
Akron Art Museum Paints Community Pride
Akron Art Museum in Akron, OH
A visitor admires a large painting by Lari Pittman called Thankfully, I Will Have had Learned to Break Glass with Sound, on display at the Akron Art Museum in Akron, Ohio. The museum more than tripled in size in 2007 with the opening of the new John S. and James L. Knight Building.
The Akron Art Museum blends an old 1899 post office and a $35 million addition to create a potent combination that’s turned the museum into a hot spot.
“The building is stunning. The lobby is stunning. Events are exciting just because they’re in the space,” says Jessie Raynor, director of the Akron Arts Area Alliance, which has its offices down the street. “The building and the energy it has brought in make it the place to be.”
With a 160-seat auditorium, the museum attracts audiences for its partnerships with Akron Independent Film Festival and a group that presents chamber music on Tuesdays.
“Third Thursdays” draws young professionals for music and cocktails in the “Crystal,” a three-story, glass-and-steel lobby, a signature part of Coop Himmelb(l)au’s design. The museum expansion was the renowned Austrian firm’s first public design in the United States.
At its core, though, a museum is about art, and Akron shines here, too.
“At long last, we can place on view all the major works in the collection,” says Mitchell Kahan, director and chief executive officer.
Construction closed the facility for four years, but tripled its space. The museum houses significant collections of photography, Northeast Ohio art, American Impressionism and international art since World War II.
The expansion created new opportunities to reach younger audiences, too. Space from the original building now houses a classroom, with studio classes for youngsters as well as adults. Two Saturdays a month feature “drop-in” days where parents and children can spend time exploring a theme together, says Missy Higgins, the museum’s education director. Those sessions alternate with more-structured family classes.
“In terms of educational ability, it’s just exploded,” Kahan says. “We never had a classroom.”
The museum worked with Case Western Reserve PBS to produce related documentaries, and the station’s educational staff helped develop a companion curriculum on motion and physics, Higgins says.
Raynor says the revamped Akron Art Museum has “put the city on the map as a forward-thinking, innovative community.”
When it reopened after construction in 2007, the museum – and the arts alliance nearby – lured coffee shops, graphic design firms and art galleries to a once-blighted part of downtown.
“Our whole neighborhood has changed,” Raynor says. “What this project has allowed us to do is to create a civil monument in the center of the city. It’s no accident that the 327-foot long roof lights up.”
If You Go
Location: One South High, Akron, OH
Phone: 330-376-9185
Hours: Wednesday - Sunday: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Thursday: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Closed Monday and Tuesday
Prices: Adults - $7
Students - $5
Seniors (65+) - $5
Children 12 & under - Free
Parking is $1 per hour or $6.25 per day.

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