Metro $26 Million For MSU Art Eli and Edythe Broad to establish a world-class museum. Eli Broad: "A great university needs a great museum." Architect and author Joseph Giovannini, who heads the architect-selection committee, shows the site plan for the museum. East Lansing M ichigan State University will be the home of a new world- class art museum focusing on modern and contemporary art, thanks to a gift of $26 million from philanthropist and MSU alumnus Eli Broad and his wife, Edythe. The museum will be the new home of the university's art collection, currently housed on campus in the Kresge Art Museum. The Broad gift is the largest individual cash gift in MSU's history. "A great university needs a great muse- um, since the arts stimulate learning and creativity throughout the entire campus," said Eli Broad. "Speaking from personal experience, the arts have played a trans- formative role in my life, even though they were not the center of my studies at MSU. This museum — and the iconic building that will bring it to life — will also serve as an important new resource for the peo- ple of central Michigan, making great art accessible to the millions of people who live and work within the region." The new building, to be located on Grand River Avenue at the Collingwood Entrance to campus, will have two front doors — one facing campus and the other facing Grand River — making it the first building on Grand River to face outward and creating a visual symbol of the con- nection between the university and the community. The Broad Art Museum will enable the university to increase the visibility and accessibility of art both for education and outreach, showcase more of the university's permanent collection, acquire and show larger and more significant works and exhibitions, and significantly add to the rich cultural and artistic heritage of MSU. "Eli Broad's commitment to Michigan State University is extraordinary," said MSU President Lou Ann K. Simon, "and his generosity will have a lasting and transformational impact. With this second major gift to the university, he and Edythe are ensuring our students and faculty have the tools for learning and knowledge in the 21st century — a conception of multi- disciplinary and global learning in which art and culture must play a part. "But in the true land-grant spirit, the benefits of this world-class facility and its programs will extend far beyond the borders of campus," Simon said. "This is a key component of cultural entrepreneur- ialism that will make Michigan's Capital Region more vital and attractive. It will provide a platform for extensive outreach and engagement to enrich the cultural and artistic education and appreciation of the entire community." The Pending Design The university is holding a competition to select the firm that will design the new museum. Joseph Giovannini, a noted architect and author, has been tapped to facilitate the selection process. Five firms from around the world have been invited to submit competition proposals. The firms are: Zaha Hadid (London), Coop Himmelblau (Vienna and Los Angeles), Morphosis (Santa Monica, Calif.), William Pedersen, Kohn Pedersen Fox Architects (New York), Randall Stout (Los Angeles). The proposed building will have a minimum of 26,000 square feet of gallery space and will accommodate both perma- nent and temporary exhibitions. In addition to supporting design and construction of the building, the gift provides the resources to stimulate and support collection growth, with new acquisitions focusing on modern and con- temporary works. The Broad Art Museum will vitalize the arts district in the northeast section of campus. Additional components of this area include the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, which welcomes its first class this fall, and a proposed new building for the College of Music. The Kresge Art Center, a part of the College of Arts and Letters, which houses the current art museum, will serve the new art museum and the Department of Art and Art History and support visual arts programming with classroom, studio and exhibition spaces. The total project cost for the museum is $30 million. The Broad gift includes $18.5 million for construction, and $7.5 million for art acquisitions and endow- ments for exhibitions and operations. MSU has raised an additional $6.5 million toward the construction project, including a $2 million gift from Edward and Julie Minskoff. The museum will be built at the cur- rent site of the Paolucci Building, which is empty and planned for demolition this summer. Groundbreaking for the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum is expected in the fall of 2008. June 14•2007 13