The Frye Art Museum continues to strategically build its collection through purchases and gifts, both deepening existing areas of strength and diversifying holdings to reflect the Museum’s expansive curatorial program and Seattle’s globalized present.
Acquisitions of the last ten years demonstrate the Museum’s commitment to growing and contextualizing its distinctive historical collections of late nineteenth- and twentieth-century European and American art while broadening its holdings of contemporary works to embrace previously underrepresented identities, perspectives, and forms of expression. To some extent, acquisitions mirror the Museum’s exhibition history, creating a material record of the institution’s engagement with local, national, and international artists and commemorating the special audience connection formed through temporary presentations. Contemporary artworks chosen for the collection often respond to or complicate the narratives around mediums and genres traditionally associated with the Frye, like painting, landscape, and portraiture.
Viktor Deni
Poster reproduction
1928, printed 1967
Unknown
Poster reproduction
ca.1927, printed 1967
Aleksandr Tyshler
Poster reproduction
1929, printed 1967
Unknown
Poster reproduction
1927, printed 1967
Unknown
Poster reproduction
ca.1917-1929, printed 1967
Unknown
Poster reproduction
1926, printed 1967
Unknown
Poster reproduction
ca.1917-1929, printed 1967
Nikolai Valerianov
Poster reproduction
1925, printed 1967
Alexander Rodchenko
Poster reproduction
1924, printed 1967
I. Isenberg
Poster reproduction
1924, printed 1967
Unknown
Poster reproduction
1923, printed 1967
Ivan Simakov
Poster reproduction
1921, printed 1967