Last updated: 8/4/2023
5401 Bay Shore Road
Sarasota, FL 34243
Sunday - Wednesday, Friday - Saturday
10 AM - 5 PM
The Ca d'Zan (only) closes at 5:00 pm on Thursdays
Closed Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day
Estate grounds open daily from 9:30 a.m. until 6:00 p.m.
Adults - $25
Children ages 6 to 17 - $5
Children ages 5 and under - Free
Members – Free
Grounds Pass - $5 per person or $25/per person per year
Steven High
phone: 941-358-2600
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Heidi Taylor
phone: 941-358-2644
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Katie Nickel
phone:
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Sarah Cartwright
phone:
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Elisa Hansen
phone:
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Jennifer Lemmer-Posey
phone:
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Christopher Jones
phone:
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Jean Evans
phone:
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Ericka Kelley
phone:
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Rhiannon Paget
phone:
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Cherie Knudson
phone:
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Marci Boland
phone:
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Barbara Ramsay
phone:
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Heidi Connor
phone:
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Lynn Hobeck Bates
phone:
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Jay Boda
phone:
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Elizabeth Doud
phone:
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Amanda Robinson
phone:
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Jane Harris
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Laura Steefel-Moore
phone:
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Caitlyn Shanley
phone:
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Brooke Keller
phone:
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Francesca Tignore
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Jevon Brown
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The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art is the remarkable legacy of circus entrepreneur and collector of art John Ringling and his wife, Mable. The 66-acre estate includes the Museum of Art, the Searing Galleries, and the Chao Center for Asian Art featuring both permanent collection and temporary exhibition galleries and is the home of Joseph’s Coat, a skyspace by the artist James Turrell; the winter-residence of John and Mable Ringling, the Venetian-Gothic Cà d’Zan mansion; historic grounds and gardens; the 18th-century Historic Asolo Theater; and the Circus Museums, including the home of the world’s largest miniature circus at the Tibbals Learning Center.
The Ringling is the State Art Museum of Florida and is administered by Florida State University. It features a historic mansion, art museum, circus museum, historic theater, conservation center, arboretum, and reference library, and is situated on 66 acres of spectacular bayfront property in Sarasota.
The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art preserves and enhances the legacy of John and Mable Ringling and engages a large and diverse audience through its Museum of Art, Circus Museum, Cà d’Zan Mansion, Historic Asolo Theater, and historic grounds overlooking Sarasota Bay. The Museum is a division of Florida State University and is the Official State Art Museum of Florida.
The Ringling is an extraordinary center of art and culture that engages the local, state, and global communities and is accessible to and inclusive of all.
♦ Collaboration ♦ Innovation ♦ Relevance ♦ Accountability ♦ Inclusivity ♦ Integrity ♦
John Ringling, one of the five original circus kings of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, was blessed with entrepreneurial genius and through his success with the circus and other investments, became quite wealthy. The brothers purchased the Barnum & Bailey show in 1907 for $410,000 and recouped their entire investment in the first year. In 1911, John (1866-1936) and his wife, Mable (1875-1929) purchased 20 acres of waterfront property and a house called Palms Elysian built by one of Buffalo Bill’s circus managers, Charles Thompson in Sarasota, Florida. They began spending winters there in the 1920s. At one time, John and Charles owned more than 25 percent of Sarasota’s total area.
The couple’s first project in Sarasota was the splendid Venetian Gothic mansion Cà d’Zan, built between 1924 and 1926 at a cost of $1.5 million ($24,870,000 today). New York architect Dwight James Baum designed the Ca’ d’Zan. Mable played an active role in its design. It is built in the style of Italy’s Venetian Gothic palaces using fine materials including colored marble, glazed terracotta and stained glass. An Aeolian organ graced the central court. Ca’ d’Zan is 36,000 square feet and has fifty-six rooms and five floors.
