Kreeger Museum

The Kreeger Museum is a modern and contemporary non-profit art museum located in Washington D.C. It is located on Foxhall Road, one of the wealthy residential neighbourhoods of the US capital, in the former home of Carmen and David Lloyd Kreeger, pillars of the Washington D.C. arts and cultural community, and it contains the art collection of nineteenth- and twentieth-century paintings and sculpture they acquired from 1952 to 1988.

Architecture
The building, among Washington's premier modern mansions, was designed in 1963 by Pritzker Prize winning architect Philip Johnson (known for building in the "International Style" at that time), together with Richard Foster, and sits on five and a half wooded acres in Northwest DC. The design brief was for a private residence that, one day, would become a museum habouring the extensive art collection acquired by the Kreegers. The building served as the Kreeger home from 1967 to 1990. On June 1, 1994, the Kreeger Museum opened to the public.

Johnson proposed a modern interpretation of a Roman villa, complete with sculpture terraces and reflecting pools, set in a décor of sprawling indoor and outdoor gardens. This may have resulted in his choice to build with travertine, a kind of young limestone, often used in Ancient Roman architecture and in neoclassical buildings, long the favourite style for government buildings in Washington, but mostly eschewed by other proponents of modernist architecture.

The house is protected from the main road by a 435 ft (132,5 m) long wall in rough-hewn travertine. For the Kreeger residence, Johnson envisaged a composition of asymmetrically arranged, groin-vaulted cubes with travertine walls facing the street and glass walls that open up vistas onto the wooded site surrounding the house. The building with a gross surface area of 24,000 ft2 (2230 m2) was designed on the basis of a modular system of cubes measuring 22 x 22 x 22 ft (6,7 x 6,7 x 6,7 m). The modular concept allowed the cubes to be adapted for different functions : living space, gallery space, and often, both. The largest open space in the building, The Great Hall, a two-story space that rises up to 25 feet (7,6 m), is topped by 3 vaulted domes that create a natural amplification system and provide for the excellent acoustics especially suited to chamber and piano music.

The architect's special consideration for the use of natural light and the articulation of structure, expressed by the travertine-covered reinforced concrete frame, the slim vaults covering each 22-foot module, or the baluster-like posts of the steel trusses that separate each vault, is paramount and complements the clarity of the plan. Without knowing the architect’s intention, visitors experience an unusual calm in moving from one space to another. The particular dimensional units of similar size and the attention of the architect to progression through them is the “secret” to the pleasure of experiencing this particular building.

In the original design, the art galleries on all three levels did not invade the private areas but were adjacent to them, free-flowing spaces as opposed to the contained cubes of family rooms. Walls in the gallery spaces are covered with cream-coloured carpet to blend with the natural stone which facilitates the changing of paintings. Most rooms in the house have oiled brown chevron wood floors, which adds warmth to the beige interior.

Johnson's melding of historicism and modernism results in a somewhat romantic yet functional house in the grand manner, where the same module, same clerestory lighting, and same tent-like vaults shelter intimate and public spaces alike.

The building was constructed from 1966 to 1969 and made on the basis of a structural design using steel, concrete blocks and bricks. Seventeen concrete domes form the distinctive roof and are covered with a synthetic rubberized waterproofing material. The modern exterior, inspired in part by Philip Johnson's admiration for and prior collaboration with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe on the Seagram Building in New York, is clad with 900 tonnes of hand-selected Italian travertine slabs. Richard Foster, Johnson's partner, supervised the construction of the building and travelled twice to the quarries in Italy to oversee the selection and labelling of the slabs.

Collection
The Kreeger collection comprises mainly works from the 1850s to the present.

Painting collection
The nineteenth century is represented by work of Corot, Daubigny, Fantin-Latour and Vincent van Gogh. The Impressionists and Post-Impressionists are represented by nine Claude Monet paintings, as well as works by Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas and Camille Pissarro.

From his early work to the end of his life, Pablo Picasso's career can be traced through his nine paintings at the Kreeger.

Other 20th century European artists include Edvard Munch, Max Beckmann, Jean Dubuffet, Wassily Kandinsky, Marc Chagall, George Braque, Fernand Léger, Pierre Bonnard, Paul Delvaux, James Ensor, and Joan Miró.

American artists include, among others, Alexander Calder, Arshile Gorky, Clyfford Still, Frank Stella, Helen Frankenthaler, Joan Mitchell, Anne Truitt and James Rosenquist. Washington artists represented include William Christenberry, Gene Davis, Thomas Downing, Sam Gilliam and Betsy Stewart.

Sculpture collection
The museum galleries house work by European artists such as Kenneth Armitage, Constantin Brancusi, Jacques Lipchitz, Auguste Renoir and Medardo Rosso.

Auguste Rodin has five works in the collection.

American sculptors represented are: Harry Bertoia, Alexander Calder, Richard Deutsch, a.o.

The permanent collection also includes examples of art from west and central Africa and Asia integrated throughout the museum.

Prints and drawings collection
The museum has a well documented collection on paper by the artists and sculptors already present in the collection with other works.

Sculpture Garden
The Sculpture Garden, an extension of the Museum, expands the outdoor exhibition space and affords visitors additional opportunities to experience art in a natural setting. The Sculpture Garden features work by Rainer Lagemann, George Rickey, Lucien Wercollier and notable Washington, DC- area artists Kendall Buster, Carol Brown Goldberg, Dalya Luttwak, and Foon Sham.

The Sculpture Terrace features works by Jean Arp, Aristide Maillol, Jacques Lipchitz, Henry Moore, Isamu Noguchi, and Francesco Somaini.

The Reflecting Pool Terrace features Inventions, a series of six large-scale sculptures by John L. Dreyfuss.