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The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, located on the College Avenue campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, houses the Rutgers University collection of more than 60,000 works of art. The museum holds several distinctive special collections: the Norton and Nancy Dodge Collection of Nonconformist Art from the Soviet Union, the George Riabov Collection of Russian Art, the Rutgers Archives for Printmaking Studios, the Gordon Henderson Collection of Stained Glass, and the Rutgers Collection of Original Illustrations for Children's Literature. The museum has particular strengths in nineteenth-century French and twentieth-century American graphics, and offers a selective survey of Western art from the fifteenth through the twentieth century.
The Zimmerli Art Museum serves as a research facility for Rutgers University students and faculty and visiting scholars. It also provides educational and cultural resources for communities and schools throughout New Jersey, offering a wide variety of changing and permanent exhibitions, programs, and activities. Current information about exhibitions, programs, and hours are available by calling (732)932-7237 or by visiting the web site: http://www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu/ The Rutgers Collection of Original Illustrations for Children's Literature at the Zimmerli Art Museum:
The Rutgers Collection of Original Illustrations for Children's Literature was established at the Zimmerli Art Museum in 1979, with the support of the Rutgers Advisory Council for Children's Books and an initial grant from the New Jersey State Council for the Arts. The holdings of the Rutgers Collection span more than seventy years of American children's book illustration and have grown to include over four thousand works by more than one hundred artists. Works in the collection date from the late 1920s to the present. Representation of individual artists in the collection varies greatly, from as little as one illustration to hundreds of objects. Many artists are represented by at least one book with preparatory materials, or by representative samplings from several works. The mission of the Rutgers Collection is to collect, preserve, study, and make accessible examples of an art form that is often a child's first introduction to the fine arts. Research, exhibitions, and activities related to the collection reflect the belief that examining the artist's process enhances understanding and deepens appreciation of a finished book, and of illustrated materials in general. In order to fulfill its mission, the Rutgers Collection acquires materials that reveal the process of creating an illustrated book for children, from notes, sketches and manuscripts to full-color illustrations and finished books. The Zimmerli Art Museum offers an ongoing program of exhibitions from the Rutgers Collection in a specially designated gallery, and an outreach program entitled Creating a Children's Book, based on materials from the collection designed for regional schools. The collection is available for scholarly study by appointment at the Morse Research Center for Graphic Arts and through university classes and lectures. Manuscripts associated with the Rutgers Collection are maintained by the Special Collections Department of the Archibald Alexander Library, also on the Rutgers College Avenue Campus in New Brunswick, and are available for study by appointment. Information about the Rutgers Collection is not yet available electronically. Please write, call, or e-mail questions to: Gail Aaron, Assistant Curator The Rutgers Collection of Original Illustrations for Children's Literature The Zimmerli Art Museum Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey 71 Hamilton Street New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1248 (732) 932-7237 Extension 637
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