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Return to Virginia Business - May 2003

Virginia Weekend

The Chrysler Museum, Norfolk's waterside gem

by Douglas Forshey
Virginia Business
May 2003

Strolling through the photographic exhibition of Bob Lerner’s dramatic work, you have a true sense of experiencing 20th-century history through the eyes and camera lenses of the famed photojournalist. Stunning black and white and color prints highlight Lerner’s 20 years as a leading contributor to LOOK magazine, where he captured the personalities of major celebrities and politicians from around the world. Representing extensive travel to every continent and all 50 states, Lerner’s work ranks him as one of the most celebrated craftsmen in his field.

This nostalgic collection of Americana is on display at The Chrysler Museum of Art in historic downtown Norfolk and will run through August. It’s no surprise that the Chrysler landed Lerner. Besides maintaining a world-renowned permanent collection of American and European paintings and Tiffany glass, the museum hosts numerous traveling exhibits and educational activities. It ascribes to the ambitious goal of bringing people and artwork together.

Founded in 1939 as the Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences, the facility led a rather unremarkable existence until 1971, when automobile heir, industrialist and art collector Walter P. Chrysler Jr. presented the city with his vast personal collection of art. At the time his collection was housed in a converted 19th-century church in Providence, R.I., called the Chrysler Art Museum.

All of that changed when wife Jean Ester Outland, a Norfolk native whom he met while serving in the Navy, convinced Chrysler to retire to the Hampton Roads area. Chrysler’s collection was rapidly outgrowing the church, and the couple began looking for a local facility large enough to house the collection. After visiting dozens of sites, Chrysler accepted an offer from the city of Norfolk. “What had been the Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences became the Chrysler Museum,” wrote noted New York Times art critic John Russell. “And in 1971 he made a gift that is one of the strongest and most various ever given at any one time by a single individual to an American museum.”

Chrysler was a shrewd patron of the arts. His passion is evident in the wide array of objects in the collection — thousands of paintings, sculptures, drawings, decorative art and an amazing 8,000-plus collection of glasswork, including many original works by Louis Comfort Tiffany. The impressionist gallery alone offers original paintings by such renowned artists as Monet, Degas, Renoir, Gauguin, Rodin, and Cezanne to name just a few.

“The Chrysler is a wonderful museum,” says Joseph Dye, curator of South Asian and Islamic Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond. “They have an outstanding collection of Western European and American paintings, along with a specialized collection of glass and photography. They are a real asset to the Norfolk area.”

The Chrysler presents an average of 15 special exhibitions a year, bringing to Norfolk outstanding works from around the world. The next major exhibition at the museum will be “La Bella Macchina: The Art of Ferrari,” on display from April 13 through July 20. Since the 1930s the Ferrari company has designed and produced legendary automobiles, encompassing a timeless sense of style and sophistication. The Chrysler presents 12 vintage automobiles from distinguished American and Canadian collections that represent some of the most beautiful cars in the world.

Located downtown on a waterfront site facing the Hague Inlet on the Elizabeth River, the museum offers a full range of guided tours, lectures, films, concerts and family days. Membership starts at $45 for an individual and $60 for a household. Visit its Web site for membership information and to sign up to receive an informative monthly newsletter via e-mail.

Virginia Business - May 2003


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