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Rodin Museum and Garden Landscape Rejuvenation Project

The Rodin Museum is planning to rejuvenate the exterior of the museum and its surrounding garden and landscape in the spirit of its original 1929 design. Under the direction of OLIN landscape architects, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Fairmount Park Commission, and Pennsylvania Horticultural Society are therefore collaborating on a project to renew and showcase this urban oasis.

Drawing upon the original plans and correspondence of the gifted architects Paul Cret and Jacques Gréber, who had been commissioned by Jules Mastbaum in the late 1920s to design, respectively, a neoclassical Beaux Arts building and formal garden for his extensive collection of Rodin sculpture, the new design enhances and amplifies the old vision while placing special focus on the relationship of the museum’s entrance to the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

The project is both an essential component of the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s Master Plan and part of a larger project to re-imagine and renew the entire Parkway as a preeminent artery for arts and culture and a wellspring for the region’s social and economic vitality. Designed by Gréber in the early twentieth century to evoke the Champs Élysées in Paris, the Parkway is among the nation’s greatest cultural corridors, connecting the splendor of City Hall to preeminent institutions of art, culture, and learning, crowned by the treasure-filled Philadelphia Museum of Art and the natural glories of Fairmount Park. The Parkway will be further enriched with the opening of the famed Barnes Collection’s new home in 2011.

The City of Philadelphia, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and three visionary foundations—The Pew Charitable Trusts, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and The William Penn Foundation—have offered a substantial grant to benefit the Parkway, the institutions that line it, and the millions of people they serve each year. A significant part of the grant—which must be matched by private donations—is allocated specifically to the rejuvenation of the Rodin Museum garden and surrounding parkland.

Image: The Rodin Museum

More Information: www.rodinmuseum.org

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