Perry Glass Studio In 2011, The Chrysler Museum opened the Perry Glass Studio adjacent to the main Museum building. Originally built to complement the more than 10,000 object glass collection within the Museum, the original 7,000 square foot space offered daily glassmaking demonstrations as well as provided glassmaking facilities for visiting artists and students. In 2022, the Museum embarked on an expansion project which tripled the size of the Glass Studio and doubled the number of classes available to both the general public and community partners. In addition to the daily demonstrations, the studio has a robust visiting artist series to invite glass artists from around the world to work in the studio, meet with college students, and demonstrate their artwork to the public. There is also a robust assistantship program, designed for emerging artists seeking careers in glass.
Goode Works on Paper Center In 2024, the Chrysler Museum opened the Goode Works on Paper Center within the main museum. Works on paper (prints, photographs, drawings etc.) comprise one-third of the museum's collection; however, due to their sensitivity to light are often not on view. This dedicated space contains a state-of-the-art storage facility for the collection as well as a Study Room where visitors can make an appointment to see this area of the collection.
Jean Outland Chrysler Library The collection in the Jean Outland Chrysler Library covers the history of world art, with special emphasis on material relevant to the Chrysler's permanent collection. The library subscribes to several hundred art-related journals, has an extensive collection of current and historical auction catalogues, and exchanges publications with 400 art museums around the world. The library is named in honor of Jean Outland Chrysler, wife of Walter P. Chrysler, Jr. The collection is based on the original holdings of the Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences library. In 1977, the library of the London art dealer M. Knoedler & Co. was purchased, adding major historical reference volumes, periodicals, and rare annotated sales catalogues. The library also houses the museum's archives, which includes the original copy of
Mark Twain's speech he delivered at the Jamestown Tricentennial Exposition of 1907 and a collection of papers from the Moses Myers family. The Jean Outland Chrysler Library moved to a building on the campus of
Old Dominion University in 2014; however, the public can still access the reading room at the Chrysler Museum of Art.
Moses Myers House The Moses Myers House in downtown Norfolk is an example of
Federal period architecture and retains 70 percent of its original contents. The house and its furnishings allow visitors to experience first-hand the life of a prosperous Jewish merchant and his family during the early 19th century. Moses Myers moved to Norfolk in 1787 with his wife Eliza. Five years later, he purchased a large lot where he erected a home for his family. Today the house contains an important collection of American, English and French furniture, glass, silver, ceramics, and portraits by
Gilbert Stuart,
Thomas Sully, and
John Wesley Jarvis. All were commissioned or acquired by members of the Myers family. The house was built about 1792 and is a two-story, Federal style brick
townhouse. Its facade features a pedimented gable end roof and a small aedicula type
portico surrounding the front door. In 1796, a two-story octagonal ended wing attributed to
Benjamin H. Latrobe was added to the rear of the house to contain a large dining room. Also on the rear are a two-story service wing and an attached two-story kitchen. A historic renovation of the house occurred in 1906 in anticipation of the
Jamestown Exposition. The house was converted to a house museum in 1931. Beginning in 1960, the house was completely renovated to restore it to a more historical appearance.
Victorian additions and modifications were removed, and structural repairs were made to the first floor
joists. The interior rooms were remade to return them to a more historically accurate color scheme, and a
Ludowici clay tile roof was installed to match the appearance of the building's original
wood shingle roof. It was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1970, with an amendment made in 2009.
Norfolk History Museum at the Willoughby-Baylor House The Chrysler Museum of Art previously oversaw the Norfolk History Museum at the
Willoughby-Baylor House (ca. 1794); however the museum no longer manages that property which has been closed since 2020. It illuminated the history of the region by providing thematic offerings and surveys including the decorative arts of Norfolk, stages in Norfolk's story as an international port and maritime center, and the area's naval and military heritage. ==References==