Orlando Museum of Art

(above: Orlando Museum of Art Exterior. Photo by OMA staff)

Orlando, FL

407-896-4231

http://www.omart.org

 

Resource Library articles and essays honoring the American experience through its art:

The Sources: Paintings and Drawings by Steve Lotz (3/30/16)

Lamar Peterson: Suburbia Sublime (10/9/14)

Nature and Spirit: American Art of the 19th and 20th Centuries; text by Hansen Mulford (3/19/10)

Orlando Museum of Art Acquisitions Programs (5/4/04)

From Goodnight Moon to Art Dog: The World of Clement, Edith and Thacher Hurd (1/26/04)

Something All Our Own: The Grant Hill Collection of African American Art (9/2/03)

 

Frank Moore: Green Thumb in a Dark Eden; essay by Sue Scott (7/12/02)

Frank Moore: Green Thumb in a Dark Eden (3/18/02)

An American Palette: Paintings Celebrating American Art and Life (11/19/01)

Orlando Museum of Art Receives Gift of Carolyn Brady Painting (3/13/01)

Edward Henry Potthast, American Impressionist: Selections from the Gross Family Collection (3/8/01)

Grandma Moses in the 21st Century (3/7/01)

 

Arte Latino: Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum (8/21/00)

In Praise of Nature: Ansel Adams and Photographers of the American West (3/3/00)

Twentieth-Century Still-Life Paintings from The Phillips Collection (12/4/99)

Art and Nature: The Hudson River School, Paintings from the Albany Institute of History & Art (7/27/99)

Clyde Butcher, Wilderness Photographer, at Orlando Museum of Art (3/10/99)

Our Nation's Colors: A Celebration of American Painting - Selections from the Wichita Art Museum (8/98)

 

About the Orlando Museum of Art

The Orlando Museum of Art (OMA) is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization directly serving greater Orlando, Orange County and Central Florida. The museum was founded in 1924 by a group of art enthusiasts.

The Orlando Museum of Art's mission is to inspire creativity, passion and intellectual curiosity by connecting people with art and new ideas.

OMA presents a rotating series of temporary exhibitions originated by the Museum matched by travelling shows that are complemented by permanent collection exhibitions and continuous education programs for people of all ages. OMA hosts year-round workshops, art appreciation classes, lectures, seminars, films and guided tours for children and adults.

In 2014, the museum launched the exhibition initiative titled The Florida Prize in Contemporary Art which features work produced by the most progressive and thought-provoking emerging and mid-career artists living and working in the State of Florida today.

OMA is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) and is a member of the North American Reciprocal Museums program.

 

History:

The history of the Orlando Museum of Art (OMA) is one of growth guided by community leadership. OMA was founded in 1924 as Orlando Art Association. Its name was changed to the Loch Haven Art Center in 1960, and again to the Orlando Museum of Art in 1986.

The organization began as a small art center with a group of artists who met informally in the early 1920s, displaying and critiquing their work. In the late 1950s, the community raised funds to build a new facility designed by James Gamble Rogers III, which was completed in 1960.

OMA began to collect art in 1960 when it accepted the donations of important American paintings by Georgia O'Keeffe and Charles Sheeler. OMA continued its expansion, working with architects Nils Schweizer and Duane Stark, both students of Frank Lloyd Wright. By 1969 OMA had added new galleries, a 250-seat auditorium, three studio classrooms, a library, vault and offices.

During the 1970s, OMA was given a major collection of Art of the Ancient Americas, and additional works of African Art, and also formed the nucleus of its acclaimed Contemporary American Graphics Collection.

In 1985, OMA was designated a "major cultural institution" by the State of Florida.

In the 1997, OMA completed a $13.5 million facility renovation and building project which expanded the facility to its current size of 80,000 square feet.

 

Collections:

OMA's collection boasts more than 2,400 objects including Contemporary Art, American Art from the 18th century to 1945, Art of the Ancient Americas and African Art. The Art of the Ancient Americas collection is among the finest of its kind in the Southeastern United States.

 

Visiting the Museum:

Please see the museum's website for hours and fees.

Image and text provided by Orlando Museum of Art, March, 2016

 

Why was this sub-index page prepared?

When Resource Library publishes over time more than one article concerning an institution, there is created as an additional resource for readers a sub-index page containing links to each Resource Library article or essay concerning that institution, plus available information on its location and other descriptive information.

See our Museums Explained to learn about the "inner workings" of art museums and the functions of staff members. In the exhibitions section find out how to get the most out of a museum visit. See definitions for a glossary of museum-related words used in articles.

To help you plan visits to institutions exhibiting American art when traveling see Sources of Articles Indexed by State within the United States.

Unless otherwise noted, all text and image materials relating to the above institutional source were provided by that source. Before reproducing or transmitting text or images please read Resource Library's user agreement.

Our catalogues provide many more useful resources.

American Representational Art has links to dozens of topics.

Distinguished Artists is a national registry of historic artists.

About Resource Library

 

Resource Library is a free online publication of nonprofit Traditional Fine Arts Organization (TFAO). Since 1997, Resource Library and its predecessor Resource Library Magazine have cumulatively published online 1,300+ articles and essays written by hundreds of identified authors, thousands of other texts not attributable to named authors, plus 24,000+ images, all providing educational and informational content related to American representational art. Texts and related images are provided almost exclusively by nonprofit art museum, gallery and art center sources.

All published materials provide educational and informational content to students, scholars, teachers and others. Most published materials relate to exhibitions. Materials may include whole exhibition gallery guides, brochures or catalogues or texts from them, perviously published magazine or journal articles, wall panels and object labels, audio tour scripts, play scripts, interviews, blogs, checklists and news releases, plus related images.

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