date published:
August 4, 2003

Salem’s Peabody Essex Museum
on Massachusetts’ North Shore unveils an historic expansion and
renovation to showcase its vast wealth of cultural treasures
by Christine Celli

photos: Peter Vanderwarker
WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY —The
newly refurbished Peabody Essex Museum boasts (from top) a
striking new Atrium, renovated galleries and the
imported-from-China Yu Yin Tang house. |
Growing
pains are commonplace in New England, an area founded before the
advent of grid-patterned street plans and bursting with
historical preservation groups. But when expansions are
necessary, a way is usually found to get them done—unless we’re
talking about that 90-year-old baseball stadium. Thousands of
fans may still be jamming their bottoms into outdated seats at
Fenway Park, but the Peabody Essex Museum in nearby Salem has
found a way to complete a major expansion that has finally made
room for the public display of its long-hidden treasures.
The nation’s oldest continually
operating museum got its start not long after our country did, in
1799, when a collective of elite sea merchants came together to
provide a place to publicly show art, furnishings and elaborate
finds procured on trade missions to Asia, Africa and the Pacific
Islands. But as the collection grew, the space in which to
display them became scarce, relegating some of its finest objects
to the attic.
But thanks to a recently
completed, $125 million dollar renovation and expansion, the
203-year-old museum now boasts over 250,000 square-feet of space,
including a new wing to showcase its collection of Asian art and
cultural objects, considered one of the finest and most
comprehensive in the world. The museum also boasts American fine,
folk and decorative arts spanning 300 years of New England’s
history, an extensive maritime collection that dates back to the
institution’s earliest days, and the first collection of Native
American art in the hemisphere with works ranging from priceless
archaeological finds to contemporary pieces by Native American
artists.
GETTING
THERE
By car: Located 16
miles north of Boston, take I-93 North to I-95/Route 128
North to exit 25A. Follow route 114 East into Salem. In
Salem, follow signs for the museum and downtown parking.
(Note: I-95 and Route 128 North share the same loop around
Boston. When the roads divide, stay on Route 128 North.)
By train: Take the MBTA
Commuter Rail (Newburyport/Rockport line) from Boston’s
North Station (a round-trip ticket is $6 for adults). The
museum is a five-minute walk from the Salem station. Follow
signs for downtown.
By bus: From Haymarket
Station, board the No. 450 or No. 455 bus to Salem Depot. |
The expansion, designed by
critically acclaimed architect Moshe Safdie, unites the museum’s
historic properties with its gardens, adding not just more room
but—with the inclusion of a breathtaking new atrium—a more
comfortable environment. With the new space comes a renewed focus
on education, which the museum hopes to execute through
educational centers, scholarships and a new curatorial focus that
combines historical items with contemporary works throughout the
exhibit halls. “Museums can present art and objects in ways that
create dialogue rather than support a singular worldview,”
explained Dan Monroe, the museums’ executive director and CEO.
The improvements also include
two new gallery spaces for such temporary exhibitions as Family
Ties, a collection of contemporary artists’ interpretations of
family (see story, at right). Perhaps most remarkable of all is
the addition of the Yin Yu Tang house, a late Qing Dynasty
Chinese merchant’s dwelling acquired by the museum in 1997. The
two-story home, which was owned and occupied by one family—the
Huangs—for more than 200 years, was transported to Salem and
rebuilt inside the museum with their blessing. A finely crafted
example of Anhui-style architecture, the dwelling features all
its original furniture and household items and is a picturesque
and appropriate addition to a museum that got its start thanks to
merchant traditions. With its new expansion, the museum hopes to
continue this mission to preserve the history and culture in its
care.

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ALL IN THE
FAMILY
The ties that bind—be them through a shared lineage,
ethnicity or even a homeland—are the subject of a new exhibit
at the Peabody Essex Museum, the first in its new halls
created for changing displays. Curated by Trevor Fairbrother,
who formerly curated contemporary and American shows for the
Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the Seattle Art Museum,
Family Ties presents works by nearly 60 artists, each
expressing their ideas of family in mediums ranging from
sculpture to film and photography. With works from artists
like Pop Art guru Andy Warhol, photographer Nan Goldin,
painters Paul Cadmus and Kerry James Marshall as well as
tactile creations by Faith Ringgold (pictured above) and
Yinka Shonibare, the extensive show offers provocative and
often nostalgic looks at our society’s idea of
family—particularly poignant in a time when social and
economic hardship has led many to seek out and rely on these
ties the most.
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