22 November 2024

Cummer Museum of Art and Gardens

We stopped at the Cummer Museum of Art in Jacksonville, Florida, to break up our dash north from Orlando once Doug’s conference was over. It was a delightful little museum right on the water, with bonus wonderful gardens for me.

The museum was founded in 1961 after Ninah Cummer (1875–1958) bequeathed her gardens, art collection, home, and personal items upon her death. The museum collection contains more than 5,000 items, featuring Europe and American art, along with a large collection of Meissen porcelain.

Peter Paul Rubens, Winslow Homer, and Norman Rockwell are some of the “big names” you can find in the museum, though we found lots of other works to enjoy.

The “Tudor Room” was preserved from the Cummers’ home and incorporated into the 1961 museum building. On the left is a needlepoint by Ninah Cummer.

The historic gardens, covering nearly 1.5 acres, have retained their original layout, some of which dates back to 1903. The gardens are divided into three areas: the Italian Garden, the English Garden, and the Olmsted Garden, which were designed by the famed Olmsted Brothers landscape architects. I was tickled to discover so many butterflies, too!

The cover photo to this post is Garniture of Five Vases with painted decoration by Johann Gregorious Horoldt, c. 1728-1730.

We’re so used to John Singer Sargent as a portrait painter, it is always a shock to see something else from him.  This is In the Alps, 1911.
  Café L’Avenenue, Paris by Richard Emil Miller, c. 1906-1910.
Waiting for a Bite by Winslow Homer, 1874.
Summer Morning by Charles Courtney Curan, undated.
Cat and Pair of Mice by Amanda Crowe, both c. 1950s-1960s.  The large painting to the left is Magnetic Fields by Mildred Thompson, 1991.
Henriette Begouen by Alexander Roslin, c. 1790.
100 Aspects of the Moon: Moon of the Pleasure Quarters by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, 1886.
Meissen porcelain on display.
Meissen porcelain on display.
This live oak tree is estimated to be nearly 200 years old; it’s 80 feet tall and, 138 feet across, and its trunk circumference is 21 feet!!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.