LRMA History
The
Lauren Rogers Museum of Art in Laurel,
Mississippi, was opened in 1923 as a memorial to
Lauren Eastman Rogers, the only son and only
grandson of one of the town's founding families.
Lauren had died in 1921 from complications of
appendicitis at the age of 23. After his death,
Lauren's father, Wallace Brown Rogers, and his
grandfather, Lauren Chase Eastman, created the
Eastman Memorial Foundation "to promote the
public welfare by founding, endowing and having
maintained a public library, museum, art gallery
and educational institution, within the state of
Mississippi."
The Eastman, Gardiner and Rogers families had
come to Laurel from Clinton, Iowa, in the 1890s
in search of uncut timber. Their influence on the
town touched all aspects of the residents' lives:
economic, social, educational and aesthetic. All
expectations were that Lauren Rogers would assume
an important role in the community, taking a
leadership role in business and contributing to
the general well-being of the community as well.
Deeply grieved by his untimely death, Lauren's
family was determined that something good should
come of the tragedy. The end result of their
vision and generosity is the Lauren Rogers Museum
of Art, which sits on the site where Lauren was
building a home for his new bride, Lelia.
Located
on a broad, tree-lined avenue among
turn-of-the-century homes near the center of
town, the Lauren Rogers Museum of Art is a
Georgian Revival structure designed by New
Orleans architect Rathbone deBuys. Large,
double-hung sash windows accentuate an exterior
of local brick with Indiana limestone. The
slender, attenuated metal columns in front were
made locally by the Laurel Machine and Foundry
Company.

The
interior of the building utilized the expertise
of the Chicago interior design firm of Watson and
Walton. The walls are paneled in quarter-sawn
golden oak, accented by handwrought ironwork by
Samuel Yellin and a ceiling of handmolded
plaster. Cork floors are found throughout the
Museum.
The Eastman Memorial Foundation initially sought
to establish a public library for Laurel and
Jones County in the building and decided to add a
museum wing after construction had begun. Today,
the Lauren Rogers Museum of Art includes an
extensive art and local history library with more
than 10,000 volumes, but the primary focus of the
Museum is its
collections. Contributions from the
private collections of the founding families
formed the original collection, and these works
remain at the core of the Museum's holdings. The
first donation was an assortment of 494 Native
American baskets, collected by Lauren's
great-aunt, Catherine Marshall Gardiner.
Currently, the Catherine Marshall Gardiner Native
American Basket Collection includes about 800
baskets, including 500 from North America.
The
Rogers and Eastman families donated important
19th and 20th century paintings by such
noteworthy American artists as Winslow Homer,
Albert Bierstadt, George Inness, John Frederick
Kensett and Ralph Albert Blakelock. Works by John
H. Twachtman and John Singer Sargent were
acquired soon thereafter. Today, the Museum
displays one of the finest collections of 19th
and 20th century European and American works to
be found in the South. The Museum's European
Gallery features paintings by Jean Francois
Millet, Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot and Jules
Adolph Breton, among others, and the American
Gallery includes works by Thomas Moran, Mary
Cassatt, Charles Hawthorne, John Sloan and
others. The Museum's contemporary collection
includes works by Romare Bearden, Marie Hull,
Walter Anderson, Ida Kohlmeyer and other artists
of national and regional renown.
Another
gift of the Museum's founders was the donation of
142 Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints from the
18th and 19th centuries. Given by Lauren's
father, Wallace B. Rogers, this outstanding
collection features work by such masters as Harunobu, Masanobu, Utamaro, Eishi, Hokusai and
Hiroshige and attracts visitors from throughout
the United States.
In
the 1970s, Thomas and Harriet Gibbons, co-owners
of the local newspaper, donated their extensive
collection of sterling silver. The Gibbons
English Georgian Silver Collection includes 65
major objects associated with the serving of tea,
including tea caddies, tea and coffee pots,
baskets for cakes and sweetmeats, and salvers.
Works by John Gibbons, William Plummer, Hester
Bateman, John Scofield and Henry Greenway are
included.
Building
additions and renovations were completed in 1925
and 1983, bringing the Museum to its present size
of 22,000, half of which is used as gallery
space. A recent donation of Lauren Rogers's
childhood home and the surrounding property will
be utilized in the future, allowing the Museum to
expand its space for programs, exhibitions,
administration and storage.
Today,
80 years after its founding, the Lauren Rogers
Museum of Art continues as a memorial to a young
man who stood at the threshold of his adult life,
full of promise and high expectations. In the
aftermath of his tragic death, his family
determined to create a living monument to his
spirit, his ability and the promise of his
future. The Museum, they felt, would serve the
community in ways that Lauren would have served
it, had he lived. Their vision, generosity and
commitment have endured in a Museum that opens
its collections to the public six days a week,
sponsors an extensive educational program and
offers exhibitions that expose the
members of the community to the best examples of
art of its many forms.
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