More than 17,000 works of art and culture are housed at Queen鈥檚 University鈥檚 . The collection has strengths in Canadian contemporary and historical art in all media, Indigenous art, European paintings and works on paper from the 16th to the 20th century, historical African art, and Canadian decorative arts, quilts, and historical dress. Works are brought into the collection through various means, whether by purchase, donation, or bequest.
When the objects are not on view in Agnes鈥檚 galleries or on loan to other art museums around the world, where and how are these works stored?
鈥淭he collection lives in climate-controlled areas in Agnes鈥檚 facility,鈥 says Jenn Nicoll, Collections Manager. 鈥淚n this space, paintings hang on racks, works on paper are stored in solander boxes, quilts are rolled on acid-free cardboard rolls and Indigenous ancestors (historically referred to as artifacts in Western museology) may receive offerings of tobacco and visitations from community members. This care ensures collections are available to their communities and accessible to present and future generations.鈥
In June, Agnes began to pack the collection in preparation for the building of鈥疉gnes Reimagined, the new future-oriented facility. Some of the packing is on view in the exhibition Collection Count + Care, presented by Johnson, Johnston and Macrae Investment Group, part of CIBC Private Wealth Wood Gundy. Curated works in twos and threes hold space, or 鈥渢ake the stage,鈥 for biweekly intervals, as Agnes says goodbye to them temporarily. Agnes鈥檚 current building is open to the public until Dec. 4 and construction is scheduled to end in 2025. Agnes鈥檚 temporary home will be MacGillivray-Brown Hall (218 Barrie St.).