John began collecting art in 1925 and concluded his acquisitions mostly by the end of 1930. He traveled the world with his dealer associate Julius Bohler to acquire works from museums deaccessioning and noble homes liquidating art to pay taxes. He particularly was drawn by provenance, the people who owned the work prior to his purchase, including the Astors and European nobility. At the same time, he hired the architect John H. Phillips to design his museum. Phillips had designed the Caples mansion next door and designed the central section of the Metropolitan Museum and the MIT campus in Cambridge. The art magazine Art News commented on the circus-man turned art collector: “The number of men who are active both as heads of art museums and of circuses is somewhat limited.”
John began collecting art in 1925 and concluded his acquisitions mostly by the end of 1930. He traveled the world with his dealer associate Julius Bohler to acquire works from museums deaccessioning and noble homes liquidating art to pay taxes. He particularly was drawn by provenance, the people who owned the work prior to his purchase, including the Astors and European nobility. At the same time, he hired the architect John H. Phillips to design his museum. Phillips had designed the Caples mansion next door and designed the central section of the Metropolitan Museum and the MIT campus in Cambridge. The art magazine Art News commented on the circus-man turned art collector: “The number of men who are active both as heads of art museums and of circuses is somewhat limited.”
It took two years to construct the museum, though John never fully completed the crypt under David, which was to be his last resting place. John’s masterpiece was the acquisition of the four Eurcharist cycle paintings by Rubens. The space in which they hang, Gallery 2, was designed especially for these works and creates one of the most spectacular galleries in America. After wintering in Ca’ d’Zan only three years, Mable passed away in New York at the age of fifty-four. She suffered from diabetes complicated from Addison’s disease. Mable Ringling left a rich legacy we are fortunate to still enjoy today.
Impacts from the market crash, the sinking of his yacht Zalophus, and lawsuits from Owen Burns and others in the region and nationally, left John short on cash. But his $2 million acquisition of the American Circus Corporation’s Sells-Floto and Hagenbeck-Tom Mix combined circuses was one of his biggest mistakes. Angry that two of the American Circus Corporation’s circuses had wrested Ringling Brothers time slot at Madison Square Gardens (the most lucrative venue for the circus), he bought it outright without informing his business partners, including his sister-in-law Edith. He quickly went into debt and eventually lost control of the Circus. His poor health due to thrombosis continued. His hasty wedding to Emily Haag Buck in 1930 soon collapsed into a protracted and nasty divorce. The divorce finally settled in July 1936.
John Ringling envisioned an art school as part of his museum from the very beginning. The school was founded on March 31, 1931 through the generosity of Ringling and colleagues. Initially operated by Southern College in Lakeland, FL it soon became an independent art school now called Ringling College of Art and Design.
John died of pneumonia, at age 70, in his home on Park Avenue, in New York City on December 2nd, 1936. Upon John’s passing the Ringling Estate is bequeathed to the people of Florida. Between 1936 and 1946 the Museum was only occasionally opened and not properly maintained. With the heat and humidity of the summer months, paintings suffered and required care that was not available. At the same time, the Ringling estate was settled, creditors paid, and the state of Florida took possession. Governance of Ringling initially resided with the Florida Board of Control overseeing higher education institutions.
In 1947 Arthur Everett “Chick” Austin, Jr. was hired as The Ringling’s first director. Austin was considered one of America’s top connoisseurs of Baroque art. He also incorporated Performance and Contemporary Art into the museum to make Sarasota a destination for artists and creatives. In 1947 Chick met painter Syd Solomon who became a close friend.
In 1948 Chick Austin established the Circus Museum to honor the memory of John Ringling. It was the first museum in the country to document the rich history of the American circus. The original circus collection included props, costumes and posters donated by local circus families. Chick Austin purchased the decorative elements of a theater originally built in 1798 to honor Queen Caterina Coronaro who was exiled from Cyprus in the 1600s. The theater was originally located in Caterina’s castle in the hill-town of Asolo near Venice, Italy.
