Collections Summer 2014 Volume 100 | Page 4

ENHANCING THE COLLECTION Collecting for Columbia rank cultural presence in the Southeastern United States. The strengths of the CMA’s collection may be divided up into the following broad areas, which have served as the collecting focus for approximately the past 10 years: American, European, Contemporary, and Asian art. The Museum collects paintings, works on paper, decorative art, and furniture in each of these broad categories. Having focus areas for the permanent collection allows Museum staff, board members, and interested others to more easily identify strengths as well as weaknesses. In European art, for example, we have a wonderful Monet painting, but could use a Picasso. To become that firstrank cultural presence we wish to be, the CMA needs to fill what are thought of as “holes” in the collection—places where we are missing the work of an important artist or an example of an historically important style. Osamu Kobayashi, American, born 1984. Frozen Ghost, Black Hole, 2010, oil on canvas. Gift of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York; Hassam, Speicher, Betts and Symons Funds, 2013, to the CMA in 2014. Will South, chief curator The Columbia Museum of Art is a living organism. The Museum’s galleries expand and contract with the breath of our evolving collection as we grow. The curatorial process of bringing in new acquisitions feeds this body. The goal is to provide the most suitable and highest-quality art works to cultivate the Museum’s growth in a sustainable and lifeenriching way that continually inspires our community, our members, and our visitors. The CMA is a medium-sized museum founded in 1950. Our collection numbers approximately 7,000 objects, a number 2 columbiamuseum.org that includes the extraordinary Samuel H. Kress Collection of primarily Italian and Dutch Renaissance, Baroque, and 17th-century paintings, as well as the more recent Dorothy and Herbert Vogel collection of modern art. The possibilities for every museum’s space, staff, and resources mean that museums must grow responsibly and with a view to what is achievable. Therefore, museums adopt what are called “collecting strategies,” which are documents that clearly spell out the methods that museums use to reach their goals. This past year, the CMA adopted a collecting strategy designed to help us reach the goal of becoming a first- The CMA actively works to fill these holes, knowing as an institution that we can never acquire all the things we ideally would like to have. Building the collection is therefore an ongoing compromise: We know ideally what we would like to add to our collection, and then work as hard as we can to come as close as possible to that ideal. This is where the CMA’s new collecting strategy comes in handy—it was written, discussed, rewritten, and discussed some more until it became a document pointing out steps we may take to build the best collection possible. What are some of those steps? First, realize that as a mid-sized museum we realistically cannot collect everything. What we already collect—European, American, Asian, and contemporary art— is a lot! By clarifying our focus areas we