When Clyfford Still died in 1980, his will stipulated that his entire collection be given to an American city willing to establish a permanent museum dedicated exclusively to the care and display of his art. Approximately 20 American cities contended to receive the Still collection. In August 2004, Still's widow, Patricia, chose Denver to receive the collection after then-Mayor
John Hickenlooper visited her home and agreed to the will's terms. The artworks contained within the Clyfford Still Estate included roughly 825 paintings on canvas and 2,300 works on paper on various media including
pastel, crayon, charcoal,
gouache,
tempera,
graphite, and pen and ink, and fine art prints. In 2006, the newly-formed Clyfford Still Museum secured a parcel of land within Denver's Civic Center Cultural Complex immediately west of the
Denver Art Museum’s then-under-construction
Frederic C. Hamilton Building, designed by
Daniel Libeskind. Later that year, the board selected
Allied Works Architecture, led by
Brad Cloepfil, for the museum’s design. The museum broke ground on its new home in December 2009 and opened to the public on November 18, 2011 as a
single-artist museum. In 2017, the museum launched its first online collection and research database. In 2025, the museum launched an expanded online collection, Clyfford Still Online, which includes over 3,000 artworks that Still made during his lifetime and thousands of archival objects. In 2024, the museum launched the Institute Residential Fellowship Program, by which it brings artists, educators, and thought leaders to Denver each summer to engage with the museum and its collections. The program is built on three pillars of study: art; education; and social enterprise. Past fellows have included artist
Kevin Appel, early childhood scholar Kyong-Ah Kwon, enrolled member of the
Colville Confederated Tribes Michael Holloman, Executive Director for the
Paul Robeson House and Museum Riley Jones, IV and art writer Kealey Boyd. ==Art Collection==