EXHIBITS & COLLECTIONS CALENDAR OF EVENTS IMAX THEATER FOR EDUCATORS PUBLIC PROGRAMS
VISITOR INFO ABOUT US CONTACT US NEWSROOM VOLUNTEERISM FACILITY RENTALS MEMBERSHIP SUPPORT THE MUSEUM STATE HISTORIC SITES
BUILDING FEATURES
CHANGING GALLERIES
COLLECTION
AMERICANA
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TECHNOLOGY
FINE ARTS
SOCIAL HISTORY
PALEOBIOLOGY
BIOLOGY
GEOLOGY
PREHISTORIC ARCHAEOLOGY
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
DIGS
CURATORS
E-NEWSLETTER
EXHIBIT ARCHIVE
FACES
GALLERY GUIDES
GALLERY PROGRAMS
HOOSIER HERITAGE TRAIL
INDIANA STORY GALLERIES
LEGACY THEATER
MUSEUM PASSPORT
SEARCH OUR COLLECTION
Fine Arts

RACHEL PERRY
Curator of Fine Arts

Collection highlights

The Fine Arts collection of the Indiana State Museum consists of over 8,000 pieces. Paintings, sculpture and works on paper convey the diverse creative expressions of Hoosiers. Tracing more than 200 years of Indiana art making, the works have either been created in Indiana or made elsewhere by Indiana natives. The styles include Minimalism, Abstract Expressionism, conceptual art and Realism. art_Otto_Stark.jpg

The Fine Arts collection is very strong in representational landscapes, partially due to two fortunate circumstances. Selma Neubacher Steele, upon her death in 1945, bequeathed more than 350 T.C. Steele (1847 - 1926) paintings to the state of Indiana. In an unusual arrangement with artist Frank V. Dudley (1868 - 1957), the state received one of his treasured Indiana Dunes paintings each year as “rent” for his cottage, which had been taken over to establish the Indiana Dunes State Park. There are currently 75 Dudley paintings in the collection.

The early Indiana art holdings include several pieces by Jacob Cox (1810 – 1892), one of the first portrait artists to establish a studio in Indianapolis; paintings by George Winter (1810 – 1876) and Karl Bodmer (1809 – 1893); and a major still life by nationally known American Impressionist, William Merritt Chase (1849 – 1916). These paintings speak to the historical significance of the Fine Arts collection at the Indiana State Museum. Recent collecting efforts have turned toward contemporary Indiana artists, female artists and sculptors.

The largest apple-breeding program in the world is conducted at Purdue University.
Site designed and developed by Pathway Productions