
Fogg Art Museum (Harvard Art Museums)
Cambridge, United States
The Fogg Art Museum (often called the Fogg Museum) is the oldest of Harvard University's art museums, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Tracing its origins to 1895, it is known for its holdings of Western art from the Middle Ages to the present, with particular strengths in Italian early Renaissance, British Pre-Raphaelite, and nineteenth-century French art.
Today the Fogg forms part of the Harvard Art Museums, which also encompass the Busch-Reisinger and Arthur M. Sackler collections. The combined institution reopened in 2014 in a building on Quincy Street renovated and expanded to a design by architect Renzo Piano, uniting the three collections under a single glass-roofed structure.