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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
This month in Harvard historyThe bequest makes the Fogg "one of the richest, certainly one of the most important, museums in the country," declares "The Art Digest." "Newsweek" finds "not a single dud." Among Fogg officials, the huge bequest inspires visions of a major space crisis after the war, when many treasures (including some from Winthrop) will return from off-site safekeeping. By early 1944, nine galleries are completely rearranged to display selections from the bequest, thereby providing the public access that Winthrop's will requires (and which is already a well-established general policy at the Fogg). The Museum also opens a study room for the collection's 400-plus 19th-century drawings and watercolors. The Fogg Courtyard temporarily displays some of the Buddhist sculpture. - From the Harvard Historical Calendar, a database compiled by Marvin Hightower
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