Apartments near Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC(276 Rentals)
16 Bee St
70 Cannon St
20-24 Bee St
14 Lockwood Dr
Hoffler Place
Terrivo Apartments
87 Spring St
109 Cannon St
89 Spring St
216 Ashley Ave
The Abbey
445 Meeting St
3 Hampden Ct
78-80 Drake St
115 Spring St
127 Cannon St
4 Ashe St
93 Columbus
Spring Street Apartments
The Guild
76 Nassau St
Sanctuary Court
15 Sires St
235 Saint Philip St
23L
67 Line St
99 Nassau St
LC Line Street
Poinsette
28 Blake St
8 Blake St
13 Norman St
15 Norman St
47 Kennedy St
Grace Homes
Ashton
Nunan Apartment
Bee Street Lofts
28 Cooper St
Gadson Green Homes
King Street Apartment I & II
228 President St
The Bristol
Meeting Street Manor - Cooper River Court
404 Race St
Kings Crossing
Morrison Yard
Congress
221 Congress St
Charleston, SC Local Guide
Browse Top Apartments in Charleston
Explore Charleston
Dedication to providing the people of the city, including Charleston apartment-ites, the best Southern art had to offer was the goal of James Shoolbred Gibbes, Sr., an art enthusiast. He willed the city $100,000 in a trust to be used for the erection or purchase of a suitable building to be used as a hall for the exhibition of paintings. In 1903, the mayor of Charleston and Gibbes trustees purchased a lot and a lovely, Beaux arts style building was designed and constructed under the supervision of Kentucky architect Frank P. Milburn, and dedicated in 1904. Today, the museum displays a wide range of art from colonial to renaissance to modern art in three permanent galleries, with numerous special and traveling exhibits. The colonial tour, displays a wide range of portraiture that was popular at the time, as well as shipping and sea side scenes. Henry Benbridge and Jeremiah Theus' works are here. From 1915 to 1940, Charleston experienced what art historians call a renaissance, or artistic rebirth of the art style of the day. A small community of artists realized a beauty in the extraordinary cultural and architectural past. A new appreciation was gained and recognized by such artists as Alice Ravenel Huger Smith, Elizabeth O'Neill Verner, Anna Heyward Taylor, Alfred Hutty, cornerstones of the period. Visiting artists such as George Biddle and Norman Rockwell were influenced to a certain extent as well, and Charleston can take some credit for the shaping of American art at that time. The broad contexts of modern art, including cubism, surrealism and expressionism are shown in the Southern art at the Gibbes. Representations of portraiture and landscape are offered as well. The museum is a great repository for local and regional artists to reflect the story of the low country, as most pieces are from these artists. Exciting, beautiful, vibrant art can be found here. The Gibbes Museum is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday. It is closed on Mondays and on national holidays. Admission price is $9 for adults, $7 for seniors, students and military, and $5 for children ages 6 to 12. You may be able to pick up a print to hang in your Charleston apartment, so visit when you can.