Founding When the gallery was founded in 1869 by
William Wilson Corcoran, the cofounder of
Riggs Bank, it was one of the first
fine art galleries in the country. Corcoran established the gallery, supported with an
endowment, "for the perpetual establishment and encouragement of the Fine Arts." While an independent institution, the Corcoran was the oldest and largest non-federal art museum in the
District of Columbia. Its mission was "dedicated to art and used solely for the purpose of encouraging the American genius." The Corcoran Gallery of Art was originally located at 17th Street and
Pennsylvania Avenue, in the building that now houses the
Renwick Gallery. Construction of that building started before the
Civil War. The building, near completion, was used by the government as a warehouse during the Civil War. It was finally completed in 1874 and the gallery opened to the public. The 93 works on display at the gallery were described in detail by
M.E.P. Bouligny in her
tribute to Corcoran published in 1874. By 1897, the Corcoran Gallery collection outgrew the space of its original building. A new building was constructed, designed by
Ernest Flagg in a
Beaux-Arts style. The 135,000 square feet (12,500 m2) building was built to house an expanded Corcoran collection in addition to the nascent school, which had been formally founded in 1890. The new building features a pair of bronze statues, the
Canova Lions, at its entrance. These lions were purchased at auction by the Corcoran Gallery in 1888 and placed in front of the museum at its original location. The iconic bronze castings were moved to their current location in 1897 when the museum moved to its final building at 17th Street and New York Avenue.
Years of growth In 1928, the art collection of former Senator
William A. Clark joined the Corcoran in a new wing designed by Charles Adam Platt, which was inaugurated by President
Calvin Coolidge. For decades, the Corcoran examined the possibility of adding on a final wing which would complete the campus footprint. These plans abruptly ended in 2005 after a
Frank O. Gehry-designed wing was scrapped due to lack of funding, and the remainder of the available property was sold to a private developer. Throughout the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, the gallery continued to display its main collection from Corcoran, Clark, and a few select major donors. At its peak, the museum owned a significant collection including work from
Rembrandt Peale,
Eugène Delacroix,
Edgar Degas,
Thomas Gainsborough,
John Singer Sargent,
Claude Monet,
Mariano Fortuny,
Pablo Picasso,
Edward Hopper,
Willem de Kooning,
Joan Mitchell,
Gene Davis, and many others. Space was always a challenge; only a small percentage of the gallery's permanent collection could be displayed in the confines of the 17th Street gallery, which shared its roughly with the art school.
Donelson Hoopes served as curator from 1962 to 1964. During the 1980s museum attendance swelled and the Corcoran's events and programs were imitated by other institutions.
Mapplethorpe controversy In 1989, the Corcoran Gallery of Art agreed to host a traveling solo exhibit of
Robert Mapplethorpe's works. Mapplethorpe showed a new series that he had explored shortly before his death,
Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect Moment, which was curated by Janet Kardon of the
Institute of Contemporary Art in
Philadelphia. Several trustees of the Corcoran and U.S. Representative
Dick Armey (TX) and Senator
Jesse Helms (NC) were horrified when the sexually explicit works were revealed to them; the museum board of trustees succumbed to pressure and cancelled the exhibit the night before its opening, which had already been announced to its members through an exhibition preview invitation. The Coalition of Washington Artists organized a demonstration to protest the Corcoran Gallery's cancellation of the exhibit. An estimated 700 people attended the demonstration. In June 1989,
pop artist
Lowell Blair Nesbitt became involved in the controversy over Mapplethorpe's work. It was at this time that Nesbitt, a longtime friend of Mapplethorpe, revealed that he had a $1.5 million bequest to the museum in his will. Nesbitt publicly promised that if the museum refused to host the exhibition he would revoke his
bequest. The Corcoran refused and Nesbitt bequeathed the money to the
Phillips Collection instead. After the Corcoran cancelled the Mapplethorpe exhibition, the underwriters of the exhibition went to the nonprofit
Washington Project for the Arts, which showed the controversial images in its own space from July 21 to August 13, 1989, to large crowds. The 1990
NEA Appropriations Bill included language against "obscene" work. As a result of the controversy, more than a dozen artists canceled exhibitions, funding and membership declined, and staff resigned in protest. By the end of 1989 Orr-Cahall had resigned as museum director. In 2019, the Corcoran School of Arts & Design staged the exhibition
6.13.89, exploring the cancellation of the exhibition. The show was held in the historic Flagg building's atrium and displayed archival documents related to the planning, controversy, and after-effects of cancelling
The Perfect Moment. It was curated by GW graduate students Maddy Henkin and Artie Foster with Sanjit Sethi, then Director of the Corcoran School of the Arts & Design at the George Washington University.
Final years from the Corcoran collection had been incorporated into displays at the gallery; these four paintings are among those currently visible in the rooms dedicated to American art. In its final years, the museum and its affiliated Corcoran College of Art and Design together had a staff of about 140 and an operating budget of about $24 million. Revenue came from grants and contributions, admissions fees, tuition, membership dues, gift shop and restaurant sales, and an
endowment worth around $30 million. In February 2001, two
AOL executives (
Robert W. Pittman and
Barry Schuler) and their wives donated $30 million to the museum, its largest single donation since its founding. In 2014, following years of negligence and financial mismanagement, a lawsuit was brought by the law firm Gibson Dunn on behalf of the group Save the Corcoran against the trustees. After two weeks of hearings, Judge Okum ordered the Corcoran, the city's oldest independent museum, dissolved. The trustees gave the Corcoran College of Art and Design the $200 million
Beaux Arts building, and gave $50 million to George Washington University to renovate the facility and operate the school programs. The 17,000-piece art collection, worth $2 billion, was donated to the National Gallery of Art. At the beginning of 2018, the director of the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design officially disclosed plans for the National Gallery of Art to bring art back to the second floor of the Flagg building. == Interior ==