored to support its mission by having them serve as an inspiration for teaching and research in all fields, for cultural understanding on- and off- campus, and for its role as a key resource for regional public schools. As a college museum, an attempt is made to maintain a broad range of historical examples of technical and aesthetic achievements. In response to the College’s increasingly diverse community, the Museum is making an ongoing effort to incorporate artworks into the collections from cultures that previously had been under-represented. We also try to maintain examples of artists’ works and ideas as well as periods that may not be seen in other regional museums and that both compliment and expand upon course offerings. Students in the museum studies course help shape the collections by making acquisition recommendations, following procedures established in our collections management policy.

Pablo Picasso, Dream and Lie of Franco, 1937.

Oscar Bluemner, Untitled, 1930.

Maya, Standing Man with Shield, 600-900A.D.

Blanche Lazzell, Greenmont II, 1930.

Giorgio Ghisi (after Michelangelo Buonarotti), The Eritrean Sibyl, 1549.

© 2004 - Davis Museum and Cultural Center
Provider Name: Jim Olson - jolson@wellesley.edu
Created: January 14, 2003
Last Modified: September 30, 2005
Expires: January 2, 2005
above: John Rossetti, Museum Preparator/Collections Care Specialist, installing Otto Dix’s Kupplerin (Procuress), 1923. Color lithograph printed from three stones, 23 1/2 x 18 3/8 in. Museum purchase, The Dorothy Johnston Towne (Class of 1923) Fund, 2002.26. above: Andy Warhol, Mao (#93) (detail), 1972. Screenprint, 36 x 36 in. Museum purchase, Erna Bottigheimer Sands (Class of 1929) Art Acquisition Fund, 2002.102. above: George Bellows, River-Front (detail), 1923 - 24. Lithograph, 17 3/8 x 22 7/8 in. Museum purchase, Mary Clothier Slade Fund, 2002.89.