Museum of the Dog

AKC Museum of the Dog is a nonprofit canine museum at 101 Park Avenue in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. The museum features exhibits that include: Dogs in film, dogs of presidents, war dogs, dogs in exploration. The museum features one of the largest collections of dog-related art.

History
The museum began in 1982 with donations from benefactors Frank Sabella, Marie Moore, Nancy-Carol Draper and the Westminster Kennel Foundation. The permanent collection of art consists of Bronze and ceramic sculpture, and paintings. The museum is a subsidiary of the American Kennel Club.

The museum displays artwork by renowned artists: Edwin Landseer, Maud Earl and Arthur Wardle. Much of the artwork is from the 19th century and the early 20th century.

A great deal of the work is from the late 1800s (the AKC was founded in 1884) and the early 20th century, with little abstract or contemporary art.

Previous locations

 * 1982, New York Life Building at 51 Madison Avenue
 * 1987, Queeny Park, West St Louis County, Missouri
 * 2017–present, 101 Park Avenue, New York 10178

Exhibitions

 * Fashionable Dogs (September 7 - December 31, 2023)
 * Identity and Restraint: Art of the Dog Collar (April 5 - September 3, 2023)
 * Dogs of War and Peace: Wounded Warrior Dogs (March 16 -July 19, 2022)
 * 9/11 Remembered: Search and Rescue Dogs (September 7, 2021 - January 2, 2022)
 * Women and Dogs in Art in the Twentieth Century
 * Women and Dogs in Art
 * Dog Days of Summer