Denver Art Museum unveils 2025 collection


The Denver Art Museum in Colorado announced this week that it has acquired more than 750 works from all 11 of its curatorial departments over the last year or so, with a focus on further diversifying its collection.

The acquisitions were made between October 1, 2024 and September 30, 2025, and include Tishan Hsu’s mammal screen green-1 (2024) with Jackie Amezquita Gentleman’s Voice (2023), as well as works by artists such as Dawoud Bey and Kent Monkman who will have solo exhibitions at the museum in 2025.

The museum also houses two important historical works by women: paintings by Berthe Morisot Lunch in the garden Lessons in the Garden, on display since 1886 but not officially added until 2025, and a rare version of Camille Claudel’s sculpture fire dream (Fireside Dreams), conceived between 1899 and 1905.

At the same time, the museum expanded its photography collection with 133 works, including seven 20 x 24-inch Polaroids by modernist photographer and theorist György Kepes, and its architecture and design department added 35 new objects, including two pieces of contemporary furniture designed by women that incorporate abstract cultural symbols into their designs: a 2023 chair by Monica Curiel that echoes the shape of a mariachi string instrument, and a 2023 chair by Kim from the same year. Mupangilaï designed the screen to reference Central African monetary instruments.

Other noteworthy collections include a 1969 painting by Venezuelan-born Op artist Jesús Rafael Soto for the museum’s Department of Modern and Contemporary Latin American Art; a bamboo plate, one of 28 works of bamboo art gifted to the museum by Japanese master Iizuka Shokansai circa 1975-1980 for the Asian Art Collection; and a 1925 painting by Western landscape painter Maynard Dixon.

Below are seven newly acquired works by the Denver Art Museum.

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