Schools
Fairfield University Art Museum Receives National Accreditation
Fairfield University Art Museum Receives National Accreditation from American Alliance of Museums

Press release
FAIRFIELD, Conn. — The Fairfield University Art Museum has achieved accreditation by the American Alliance of Museums (AAM), the highest national recognition afforded to American museums. Accreditation signifies excellence to the museum community, to governments, funders, outside agencies, and to the museum-going public.
Alliance Accreditation brings national recognition to a museum for its commitment to excellence, accountability, high professional standards, and continued institutional improvement. Developed and sustained by museum professionals for 50 years, the Alliance’s museum accreditation program is the field’s primary vehicle for quality assurance, self-regulation, and public accountability. It strengthens the museum profession by promoting practices that enable leaders to make informed decisions, allocate resources wisely, and remain financially and ethically accountable in order to provide the best possible service to the public.
Find out what's happening in Fairfieldfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“It is so exciting to have all of the hard work that the Museum staff has invested in this process—validated in this way. We are so proud to now be an accredited museum, and to have been recognized for all that we have accomplished since 2010 when the Museum was founded,” said Carey Mack Weber, the Frank and Clara Meditz executive director of the Fairfield University Art Museum. “Among the achievements I am most proud of are having grown and diversified the permanent collection—which now numbers over 2,500 objects—making our programs accessible to the broadest possible audiences through livestreaming, recording and archiving, and making all of our exhibition materials available bilingually in Spanish.”
Of the nation’s estimated 33,000 museums, over 1,080 are currently accredited. Fairfield University Art Museum is one of only 21 museums accredited in Connecticut, and one of only 12 accredited art museums in the state. Only 11% of museums in New England are accredited, only 16% of the Academic Art Museums in the country are accredited, only 15% of the museums with staffs the size of Fairfield’s Art Museum have achieved this honor, and only one other Jesuit University has an accredited museum.
Find out what's happening in Fairfieldfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The accreditation commissioner who shared the news with the Museum, Lisa Tremper Hanover, said that the commission “concurred that in a relatively short amount of time, you [the Museum] have met and exceeded standards and are a wonderful example of an academic museum that serves a vital town and gown purpose; your work with students and faculty is admirable.”
Accreditation is a very rigorous but highly rewarding process that examines all aspects of a museum’s operations. To earn accreditation a museum first must conduct a year of self-study, and then undergo a site visit by a team of peer reviewers. The Alliance’s Accreditation Commission, an independent and autonomous body of museum professionals, considers the self-study and visiting committee report to determine whether a museum should receive accreditation.
“Accredited museums are a community of institutions that have chosen to hold themselves publicly accountable to excellence,” said Laura L. Lott, Alliance Past President and CEO. “Accreditation is clearly a significant achievement, of which both the institutions and the communities they serve can be extremely proud.”
About the Fairfield University Art Museum
The Museum is comprised of two spaces. In the Bellarmine Hall Galleries, built on the lower level of Bellarmine Hall in 2010, the Fairfield University Art Museum displays its permanent collection alongside rotating special exhibitions. In the Walsh Gallery, located in the Quick Center for the Arts, the museum presents larger special exhibitions. All galleries are open to the public, and admission is free.
The permanent collection features European and American paintings — including a core group of 10 Renaissance and Baroque paintings from the Samuel H. Kress Collection — drawings, prints, photographs, and historic plaster casts as well as artwork from Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Also on view, are works of art on long-term loan from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Yale University Art Gallery, the Worcester Art Museum, the American Numismatic Society, Columbia University, and private collections.
The Museum presents five to eight temporary exhibitions annually in its galleries. These exhibitions survey a wide swath of centuries and cultures, from the ancient world to modern and contemporary, and are accompanied by an array of educational programming for all audiences.
The Fairfield University Art Museum inspires curiosity, creativity, reflection, and dialogue through its exhibitions, programs, and the collections in its care. As an essential component of the scholarly community at Fairfield University, the Museum advances knowledge for students from all disciplines, and offers communities of learners across Connecticut and beyond the opportunity to connect to art, ideas, and each other.
The Museum is located on the campus of Fairfield University in Fairfield, Conn., easily accessible by Metro-North train service, and just 70 minutes by car from New York City. The Museum is open to the public Tuesday through Saturday 11 a.m. – 4 p.m., with extended hours on Thursday evenings until 8 p.m.
For more information on current and upcoming exhibitions, events and programs, please visit www.fairfield.edu/museum.