<p>UT-Austin has the largest art museum of any North American university. When the second building is completed this year, the Blanton Museum of Art will total 180,000 sq ft. Put in perspective with another recent museum campaign - at ~$85M, UT’s art museum is over 3X the cost and size of Duke’s new Nasher art museum. In addition to the Blanton Museum, the Ransom Humanities Research Center has a very large art collection. In total, UT’s art collections in these two museums total almost 120,000 works, from antiquity to the present.</p>
<p>Blanton Museum of Art
<a href=“http://www.blantonmuseum.org/[/url]”>http://www.blantonmuseum.org/</a></p>
<p>Notable collections: Suida-Manning Collection of Renaissance and Baroque Art, James Michener contemporary American collection, one of the largest and most significant print and drawing collections on any US campus (including noted historian Leo Steinberg’s collection), and one of the largest contemporary Latin American collections in the world</p>
<p>Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
<a href=“http://www.hrc.utexas.edu%5B/url%5D”>http://www.hrc.utexas.edu</a></p>
<p>Primarily a literary archive, the $1B Ransom Center collection is also a repository of over 5 million photographs (including the world’s first) and over 100,000 works of art - from one of only 11 copies of ‘Songs of Innocence’ hand colored by William Blake to works by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera.</p>
<p>There was a recent article in the New Yorker profiling the Ransom Center, but unfortunately if focused mainly on the literary treasures, with little mention of the amazing art collection. For some idea of the overall scope of the collection:
<a href=“http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/06/11/070611fa_fact_max[/url]”>Final Destination | The New Yorker;