pus could not have occurred in the last century, when neither the art museum nor art itself was welcome on most Ameri- can campuses, nor even early in this century, when the public rarely visited. The first genu- ine campus museum was the ungainly Trumbull Gallery at Yale, built in 1831-32 for $5,000. The designer was none other than the benefactor, Col. John Trumbull, whose own paintings formed the core of the collection. Yale's indulgence set a pattern. When alumni of- fered their personal collec- tions, the university usually ac- cepted, often without rhyme or reason, and stashed away the eclectic mix in unused base- ments and classrooms. Since neither art nor art history was widely taught until the 1890s, what passed for the art muse- um remained divorced from the business of education. Required taste: The new world dawned with the appearance of studio and art-history courses early in this century. Model- ing themselves on the Ger- man system, American univer- sities began to churn out thou- After a long and provocative competiton in 1983, the Eisenman-Robertson team snatched the prize away from an impres- sive list of opponents, among them Michael Graves and Cesar Pelli, who designed the addition to the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The winners triumphed by of- fering Ohio State a startling hypermodern form that perfectly symbolizes a gallery determined to avoid traditional art history. The Wexner is more a spine than a build- ing. Galleries are strung along a grid- sheathed corridor of glass that links two well-traveled campus streets. Simply by walking from one street to the other, thou- sands of students will be exposed to the exhibitions inside-as well as to the studios of working artists. The Wexner not only hugs the landscape, refusing the role of a monolith, it exhumes local history. At the west end of the glass spine, Eisenman and Robertson are rearing a 60-foot-high brick- and-glass tower that will serve both as a beacon and as a trace of memory, recalling the beloved OSU Armory, destroyed 20 years ago. Defiantly contemporary, the Wexner cuts a new path in a field dominat- ed until now by architectural modes that revive and glorify the distant, mostly clas- sical past. The new gallery has easily sum- moned donors and beneficiaries, to the tune of $26.5 million-most of all the fam- ily of Columbus retailer Leslie Wexner (The Limited stores, Henri Bendel, among others), for whom the center is named. Derrick display: Certainly this lesson was not lost on the Cal State campus at Long Beach, where a similarly unconventional Eisenman-Robertson scheme will house a $13.6 million cultural complex incorporat- ing museum, theater and arboretum, spread over 23 acres near the Pacific Ocean. Once again, the museum fans out, refusing a central image, its wings and walkways clinging to the curves of the earth, with a reconstructed oil derrick in ART STREIBER Delicate instincts: Emory's converted interior space sands, then millions of students trained to believe that "art" was a required taste for civilized men and women. Collec- tions grew quickly, especially after World War II; almost half of all campus museums have been built since 1950. Large buildings, professional staffs, flashy exhibitions of contemporary art- and the presence of real artists-are now de rigueur on any campus that aspires to at- tract top students and tempt wealthy bene- factors. Jonathan Green, director of the still-rising Wexner Center for the Visual Arts at Ohio State, wired these words into the new gallery's formal statement of purpose: "The Center is dedicat- edto the belief that the presence of the active, imaginative artist or scholar is as important as the collection of art itself. In its pre- sentations and in.its support of the artist . .. the Center is dedi- cated to vanguard experimen- tation." At least8percent of the Wexner willbe devoted to living / and working space for artists A central feature of the American campus: Model for the new arts complex at Cal State, Long Beach, stretching over 23 acres working in every medium, from painting and sculpture to video and computers. Ear- ly this year Green invited composer Philip Glass, sculptor Richard Serra and sound artist Kurt Munkacsi to Ohio State to col- laborate on a single installation in the old galleryandto speakwith students. "Wewill do more and more of this in the new build- ing," says Green. This open-ended embrace of the present tense is reflected in the Wexner's design. I SEPTEMBER 1987