Since the 1820s, the Boston Athenaeum has, among other things, functioned as an art museum. In fact, until its own trustees took the lead in founding, in the 1870s, an institution that would eventually dedicate itself to the fine arts in Boston, the Athenaeum single-handedly filled that role in the city.
Following what would later become standard museum practice, the Athenaeum pursued its mission in two ways: by regularly mounting exhibitions of contemporary and historical art; and by collecting objects to form a permanent collection.
Jean-Antoine Houdon (French 1741–1828)
Shobal Vail Clevenger (American 1812–1843)
Jean-Antoine Houdon (French 1741–1828)
Robert Ball Hughes (1806–1868)
Francis Legatt Chantrey (British 1781–1841)
Henry Westmacott (British 1784–1861)
Richard Saltonstall Greenough (American, 1819–1904)
Richard Saltonstall Greenough (American, 1819–1904)
Pietro P. Caproni
Pietro P. Caproni
Thomas Ridgeway Gould (American 1818–1881)
Joanna Quiner (1796–1869)