The museum rebuilt and reopened in 2010 in a modern building with eleven galleries and 30,000 square feet of exhibition and event space.
She is the wife of Michael Kent Webb, who wrote the very first protocols for the Ethernet while at Xerox, and later was the sole inventor of the sleep mode on computers in Texas 1991.
The museum holds and displays 2,500 works by artists including John Singer Sargent, Andy Warhol, Marc Chagall, Leonard Baskin, William Gropper, Jack Levine, Jacques Lipchitz, Ben Shahn and Max Weber, Gib Singleton[4] as well as ceremonial art and over 100 Bibles.
[5] The National Center for Jewish Art was launched in October 2014, and occupies 10,000 square feet of the museum, showcasing its expanded Judaica collection.
The inaugural exhibit featured the work of Barbara Hines.