The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center

The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College. Link in bio: linktr.ee/theloeb
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The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center was founded in 1864 as the Vassar College Art Gallery. Vassar was the first college or university in the country to include an art museum as part of its original plan. The current 36,000 square foot facility was designed by Cesar Pelli and named in honor of the new building’s primary donor Frances Lehman Loeb, a member of the Class of 1928. The Lehman Loeb Art Ce

nter’s collections chart the history of art from antiquity to the present and comprise over 22,000 works, including paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, textiles, and glass and ceramic wares. Teaching students and working as an important tangible complement to the curriculum is the main focus of the collection. Notable holdings include the Warburg Collection of Old Master prints, an important group of Hudson River School paintings given by Matthew Vassar at the college’s inception, and a wide range of works by major European and American twentieth century painters. The design of the galleries and the storage facilities are geared to ease of presentation for groups of faculty and students. This is particularly true of the Project Gallery where faculty can request works of art from storage at short notice and have them installed for class use. Often multiple classes from different disciplines present work in this space thereby offering unexpected but revealing comparisons among different cultures and eras. While the Department of Art is the Lehman Loeb Art Center’s primary client, classes from other disciplines as diverse as Drama and Film, Botany, Classics, and Hispanic Studies make regular use of the broad collections. Designed by Cesar Pelli and opened to the public in November 1993, the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center is a distinguished addition to a campus internationally known for its fine buildings. Called "a symphony of architecture" by the New York Times, the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center comprises a new museum, home to one of the finest teaching collections in the nation, as well as the renovated collegiate-gothic building, Taylor-Van Ingen Hall, home of the art department and the art library. The entrance to the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center is the Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller, class of 1931, Entrance Pavilion, a glass hexagon visible from just inside the college's main gate. A symbol of the art center, the pavilion is connected to Taylor-Van Ingen Hall by a buttress screen, creating a forecourt for the complex. The pavilion and glass-walled passageway leading to the exhibition areas offer views of the campus. The Hildegarde Krause Baker, class of 1911, Sculpture Garden, the Briarcombe Sculpture Courtyard, and the entry forecourt were designed by landscape architect Diana Balmori and recently renovated to a design by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates.

06/22/2026

Another week, another installation. “A Living Legacy, Gifts From Lynn Gross Straus,” is now on view June 20–September 20, 2026.

Lynn Gross Straus (1925-2023), Vassar class of 1946, was a philanthropist, an adventurer, an avid art collector, and a tireless champion of early childhood education. For years, Lynn was an active member of the Friends of Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center. She played a pivotal role on its advisory board for nearly a decade. In honor of her 50th reunion, they endowed the Philip and Lynn Straus Curator of Prints and Drawings position, leaving behind a legacy that extends well beyond the campus community.

Inspired by the exhibition, "The Botanist at Vassar," we are proud to partner with Nature’s Impact to present a hands-on...
06/17/2026

Inspired by the exhibition, "The Botanist at Vassar," we are proud to partner with Nature’s Impact to present a hands-on workshop with artist Serena Domingues. 🌸

Botanical Dreams Workshop 🌿
📅 June 25, 5-7pm, Loeb Atrium

Guests will engage in a guided experience where they observe botanical forms and sculpt their own imagined flower. This activity is designed for visitors ages 7 and up. No pre-registration is required; simply drop in anytime.

This event is part of Upstate Art Weekend, an annual event that brings together artists, organizations, and audiences across the Hudson Valley and Catskills, inviting exploration of exhibitions, programs, and cultural spaces throughout the region.


Photo courtesy of Serena Domingues from Nature’s Impact

Step inside one of the twentieth century's most radical printmaking workshops.Founded by Stanley William Hayter in Paris...
06/15/2026

Step inside one of the twentieth century's most radical printmaking workshops.

Founded by Stanley William Hayter in Paris in 1927, Atelier 17 became famous for fierce collaboration and technical daring. When war broke out, the workshop crossed the Atlantic to New York—where artists like Jackson Po***ck pushed etching and engraving into new territory.

Discover prints that confronted their moment: the Spanish Civil War, World War II, the dawn of the Atomic Age. These artists fused abstraction and surrealism with antifascist conviction, pulling from Greco-Roman myth, the Bible, and psychoanalysis to make work that still crackles with urgency.

Drawn from the collection of the late Arthur Jones and dedicated to his memory, "Atelier 17: Myths in Motion" opens the workshop's path toward its 2027 centennial. See it on view June 5–August 30.


photo by Destiny Kearney

"A Living Legacy: Gifts from Lynn Gross Straus" opens on June 20th. This exhitbiton celebrates Lynn (Vassar class of 194...
06/12/2026

"A Living Legacy: Gifts from Lynn Gross Straus" opens on June 20th.

This exhitbiton celebrates Lynn (Vassar class of 1946) and Philip Straus, who over forty years gave nearly fifty works spanning five centuries—prints by Erich Heckel, Käthe Kollwitz, and Edvard Munch, plus American artists like Lee Bontecou, Helen Frankenthaler, and Frank Stella. A lifelong champion of education, Lynn gave these works to support teaching and research. Many are on view together for the first time.

