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The Kent State Museum
contains important collections of fashion and decorative arts.
Its eight 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
at Kent State University, 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
1960s, Shannon Rodgers began collecting what is now considered
one of the finest period costume collections in the United States,
today totaling more than 30,000 pieces. The Tarter/Miller collection
of some 10,000 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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