George Mason University

             History & Art History Department

Full-size plaster cast of a Greco-Roman statue known as the Barberini Faun.

 

 Located between College Hall and Mason Hall.

The Casts

How did the casts come to George Mason?

When the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened in 1880 on the east side of New York City’s Central Park, it was given an endowment to fund a collection of plaster casts molded from original sculptures in the great museums of Europe.  The Metropolitan assembled a superb collection of 2,600 plaster casts, most of them made between 1880 and 1900.  After that, however, Metropolitan Museum curators spent more and more money on acquiring original works of art, resulting in the declined interest in plaster.  By 1930, the plaster casts had been placed in storage.  In 2003, a selection of these casts arrived at George Mason University on long-term loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Two more shipments arrived in 2005, bringing the total number of casts at GMU to more than 60. The casts are to be gifts from the MET. They have been undergoing cleaning and restoration, and they will all be installed in buildings on campus.

Webmaster: Jennifer  E. Seamster

                 Masters of Arts Management

                 College of Visual and Performing Arts

To contact us:

Department of  History & Art History

Robinson B 359

4400 University Drive

MSN 3G1

Fairfax, VA 22030

 

Telephone: 703-993-1250

Fax: 703-993-1251

 

We are extremely grateful to LeAnn and Joe Brickey for their generosity
in allowing us to use their 'shed' for the second and third shipments of
plaster casts. We meet and work happily in this large and comfortable
space, and we wish that LeAnn were still with us to share her
enthusiasm, her expertise, and her unflagging commitment to the study of
the Classical world.