Organized by Bart Thurber with John P. Murphy and Ruby Funfrock '24. Supported by the Friends of the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center Exhibition Fund.


Edvard Munch (Norwegian, 1863–1944), "Moonlight I-II," 1896, color woodcut on Japanese paper, Gift of Philip and Lynn Straus, class of 1946, 1995.20

Here for the summer? So are we! 🌞We are open our regular hours Tuesday-Sunday 10am-5pm with Summer Late Night hours on T...
06/11/2026

Here for the summer? So are we! 🌞

We are open our regular hours Tuesday-Sunday 10am-5pm with Summer Late Night hours on Thursdays until 7pm from June 11 through August 20. Our regular hours will resume on August 27.

You asked for Part 2! 🖼️ See your zodiac sign, reimagined as a painting from our collection.  Cover Image: Alexej von Ja...
06/09/2026

You asked for Part 2! 🖼️ See your zodiac sign, reimagined as a painting from our collection.

Cover Image: Alexej von Jaelensky (Russian, 1864–1941), “Woman in a Hat,” 1910, oil on board laid on panel, Bequest of Frances W. Pick (Frances Weis, class of 1927), 1988.44.1

Kick off Upstate Art Weekend at the Loeb!Join us Thursday, June 25, 5–7pm for a hands-on workshop with artist Serena Dom...
06/08/2026

Kick off Upstate Art Weekend at the Loeb!

Join us Thursday, June 25, 5–7pm for a hands-on workshop with artist Serena Domingues. Observe botanical forms up close, then sculpt your own imagined flower in this guided experience. Designed for ages 7 and up. While you're here, stop by the Vassar Art Library for "Address: Earth-Artist Books in a Suitcase," with Bibiana Haung Matheis featuring an exhibition of 50 unique artist books exploring environmental and social challenges.

And don't miss our new summer exhibitions: "A Living Legacy: Gifts from Lynn Gross Straus," "Atelier 17: Myths in Motion," and "The Botanist at Vassar" plus collection favorites throughout our galleries.

Welcome back, alumni! We are so happy to see our alum back on campus this weekend. We are  hosting events throughout the...
06/05/2026

Welcome back, alumni! We are so happy to see our alum back on campus this weekend. We are hosting events throughout the weekend, starting today.

🖼️Friday, June 5th

5pm, Bart Thurber and Amanda Potter will discuss opportunities for Community Engagement, Learning and Outreach Beyond Vassar followed by a reception.

🎨Saturday, June 6th

2pm, Join curator John Murphy for, “Prints and Politics Between the World Wars.” Hosted in Taylor 203.

3pm, Refreshments in the sculpture garden.

3:30pm, Curator tours with Jessica D. Brier on “The Botanist at Vassar” and Monique D’Almeida on “Bunmei Kaika: Political Landscape in Early Modern and Modern Japan”

We look forward to seeing you all on campus, and can't wait to kick off an amazing Loeb reunion!!

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Photo by Elia Smith

06/04/2026

Putting the finishing touches on our newest exhibition “Atelier 17: Myths in Motion.”

Stop by the Loeb through August 30 to dive deeper into the workshop in the context of global events of that era, including the Spanish Civil War, World War ll, and the Atomic Age.

Last week to see Bunmei Kaika: Political Landscape in Early Modern and Modern Japan — on view through June 7th.This exhi...
06/01/2026

Last week to see Bunmei Kaika: Political Landscape in Early Modern and Modern Japan — on view through June 7th.

This exhibition traces how artists captured the sweeping shifts in Japan's culture and physical landscape during a tumultuous era; from American "gunboat diplomacy" to rapid Westernization under Emperor Meiji. Woodblock prints from the period circulated sensationalized images that celebrated imperial power, reported on battlefields abroad, and fed a modernizing nation's imagination, all while cleverly navigating government regulations and prohibitions.

Featuring works by Hiroshige, Hokusai, Kunisada, Yosh*toshi, Kiyochika, and Ogata Gekkō, drawn largely from the Loeb's permanent collection. Don't miss it before it closes.

📍 Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY

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1. Kobayashi Eisei (古林 栄成), Japanese, "Enlightened Nobility List," 1877
woodblock print (oban tate-e triptych); ink and color on paper, Gift of Frances Beatty Adler, class of 1970, and Allen Adler, 2008.19.6

2. Utagawa Hiroshige (Japanese, 1797–1858), "Tsuchiyama: The Suzuka Mountains in the Rain from the series Fifty-Three Stations of the Tōkaidō," 1845, woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper, 9 x 13 3/16 in. (22.9 x 33.5 cm), Gift of Celia Faulkner Clevenger, class of 1958, 1987.21.8

3. Utagawa Hiroshige III (三代目 歌川 広重), Japanese, 1843 - 1894, Yamanaka Kitarō, Japanese, "View of Ginza Kyobashi Stone Gas Lamps," 1880, woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper, Gift of Justine Lewis Keidel, class of 1937, 1987.20.17

Address

124 Raymond Avenue
Poughkeepsie, NY
12604

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 10am - 5pm
Sunday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

+18454375237

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