The museum is apparently now billing itself as the New Columbus Miseum of Art. This renovation and addition includes the Walter Wing--a two-storey exhibit space; a "cinematic facade," a phrase coined by the architect Michael Bongiorno, which refers to the views from the north and south ends of the Walter Wing; a light-filled atrium, which connects the new wing and the historic building, providing a lobby/entrance; a new cafe and museum store; and an event pavilion (not pictured here).
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The north facade with the new entrance and new exhibit space--the Margaret M. Walter Wing |
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The entrance with a covered porch which leads to the light-filled atrum (the lobby and connecting hall between the new wing and historic building) |
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The dramatically cantilevered second storeyThe new bookstore is under this section. |
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Looking west |
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The long east facade |
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Pre-patinated copper claddingThe architect Michael Bongiorno explains that he wanted to create a dialogue between the old and the new; "in particular you can see this in the pre-patinated copper material on the exterior of the upper gallery in the addition. It is a beautiful, natural material relating to the bronze detailing of the historic building and riffing on the patinated copper roofs and spires of the First Congregation Church nearby while creating a striking presense in its own, new way, against a backdrop of natural limestone" (brochure, unpaginated). |
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View from Broad Street--the front of the historic building |
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Paul Feeley, Karnac (Sculpture Court), 1966, fabricated 1968/2015, painted aluminum |
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Kenneth Snelson, V-X, 1984-5, stainless steel, wire |