The Hammer Museum manages five distinct collections: The Hammer Contemporary Collection; the collection of the UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts; the Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden; the Armand Hammer Collection, and the Armand Hammer Daumier and Contemporaries Collection.
Hammer Contemporary Collection The Hammer Contemporary Collection, inaugurated in 1999, is the museum's collection of
modern and
contemporary art. The collection includes works on paper, primarily drawings and photographs, as well as paintings, sculpture, and media arts. The Contemporary Collection houses works from artists, including many active in Southern California from 1960 to the present. Hammer Contemporary Collection works are often acquired in tandem with exhibitions presented at the museum, including the Hammer Projects series focusing on the work of emerging artists. The 2009 exhibition Second Nature: The Valentine-Adelson Collection at the Hammer exhibited selections from Dean Valentine and Amy Adelson's gift to the Hammer Contemporary Collection. The gift of fifty sculptures by 29 Los Angeles artists represents a significant milestone in the Hammer's commitment to collecting the works of Southern California artists. In 2012, the Hammer showcased selections from the Susan and Larry Marx Collection. The exhibition was made possible by a substantial gift from longtime museum supporters Susan and Larry Marx and includes more than 150 paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by over 100 international artists from the post-World War II period. The collection includes examples of
Abstract Expressionism on canvas and paper by the American artists
Jackson Pollock,
Willem de Kooning, and
Philip Guston as well as works by contemporary artists including
Mark Bradford,
Rachel Whiteread,
Mary Heilmann, and
Mark Grotjahn among others. Highlights from the contemporary collection include:
The Battle of Atlanta: Being the Narrative of a Negress in the Flames of Desire - A Reconstruction (1995) by
Kara Walker, Untitled (2007) by
Mark Bradford, Migration (2008) by
Doug Aitken, Untitled #5 (2010) by
Lari Pittman, Mirage (2011) by Katie Grinnan, Ruby I (2012) by
Mary Weatherford, Mimus Act I (2012) by
Mary Kelly. Notable recent acquisitions to the Hammer Contemporary Collection include
Suzanne Lacy's
Three Weeks in May (1977), as well as major works by
Lisa Anne Auerbach,
Fiona Connor,
Bruce Conner,
Jeremy Deller,
Jessica Jackson Hutchins,
Friedrich Kunath,
Tala Madani,
Allan McCollum, Robert Overby,
Martha Rosler,
Sterling Ruby,
Allen Ruppersberg,
Barbara T. Smith,
William Leavitt, and
Eric Wesley.
UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts at the Hammer Museum The UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts is one of the largest collections of works on paper in the country. Housed at the Hammer Museum, the center was established in 1956 after a gift from Fred Grunwald and today houses over 40,000 prints, drawings, photographs, and artists' books. In 1988 the Grunwald Center received a bequest of over 850 landscape drawings and prints from the collection of Los Angeles–based architect Rudolf L. Baumfeld. The Baumfeld Collection includes important examples of European landscapes from the 16th to 20th-centuries and includes pure landscapes, as well as views of architectural ruins and urban scenes. The Eunice and Hal David Collection, bequeathed to the Grunwald Center by lyricist Hal David and his wife Eunice, is a collection of 19th and 20th-century drawings by European and American artists. Selections from the collection were exhibited at the Hammer in 2003. The 2014 exhibition showcased works from the Elisabeth Dean Collection of 19th and 20th-century works on paper. The collection of approximately 900 prints and illustrated books is among the most significant gifts received by the Grunwald Center in recent years. The Grunwald Center is also home to several important collections of Los Angeles–based contemporary artists. The Grunwald Center's collection features over 1,000 works by Sister
Corita Kent, an influential pop printmaker and social justice activist, including rare preparatory studies and sketchbooks. Additionally, the Grunwald maintains an archive of the first twenty years of
June Wayne's influential Tamarind Lithography Workshop, offering a rare overview of contemporary print-making in Los Angeles. Jointly acquired by the Grunwald and the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Grunwald Center maintains a complete archive of prints by Los Angeles publisher Edition Jacob Samuel which documents the activity of master intaglio print-maker Jacob Samuel. Highlights from the archive were exhibited in the 2010 exhibition Outside the Box: Edition Jacob Samuel, 1988-2010. A research and education resource, the Grunwald Center study room is available by appointment to faculty, students, and members of the public. Highlights from the Grunwald's collection include:
Melencolia I (1514) by
Albrecht Dürer,
Christ Preaching (1652) by
Rembrandt van Rijn,
Maple trees at Mama, Tekona Shrine and linked Bridge (1857) by
Utagawa Hiroshige,
Les Grands Baigneurs (1896) by
Paul Cézanne,
Le Repas Frugal (1904) by
Pablo Picasso, and
Entropia (review) (2004), by
Julie Mehretu.
Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden The
Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden at
UCLA was inaugurated in 1967 and dedicated to the
eponymous chancellor of the university. Designed by famed landscape architect Ralph Cornell, the garden houses over 70 works of modern and contemporary sculpture in a five-acre, park-like setting. Group tours of the garden can be scheduled through the Hammer's online request form. The 72 object collection comprises works by Deborah Butterfield,
Alexander Calder,
Henri Matisse,
Joan Miró,
Henry Moore,
Isamu Noguchi,
Auguste Rodin, and
David Smith. A fully illustrated catalogue, including scholarly entries for each artist, was published by in 2007 by the Hammer Museum.
Armand Hammer Collection The Armand Hammer Collection The focus of the collection is primarily 19th century and early-20th century French impressionist and post-impressionist paintings, though the collection itself spans the 16th through the 20th century. Selections from the collection are on permanent display in the Hammer Museum's third floor galleries. Highlights of the collection include:
Juno (ca. 1665-1668) by
Rembrandt van Rijn,
The Education of the Virgin (1748-1752) by
Jean-Honoré Fragonard,
El Pelele (ca. 1791) by
Francisco Goya,
Salome Dancing before Herod (1876) by
Gustave Moreau,
Dr. Pozzi at Home (1881) by
John Singer Sargent,
Bonjour Monsieur Gauguin (1889) by
Paul Gauguin, and
Hospital at Saint-Remy (1889) by
Vincent van Gogh.
Daumier and Contemporaries Collection The Honoré Daumier and Contemporaries Collection at the Hammer Museum is one of the most important collections of Daumier works outside France. Housing over 7,500 works of art by the French satirist
Honoré Daumier (1808-1879) and other contemporary
caricaturists, it is the largest of its kind outside of Paris. Daumier was an extremely prolific artist whose work spans multiple media, and as such the collection includes paintings, drawings, lithographs, and a series of bronze portrait busts. Highlights from the Daumier and Contemporaries Collection include Daumier's ''Le passé - Le present - L'avenir
(1834), Un Avocat Plaidant,
(ca. 1845) Nadar élevant la Photographie á la hauteur de l'Art
(1862), and Don Quixote et Sancho Panza'' (1866-1868). ==Programs==