Four years later, in 1956, Alfred I. Barton donated his extensive collection of Native American art to Lowe, which was accommodated in a 1,300 square-foot purpose-built addition.
[7] There are also glassworks by Pablo Picasso, William Morris, Emily Brock,[8] Harvey Littleton, Erwin Eisch, and Ginny Ruffner in its permanent collection.
There are also Modern works of Art by Roy Lichtenstein, Sandy Skoglund, Purvis Young, Louise Nevelson, Julian Stanczak, and Enrique Montenegro in the permanent collection.
The museum's most recent expansion, the Myrna and Sheldon Palley Pavilion for Contemporary Glass and Studio Arts, opened in 2008 and added another 4,500 square feet of exhibition space.
The antiquities on view are complemented by Washington Allston's mural-sized, neoclassical painting Jason Returning to Demand His Father's Kingdom (1807-1808).
This gallery includes ceramics, metalwork, sculpture, costumes, textiles, and architectural elements dating from the Neolithic period through the present from China, Japan, Korea, India, and Southeast Asia.
This gallery, which is dimly lit to preserve its contents, hosts pottery, basketry, sculpture, costumes, and textiles of Native North, Central, and South America.
Jacopo Robusti known as Tintoretto Vincenzo Catena Lucas Cranach the Elder Lippo Vanni Jacob Jordaens Adriaen Isenbrandt Giuseppe Maria Crespi Lorenzo di Credi Andrea del Sarto Antonio da Correggio (attr.)
Ambrogio Bergognone Jusepe de Ribera Dominikos Theotokopoulos known as El Greco Bartolomé Esteban Murillo Thomas Gainsborough Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes Paul Gauguin Claude Monet Albert Bierstadt André Masson Fernando Botero Carlos Alfonzo José Bedia Roy Lichtenstein Frank Stella Duane Hanson Deborah Butterfield Tatiana Parcero Sandy Skoglund