About the Walters
The museum’s campus includes five historic buildings and 36,000 art objects. Moving through the museum’s galleries, visitors encounter a stunning array of objects, from romantic 18th and 19th-century images of French gardens and Latin American effigies to mesmerizing Ethiopian icons, richly illuminated Qur’ans and Gospel books, ancient Roman sarcophagi, and serene images of the Buddha.
The Walters Art Museum was established in 1934 “for the benefit of the public.” Originally called the Walters Art Gallery, the museum started when Henry Walters (1848-1931) bequeathed to the City of Baltimore an extensive art collection begun by his father, William T. Walters (1819-1894), two buildings, and an endowment. While previous descriptions of William and Henry Walters have focused on their roles as philanthropists and art collectors, the museum is addressing and examining their support of the Confederacy and their Eurocentric collecting. In 2000, the Walters Art Gallery became the Walters Art Museum, a change that reflects the museum’s role as a major public cultural institution. The museum’s original collection and now three of the museum’s five buildings are owned by the City of Baltimore and stewarded by the Walters.
In addition to offering free admission to the museum and special exhibitions, the Walters is committed to public education, offering essential programs that help people to connect art to their lives. The Walters is also a leader in digitization, releasing high-resolution digital images of collection objects into the public domain for any use, free of charge, on the online collection and award-winning manuscripts website Walters Ex Libris. The Walters’ Visitor Promise aligns staff and volunteers across the museum to preserve and share the works in our care for future generations, partner with communities, and create welcoming, accessible experiences for visitors.
Today, the Walters serves Baltimore and Maryland by embracing its role as educators and storytellers, using the collection as a vehicle of knowledge and cultural expression to support learning, dialogue, and community engagement.
Leadership
The Walters Art Museum has been governed by an independent Board of Trustees since its founding. Read about the museum’s current leadership here.
Land Acknowledgement
As part of the Walters Art Museum’s commitment to understanding the deepest histories of its artworks, buildings, institutional legacy, and indeed the land on which we sit, we acknowledge the original stewards of the objects we hold and the territory on which the City of Baltimore, and subsequently the museum, were created.