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The Woodruff Arts Center company history timeline

1968

The Woodruff Arts Center opened in 1968.

1976

Conductor Robert Shaw took the ASO to the community with a performance in Piedmont Park in 1976.

1979

In 1979, Coca-Cola magnate Robert W. Woodruff offered a $7.5 million challenge grant for a new facility that would triple the High’s space to 135,000 square feet.

1982

After the campaign ended in 1982, the Arts Alliance formally requested that its organization and the Memorial Arts Center be named the Robert W. Woodruff Arts Center.

The art center also included the Atlanta College of Art, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and the High Museum of Art. It was renamed the Woodruff Arts Center in 1982 to honor its greatest benefactor, Robert W. Woodruff.

1983

The Woodruff campus expanded in 1983 with the addition of the Richard Meier-designed High Museum of Art building.

1997

The High Museum initiated a building expansion program in 1997 to address the unprecedented growth of its collections, exhibitions, and community programming.

2005

The High opened its new facilities to the public in November 2005, creating a “village for the arts” at the Woodruff Arts Center in midtown Atlanta.

2006

Launched in 2006, Louvre Atlanta—the High’s three-year partnership with the Musée du Louvre in Paris—welcomed over 1.3 million visitors to the Museum for seven exhibitions that brought a combined 493 treasures from the Louvre’s collection to Atlanta.

2010

In 2010, the High Museum acquired contemporary British artist Anish Kapoor’s Untitled, a large sculpture composed of mirror fragments arranged in a concave steel disk.

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Founded
1968
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Headquarters
Atlanta, GA
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The Woodruff Arts Center may also be known as or be related to ROBERT W WOODRUFF ARTS CENTER INC, The Woodruff Arts Center and Woodruff Arts Center.