Chick Austin hired Marion Manley, the second female architect licensed in Florida, to design a new building for the Asolo Theater on campus. The theater became the center of the performing arts in Sarasota hosting emerging performing arts companies that would become the Sarasota Opera and Asolo Repertory Theater and presenting contemporary performances by Trisha Brown Company and Laurie Anderson in later years.
The opening for the Asolo Theater in its new home was a grand celebration of the arts in Sarasota and brought together artists, performers, and audiences in formal attire for an evening of theater, music and dancing.
With the opening of the FSU Center for Performing Arts in 1989 the Asolo Theater was too small for larger performance groups and, in 2001, the theater closed for performance and was used for collection storage. Eventually the Manley Building was destroyed in 2004 for construction of the Searing Wing.
After Chick’s death in 1957, his Assistant Director Kenneth Donahue was named director. Donahue brought significant exhibitions to Sarasota, including the Abstract Expressionists (Pollock, de Kooning, Rothko and others). In 1964 he was appointed the second director of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, LACMA. From 1959–1969 Governance shifted to the Board of Commissioners for State Institutions. The Ringling Board was now appointed by the Governor.
Curtis Coley, the third director, oversaw construction of the 1965 addition to the Museum of Art with galleries for special exhibitions and offices. He exhibited numerous contemporary art exhibitions including Thomas Chimes and Oscar Cahen. The young artist Sam Gilliam was exhibited as part of a group show in 1969…50 years later, in 2019, Gilliam had a solo exhibition at The Ringling. From 1969-2000 Governance shifted to the Department of State.
Richard Carroll, the fourth director, acquired Rubens’ The Triumph of Divine Love (the fifth painting in the Eucharist series in Gallery One) for $200,000 and unveiled it at the museum’s 50th Anniversary celebration that year. He established the Archives department and the Italian Baroque Portraiture exhibition traveled to the Wadsworth Atheneum in 1984.
In 1980 the Museum of Art was designated as the official State Art Museum of Florida. In 1982 the Estate was designated as part of the Caples-Ringling Historic District, which includes property once owned by Charles Ringling, and is now part of New College.
Larry Ruggiero, fifth director, did a major reinstallation of the original galleries, some of which is still visible today. During his tenure, the collection traveled to Washington DC’s National Gallery of Art. After leaving Ringling, Larry became director of the Morse Museum in Winter Park until his death in 2022.
Despite challenges with lack of financial resources, fewer staff, and aging infrastructure with the Ca’ d’Zan and Museum of Art, David M. Ebitz, the sixth Director, organized an exhibition of the collection to travel to 4 venues in Japan, beginning with Kyoto. In 1996, he initiated a campaign to raise money to restore the Ca’ d’Zan and launched the renovation in 1998. The exhibition toured to Hiratsuka Museum of Art, Tobu Museum of Art, Takamatsu City Museum of Art, and The Miyagi Museum of Art, Sendai. The exhibition was a sensation in Japan and created international media for The Ringling. It created some controversy locally due to the absence of the Ringling’s most important works for an entire year while in Japan.
Over the years, John and Mable’s mansion had fallen into a state of neglect, and by the mid-1990s, the local community acted. Local, state, and national campaigns secured private and public funding to restore the architectural treasure. The campaign began in 1996 and saw three phases of restoration, and the mansion reopened in April 2002.
In 2000 the State of Florida passed governance of The Ringling to Florida State University (FSU). Together with the FSU Center for the Performing Arts, it is now one of the largest University art complexes in the United States.
Having restored the Ca’ d’Zan and the Museum of Art, additional state and private funds enabled John Wetenhall, the seventh director, and his board to undertake a major campus design and construction project that greatly expanded the campus and added four new buildings (Tibbals Learning Center, Visitors Pavilion, Searing Wing, and Education Building) by 2008. He also commissioned the James Turrell Skyspace.
