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About the Collection


Among the first U.S. museums devoted to collecting American art, Montclair Art Museum was founded in 1914 with two parallel collections of Native and non-Native work, each with dedicated gallery space. Our continually evolving collection—today numbering more than 12,000 objects—has been widely recognized for its quality and depth. It features work by a range of artists from across the United States and Native North America dating from the eighteenth to the twenty-first centuries. Highlights include landscapes by Montclair-based George Inness, basketry, regalia, beadwork, and more. Works from the permanent collection rotate regularly in our galleries.

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Edward Hopper (1182–1967), "Coast Guard Station," 1929, Oil on canvas, 29 x 43 in. (73.7 x 109.2 cm), Museum Purchase; Picture Buying Fund, 1937.21.
American Art
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Jaun Quick-To-See-Smith, "War Shirt," 1993
Native American Art
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Crown for the Victor (1896) by William Couper
Collection Spotlight
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MAM Curators, Gail Stavinsky: Chief Curator (left), and Laura Allen: Curator of Native American Art (right).
Curators
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Using the Collection
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Installation view of "Open configuration options Open configuration optionsFacebookTwitterinstagramPrimary tabs View(active tab) Edit Outline Delete Manage display Revisions Devel Open Color Riot! How Color Changed Navajo Textiles configuration options Color Riot! How Color Changed Navajo Textiles"
Donating to the Collection
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MAM holding a printout depicting a painting. He is holding the printout up next to the painting it is depicting, comparing the two.
Rights & Reproductions
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Birds eye view of multiple art books scattered across a table. At the center is "Montclair Art Museum: Selected Works" by Mary Birmingham, Twig Johnson, Diane P. Fischer, and Gail Stavitsky.
Research, Information, & Loan Requests