• Source: Gertrude Herbert Institute of Art
    • Gertrude Herbert Institute of Art is located in Augusta, Georgia, in the home of former Augusta mayor and United States senator Nicholas Ware. Olivia Herbert founded the institute in 1937. The original name for the institute was the Augusta Art Club; it was later renamed in memorial to Olivia Herbert's daughter, Gertrude Herbert Dunn. The two primary missions of the institute are art education and visual arts exhibition.


      Education activity


      Facilitating the art education mission of the institute is a certification by the Georgia Council of Arts as a Teacher Professional Learning (TPL) provider current as of 2007. Among other certified providers is Emory University.


      Ware's Folly: The building housing the institute



      Construction of the home in which the institute is housed was completed in 1818. The building is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Built in the Federal style the house is notable for its three-story elliptical staircase. The building bears the nickname Ware's Folly, which derives from the high cost of the construction, $40,000 in 1818 or c. $12 million in 2007, and the extravagant interior detailing.


      References


      Fay, Robin (21 October 2005). "Gertrude Herbert Institute of Art". New Georgia Encyclopedia (On-line ed.). Georgia Humanities Council (primary). Retrieved 2007-07-31.
      "Gertrude Herbert Institute of Art". Artcom Museums Tour. Retrieved 2007-08-01.


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      External links



      Homepage for the Institute
      Augusta, Georgia, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary

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