The Norton Museum in West Palm Beach, Florida, announced that some 80 artworks will be added to the museum’s collection via a combination of acquisitions and promised gifts. The new works cover a wide range of mediums and time periods, in step with the museum’s focus on European, American, and Chinese art.
Highlights include one of Fred Eversley’s parabolic lens sculptures; a 1981 painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat; Mary Cassatt’s drawing Mother Jeanne Nursing Her Baby; a trio of works (a film, a painting, and a sculpture) by Rashid Johnson; and three new blue-and-white porcelain objects from the Qing dynasty.
The Norton Museum of Art—the largest institution in Florida—reopened in 2019 after an extensive renovation by Pritzker Prize–winning architect Norman Foster’s firm Foster + Partners. The new building added 12,000 square feet of gallery space, along with a sculpture garden. Current exhibitions include “Artists’ Jewelry: From Cubism to Pop, the Diane Venet Collection,” featuring wearable objects by artists like Picasso, Dali, Jeff Koons, and Alexander Calder, and “Achromatic Scales,” featuring photographic installations by Leslie Hewitt.

Image Credit: Courtesy Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach
Mary Cassatt: Mother Jeanne Nursing Her Baby, 1907–08.

Image Credit: Courtesy Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach
Jean-Michel Basquiat: Gunga Din, 1981.

Image Credit: Courtesy Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach
Fred Eversley: Untitled (parabolic lens), 1981.

Image Credit: Courtesy Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach
Fabiola Menchelli: running towards the fire, 2023.

Image Credit: Courtesy Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach
Lidded Jar with Panels Depicting Antiquities on a Plum Blossom and Cracked Ice Ground, 1662–1722.