High Museum Adds 361 Works to Collection, Including Jacob Lawrence Watercolor

76Dec. 19, 2025

The High Museum of Art in Atlanta has added 361 artworks and objects to its collection in 2025. The acquisitions are part of a strategic plan to grow its holdings, now numbering over 20,000 objects, ahead of the museum’s centennial next year. “As we look ahead to our centennial in 2026, our curators have strategically acquired artworks that not only support where we’ve traditionally built strengths as an institution but that also signal where we’re heading in the next 100 years,” High Museum director Rand Suffolk said in a statement. “They bolster what’s uniquely special about our existing holdings and also bridge gaps in our collecting to foster audience growth and engagement.” The highest-profile of these is Jacob Lawrence’s 1943 watercolor Night (And then they go to sleep) from the artist’s “Harlem” series. The early work was recently rediscovered and was only exhibited once, in 1943. For its European art department, the High also acquired its third painting by Henri Matisse, 1900’s Homme assis (Seated Man). Several of the acquisitions are already on view at the museum, including Simone Leigh’s Cupboard (2024) in the modern and contemporary art galleries and Ngozi-Omeje Ezema’s Togetherness (2022) in the African art galleries. Other acquisitions are drawn from the museum’s exhibition calendar. The High is currently host to “The Family Album of Ralph Eugene Meatyard” (through May 10), and around 30 of the more than 50 photographic prints it purchased are included in the exhibition. Also on view is Minnie Evans’s Temple by the Sea (1955) in the late artist’s current retrospective at the museum. The High also purchased a table and stool by Isamu Noguchi that will feature in the museum’s upcoming retrospective, scheduled to open in April. “These acquisitions reflect key priorities for the High in seeking out excellence and distinctiveness that support curatorial initiatives in the development of an international slate of collections, exhibitions and new scholarship,” the museum’s chief curator Kevin W. Tucker said in a statement. Below a look at these highlights from the museum’s 2025 acquisitions. Made two years after his famed “Migration” series, Night (And then they go to sleep) is part of Jacob Lawrence’s “Harlem” series, showing various views of the New York neighborhood that was the epicenter of the Harlem Renaissance. The Portland Art Museum in Oregon owns six of these watercolors from the 30-work series, while the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. owns one. Night has only been exhibited once, in 1943, alongside the other works from the series and was recently rediscovered. It shows a family at sleep under a vividly patterned quilt. The work will go on view next year as part of a reconfiguration of the museum’s American art galleries as part of its centennial celebrations. “Acquiring this work,” a press release reads, “affords the High a leading place in new scholarship on Lawrence’s most formative artistic pathways, his relationship to Southern arts and culture, and the cross-disciplinary presence of numerous aesthetic traditions in his monumental oeuvre.” Painted in 1900, Homme assis (Seated Man) was made five years before he began working in a Fauvist mode and created more than a decade earlier than the other two Matisse paintings owned by the High: Portrait of a Little Girl (1916) and Woman Seated at the Piano (ca. 1924). Its intense and darker palette is a sharp contrast from the works that Matisse would go onto paint. The work was owned by Matisse’s family until 2023, when it was purchased by a private collector, from whom the High acquired the canvas. Simone Leigh is among today’s leading artists, having represented the United States at the Venice Biennale in 2022. This work belongs to Leigh’s “Cupboard” body of work, which takes its name from Mammy’s Cupboard, a restaurant in Natchez, Mississippi, dating to the 1940s and still in operation today. That restaurant was built to resemble the hoop skirt of the “mammy” stereotype of Black women, popularized by Gone with the Wind. According to a release, “Cupboard is one of the High’s most significant acquisitions of contemporary art by a woman artist and is among only a few figurative contemporary sculptures in the collection.” This table and stool mark Isamu Noguchi’s only set of dining designs for the Herman Miller Furniture Company and represent one of his final collaborations with the manufacturer. These two design objects join two others already in the High’s permanent collection: IN-50 Coffee Table and the original plaster model for Play Mountain (1933). This pair, a release reads, “stand out among Noguchi’s mass-produced furnishings for their unique synthesis of his signature, striking biomorphic silhouettes with a sensitivity to the space-saving priorities of many postwar consumers, and they exemplify his sincere desire to extend inventive sculptural form-making into diverse facets of everyday life.” The High Museum is the first US institution to acquire a work by Nigerian artist Ngozi-Omeje Ezema, who specializes in ceramic and pottery to make large-scale sculptures and installations. Composed of hundreds of terracotta leaves to form a large-scale vase, Togetherness is the largest work from the artist’s “Boundless Vessels” series. In a release, the museum said that acquisition of Togetherness “is part of the High’s ongoing initiative to acquire works by Nigerian artists and to present ceramic works by African women artists, and it complements the museum’s strong examples of ceramic vessels, from seventh-century terra-cotta forms to contemporary decorative sculpture.” Though the High Museum organized a traveling retrospective of Minnie Evans, titled “The Lost World: The Art of Minnie Evans,” it had until now not owned a painting by the self-taught artist. Temple by the Sea joins the 16 drawings by Evans already in the High’s collection. Evans worked primarily in drawing and is estimated to have made fewer than two dozen paintings. The museum believes that the temple referenced in the work’s title is one built by Sewdass Sadhu in 1952 in Trinidad. “Evans traced her ancestry to Trinidad, so it is conceivable that she would have seen coverage of Sadhu’s temple and felt a connection to it,” according to a press release. “She paints her version in a coastal setting, an environment similar to her home in Wilmington, North Carolina.” The estate of photograph Ralph Eugene Meatyard donated 53 photographic prints to the High Museum; 36 from his “Gnomon Press Monograph Set” (1958–69) and 17 from his “Georgetown Street series,” ca. 1955. Published in 1970 by Gnomon Press, the “Gnomon Press Monograph Set” are the 36 works that Meatyard considered his most important works. Because Meatyard typically did not produce more than three prints for each image, a complete set like this is extremely rare. The “Georgetown Street” prints come from the artist’s first series, which focused on an African American community in Meatyard’s hometown of Lexington, Kentucky. Several of these works are on view in “The Family Album of Ralph Eugene Meatyard” at the High, which already owned 10 prints by Meatyard.

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