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Welcome to the Kent
State University Museum. Housed in Rockwell Hall, the original
University Library,
the Museum contains important collections of costume and decorative
arts. Its nine galleries feature changing exhibitions of
work by many of the world's great artists and designers.
Closely linked to the Shannon Rodgers and Jerry Silverman School
of Fashion Design and Merchandising, the Museum provides students
with first hand experience with historic and contemporary fashions,
as well as costumes representing many of the world's cultures.
An extensive collection of American glass, fine furniture, textiles,
paintings and other decorative arts combine to give context to
the study of design.
The Museum serves both the University and the community through
exhibitions and public programs, and, by appointment, research
in the collections.
Opened to
the public in October 1985, The Kent State University Museum was
founded with an initial contribution from New York dress manufacturers
Jerry Silverman and Shannon Rodgers. Their gift included 4,000
costumes and accessories, nearly 1,000 pieces of decorative art
and a 5,000-volume reference library. In
the 1960's, Shannon Rodgers began collecting what is now considered
one of the finest period costume collections in the United States,
today totaling more that 20,000 pieces. The Tarter/Miller
collection of some 200,000 pieces of glass formed the second major
gift to the Museum. Together with the other decorative arts
collected by Rodgers and Silverman, the Museum holds one of the
most comprehensive teaching collections of fashionable design
from the 18th century to the present. For more on the story of
the museum and its founders click
here.
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