Microsoft Art Collection
The Lumiere Group manages the entire scope of the Microsoft Art Collection; a corporate art collection established in 1987 containing 5,000 artworks. In addition to providing guidance on new 2D, sculpture and commissioned art acquisitions, we document and care for all artworks, including overseeing shipping and installation across 140 buildings in the United States and Canada.
Details
Highlights
- Draft and implement strategy, vision, and mission for the Microsoft Art Collection
- Research and present artworks tailored to individual project goals and Collection mission
- Arrange for shipping, framing, and professional installation
- Oversee artist selection, design, and installation phases for commissioned artworks
- Collect and store art collection data
- Design engaging programs, informational articles, and events for employees
Overview
Our holistic engagement with The Microsoft Art Collection allows The Lumiere Group to employ all of our skills as a team, including everything from mission implementation and curatorial guidance to database organization and professional art installation. We research and present stakeholders with diverse artists whose artworks speak to the goals of each individual project and meet the art collection’s mission. Working with artists and galleries throughout the United States and Canada, we support acquisition and legal transfer of title. We curate, maintain, ship, and install artworks in Microsoft’s buildings. The Lumiere Group also designs programs and educational content for Microsoft’s employees worldwide. In alignment with the Collection’s mission, we encourage creativity among employees by facilitating an annual employee art exhibition and bring artworks to life through curated digital exhibitions, specialized tours, self-guided tour maps, interpretive text, interviews, articles, panels, and workshops.
Next Project:
Microsoft: Raven's Escape
The Lumiere Group coordinated with Tlingit artist Preston Singletary and sculptor David Franklin; artists commissioned by Microsoft to create a sculptural wayfinding component. Welcoming visitors to their new campus, the artwork extends from the roadway to the pedestrian area. It is executed in Singletary’s signature interpretation of Northwest formline style and consists of six ravens mounted on three vertical poles. Coordinating installation was key in one of the largest active construction sites in Western Washington.
View Project