Galleries
Anthony Randazzo Family Gallery From the medieval period through the exuberance of the Baroque >>
Marvin H. and Mary M. Davidson Gallery European and American Art 1650–1830 >>
Museum Apse This gallery focuses on “grand manner” European and American art from 1850 to 1915. >>
Thomas H. and Polly W. Bredt Gallery 18th- and 19th-Century European and American painting and sculpture >>
Albertine Monroe-Brown Study-Storage Gallery Visible or “open” art storage galleries are located on the second floor of Alumni Memorial Hall >>
European and American Decorative Art Reopening the 360-degree views of the Apse and providing a point of transition between Alumni Memorial Hall and the new Frankel Wing >>
A. Alfred Taubman Gallery The Museum's soaring, and at over 5,000 square feet its most spacious, special exhibition space.
Robert and Lillian Montalto Bohlen Gallery of African Art African art from a range of regions and traditions is on view in this light-filled oasis in the new Frankel Wing >>
Asian Crossroads Gallery Displaying works from central, south, and southeast Asia >>
South and Southeast Asian Gallery A marble column from a Jain temple in northwest India sitting beside a sculpture of the Hindu god Ganesh speak to the range of cultures >>
Japanese Gallery UMMA’s Japanese collection has notable strengths in painting and ceramics of the early modern era. >>
Modern Art Foyer Moving to the Mezzanine Level, visitors will encounter the first of a suite of galleries dedicated to modern and contemporary art >>
Joan and Bob Tisch Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art Don’t miss Max Beckmann’s Begin the Beguine >>
The Jan and David Brandon Family Bridge This space is both literally a bridge across the triple-height Vertical Gallery and a transition to the Museum’s new Asian galleries >>
Shirley Chang Gallery of Chinese Art UMMA’s Chinese collection spans three thousand years and many dynasties. >>
Woon-Hyung Lee and Korea Foundation Gallery of Korean Art UMMA’s exquisite Korean pottery, as well as an evolving collection of furniture, decorative arts and painting >>
Vertical Gallery Viewable from any level of the new Frankel Wing is perhaps the most architecturally dramatic space in the expanded Museum >>
Irving Stenn, Jr. Family Gallery The Museum's glass-walled temporary exhibition space devoted to cutting-edge contemporary installation art.
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