A major new feature of The Ringling campus was the Tibbals Learning Center. Its centerpiece is the miniature tented circus that fills 10,000 sq.ft. of the building built by Howard Tibbals. Coming soon in 2023 is the immersive experience of the Greatest Show on Earth Gallery which highlights the 60 years of ownership of Ringling Brothers Barnum & Baily Circus by the Feld Family.
A major new feature of The Ringling campus was the Tibbals Learning Center. Its centerpiece is the miniature tented circus that fills 10,000 sq.ft. of the building built by Howard Tibbals. Coming soon in 2023 is the immersive experience of the Greatest Show on Earth Gallery which highlights the 60 years of ownership of Ringling Brothers Barnum & Baily Circus by the Feld Family.
In the early years of the museum, temperature and humidity controls were not available and artwork acquired by John Ringling suffered from poor conditions. Later, as technology became available, we could create a better environment for the collections. But conservation needs to be continuous.
Beginning in 1946 and continuing today, the conservation of our collections was critical. Starting in the late 1940s, contractual conservators included Julius Weitzer, Ceasar Diorio, and Edward Korany. Beginning in 1979 Head Conservators were Ted Knightwine, Michelle Scolari and, since 2013, Barbara Ramsay.
In the construction of the John McKay Visitors Pavilion, room was made to reinstall the now Historic Asolo Theater. The molded and damaged panels took over a year to be cleaned and gilded by Ringling conservators for reinstallation. The theater reopened to the public in 2006.
Steven High, the eighth director, has to date launched design, construction, and the opening for the Kotler|Coville Glass Pavilion, the Center for Asian Art and the Monda Gallery of Contemporary Art; re-branded The Ringling; opened the Turrell Skyspace, Tibbals Immersive Circus Galleries, the Bolger Playspace, and re-opening of the Historic Circus Museum. He completed a $100 million comprehensive campaign in 2019.
Beginning with the Ringling International Arts Festival’s five years of dynamic programming by Mikhail Baryshnikov as artistic director and continuing with performances of cutting-edge international artists selected by Ringling curators of performance. Recent performances of jazz by Alfredo Rodriguez and Pederito Martinez and dance by south Korea’s Bereishit Dance Company reflects the international diversity of performance at the HAT.
For over twenty years The Ringling has been in a state of constant expansion. During these years approximately 250,000 sq. ft. of new buildings have more than doubled the existing architectural footprint adding up to approximately $90 million in architectural construction.
Founded in 1946 by combining the libraries of John Ringling and Chick Austin, The Ringling Library has grown to become a world class art research library. With over 70,000 volumes of art books covering the History of Western and Asian Art, the Library is a member of the prestigious Art Discovery Group Catalogue, a consortium of fifty preeminent academic and museum art libraries in North America, Europe, and other countries.
As the museum expanded, the grounds became an important component of our program. With 200 species of plants and over 2,000 individual trees, The Ringling was officially accredited as a Level 2 Arboretum in 2019. Using the database Treefinder, every tree and its location is identified on a GPS map of campus that visitors can access to learn more about each unique tree.
Opening in 2011, Joseph’s Coat, a Skyspace by James Turrell, signaled the beginning of a new initiative to engage with living visual and performing artists at The Ringling. Following the example of Chick Austin, Art of Our Time presents contemporary work by living artists and diversifies the voices and perspectives in our collections and programming.
Since 2011, The Ringling has added over 12,500 artworks to the collection. This expansion featured two new collecting areas (modern glass and photography) and a focus on collecting Contemporary art and Asian art. The Ringling has focused on exhibiting and acquiring work by artists of color who have been under-represented in our collecting in the past. The Ringling has nearly doubled income from admission and its budget has grown from $12.5 million in 2011 to $24.5 million in 2023.
Access: General Public, Students, Scholars, Members
Appointment required: No
Fully ADA compliant, including specially-equipped campus trams
Wheelchair Accessible
Parking
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