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Nevada Art Gallery on Ralston Street

Hawkins House on Court Street

Nevada Museum of Art
1989-2001

New Home of the NMA
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MISSION
The Nevada Museum of Art (NMA) provides a forum for the presentation
of creative ideas. We aspire to serve as a cultural resource for
every member of our community. Through innovative programming and
scholarship, the Museum provides the opportunity for people of all
ages to encounter, engage, and enjoy a diversity of art experiences.
The NMA's focus on its collections, education, and outreach are
means to conserve, convey, and expand artistic knowledge.
HISTORY
The museum is the oldest cultural institution in the state of Nevada.
Founded in 1931 as the Nevada Art Gallery by Dr. James Church and
Charles F. Cutts, the organization provides a forum for community
visual arts activities, exhibitions, and artists. With Cutt's bequest
of his Ralston Street home and collection in 1949, the Gallery obtained
a facility and the foundation of a permanent collection.
The Nevada Art Gallery remained largely a volunteer organization
until 1975, when the Board of Trustees hired two art historians
and began to improve upon the quality of the collection, exhibitions,
and programming. In 1978, the Nevada Art Gallery purchased the Hawkins
House, a national historic landmark building. Located on Court Street
overlooking Reno's Truckee River, the house was commissioned in
1911 by Nevada banker and lawyer, Prince Hawkins. The Hawkins House
was designed by Elmer Grey, a prominent Los Angeles architect who
also designed the Huntington Mansion (now the Huntingon Library
and Gallery), The Pasadena Community Playhouse, and the Beverly
Hills Hotel. Upon moving into the new facility, the organization's
name was changed to the Sierra Nevada Museum of Art.
In 1983, the Trustees established an operating endowment to contribute
to the annual operating budget. After obtaining a new 15,000 sq.
ft. facility, the organization changed its name once again to the
Nevada Museum of Art. The E. L. Cord Museum School classroom was
added to the building three years later.
The new NMA, designed by Will Bruder, opened in Spring 2003.
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