The museum, which opened in Devlin Hall in 1993, was officially named The Charles S. and Isabella V. McMullen Museum of Art in 1996 in honor of the parents of the Boston College benefactor, trustee and art collector John J. McMullen.[1]
In September 2016, the museum relocated to 2101 Commonwealth Avenue on Boston College's Brighton Campus.[2][3][4] The new facility features nearly two times the exhibition space of its previous location in Devlin Hall, state-of-the art lighting, movable walls, humidity and climate control, and extensive storage for the museum's growing permanent collection.[5]
Despite being a university art museum residing on a college campus, the McMullen Museum of Art organizes multidisciplinary exhibitions that have received national and international recognition. Stephen Kinzer of the New York Times has written that it is in the vanguard of museums creating exhibitions that "reach far beyond traditional art history", providing political, historical, and cultural context for works on view.[6]
The Museum holds an extensive permanent collection that spans the history of art from Europe, Asia and the Americas, and has significant representation of Gothic and Baroque tapestries, Italian paintings of the 16th and 17th centuries, and American paintings of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Well-known artists represented in the museum include Amedeo Modigliani, Frank Stella, Françoise Gilot, Alexander Ney, and John La Farge.
In 2021, the investor and philanthropist Peter Lynch donated 27 paintings and drawings to the museum, including works by Winslow Homer, Mary Cassatt, John Singer Sargent, and Pablo Picasso.[7] Lynch also committed $5 million to support the curation of the works, which will become the museum's Carolyn A. and Peter S. Lynch Collection.[7]
The McMullen Museum has hosted more than sixty exhibitions over two decades.[8] They have been curated by both internal teams of scholars from the Boston College and international specialists. Being a university museum, the focus of the exhibitions is the generation of new knowledge in all disciplinary fields of art history.
Recent significant exhibitions include:
"Carrie Mae Weems: Strategies of Engagement" (2018)[9]
"Cao Jun: Hymns to Nature" (2018), curated by the American philosopher John Sallis.[10] It was the first exhibition of Cao Jun's work in the United States.
"Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections" (2016)
"Portugal, Jesuits, and Japan: Spiritual Beliefs and Earthly Goods" (2013).[11] The exhibit focused on nearly a century of interaction, beginning in 1543, between the Japanese people and the Portuguese, namely traders and Jesuit missionaries. .[12]
"Paul Klee: Philosophical Vision; From Nature to Art", with which the McMullen Museum of Art reopen for its fall 2012 season;
A retrospective of the work of Surrealist Roberto Matta (2004), organized by university faculty from the romance languages, art history, and theology departments, was also well received;
"Edvard Munch: Psyche, Symbol, and Expression" (2001) was the largest American exhibition of Munch's work since 1978;
"Saints and Sinners: Caravaggio and the Baroque Image" (1999), featuring as its centerpiece the first North American appearance of the then-recently rediscovered masterpiece by Italian Baroque artist Caravaggio, The Taking of Christ. This exhibition, by any reckoning, has outshone by far all other McMullen exhibitions, previous and subsequent, both in terms of the amount of international media attention and attendance numbers it received. It effectively first put the McMullen Museum "on the map."[13]
^The Art Newspaper of London (March 2000 issue) lists it among the 'Most Popular Exhibitions" of 1999 in the world, with an attendance of over 65,000. For reviews of the exhibition see, among the many published, The New York Times (Sunday, Jan. 31, 1999), The Boston Globe (Friday, Jan. 29, 1999), The Wall Street Journal (Thurs., May 13, 1999, The Art Newspaper of London (Jan. 1999 issue), The Chicago Tribune (Feb. 14, 1999), The Christian Science Monitor (March 5, 1999) and The Associated Press (Jan. 31, 1999). The catalog, edited by exhibition principal organizer, Franco Mormando, and featuring works by some thirty other Italian Baroque masters, with a series of scholarly articles by eminent art historians and historians, is available for download at the McMullen Museum's website [1]