Mingei International Museum
The Mingei International Museum is a non-profit public institution that collects, conserves and exhibits folk art, craft and design. The museum was founded in 1974, and its building opened in 1978.[1] The word mingei, meaning 'art of the people,' was coined by the Japanese scholar Dr. Sōetsu Yanagi by combining the Japanese words for all people (min 民) and art (gei 芸).
History
Mingei International Museum was founded by Martha Longenecker, Professor of Art Emerita, San Diego State University. As an artist craftsman who studied pottery-making in Japan, she became acquainted with and learned from the founders and leaders of the Mingei Association of Japan. Under her guidance, the museum was established and developed over more than 27 years.
In May 1978, Mingei International Museum of World Folk Art opened at University Towne Centre in San Diego with the exhibition, Dolls and Folk Toys of the World.
In August 1996, Mingei International was relocated to the historic House of Charm on the Plaza de Panama in Balboa Park. It shares the central square with the San Diego Museum of Art and the Timken Museum of Art.
In 2003, Mingei International opened a second museum in downtown Escondido, in North San Diego County. The premiere exhibition, Niki de Saint Phalle Remembered featured the artist's work from the museum's permanent collection and loans from the Niki Charitable Art Foundation.
In its 30-year history, Mingei International has presented 140 exhibitions, accompanied by related lectures, films, demonstrations, workshops, music, theater and dance.
Mingei International Museum closed its Escondido museum galleries to the public on June 26, 2010.
Collections
The museum's collections comprise 17,500 objects from 141 countries. The collections contain artifacts from the 3rd century BCE to the present day and include objects as diverse as ancient clay vessels and 21st-century Venetian glass.[2]
Several regions of the world are represented.
- Mexico: pottery, wood carvings, textiles, retablos, masks
- India: bronzes, wood carvings, pottery, textiles
- China: costumes, jewelry, wood carvings, pottery
- Japan: pottery, textiles, wood carvings, lacquer ware, metal work
- Indonesia: ancestral monuments, wood carvings, textiles, masks, sculptures
- Africa: pottery, head rests, stools, masks, textiles
- Pre-Columbian: pottery and textiles from Central and South America
- Middle East: textiles, jewelry, wood carvings
- US: mid 20th-century pottery; contemporary furniture, textiles, glass; Navajo weavings
References
Further reading
- Showley, Roger M. (1999). Balboa Park: A Millennium History. Heritage Media Corp. ISBN 1-886483-40-X.
External links
- Official website
- See-Mingei, an online interactive presentation of the museum's collections
- Frommers
- v
- t
- e
- Alcazar Garden
- Balboa Park Gardens
- Balboa Stadium
- Ballet Folklorico Aztlan
- Bea Evenson Fountain
- Botanical Building
- California Quadrangle
- Casa de Balboa
- Casa del Prado
- El Prado Complex
- Ford Building
- George W. Marston House
- House of Charm
- House of Hospitality
- House of Pacific Relations International Cottages
- Japanese Friendship Garden
- Moreton Bay Fig Tree
- Morley Field Sports Complex
- Old Globe Theatre
- Plaza de Panama
- San Diego Velodrome
- San Diego Zoo
- Spanish Village Art Center
- Organ Pavilion
- Starlight Bowl
- Zoro Garden
- Centro Cultural de la Raza
- Mingei International Museum
- Museum of Photographic Arts
- Museum of Us
- San Diego Air & Space Museum
- San Diego Art Institute
- San Diego Automotive Museum
- San Diego Hall of Champions
- San Diego History Center
- San Diego Model Railroad Museum
- San Diego Museum of Art
- San Diego Natural History Museum
- Reuben H. Fleet Science Center
- Timken Museum of Art
- Veterans Museum and Memorial Center