:Elizabeth Glassman, president and chief executive office, and
Marshall Field V, chairman, Terra Foundation for American Art,
with Richard J. Wattenmaker, director, Archives of American Art,
have announced that the Terra Foundation has awarded a grant of
$3.625 million to the archives in order to dramatically increase
the accessibility of its resources.
A unit of the Smithsonian Institution, the Archives of American
Art, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, is the
world's largest and most widely used resource on the history of
art in America.
The grant will fund a comprehensive, five-year program to
digitize a substantial cross-section of the archives' most
important holdings, including the papers of a highly diverse
range of artists and arts-related figures from the Eighteenth
Century to today.
At the end of the program, nearly 1.6 million digital files will
be available to the public on a newly redesigned website. Access
to the files will be free-of-charge. The grant signals the
foundation's growth as an active grant-making organization, and
is the largest the foundation has made to date.
Ms Glassman stated, "Last year, the board voted to devote greater
resources to the support of the foundation's fundamental mission,
which is to foster a broad appreciation and understanding of the
art of the United States. We are delighted to invest substantial
funding for this important and far-reaching project. The
foundation grant to the archives has the potential to
revolutionize research in American art, creating free and open
access to important documents not just for the academy, but also
for schools, libraries and homes, from St Louis to Shanghai."