a picture of the outside of a brick buildings with trees around it

MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM

Michigan State University Museum is committed to understanding, interpreting, and respecting natural and cultural diversity. As Michigan’s land-grant university museum, this commitment to society is met through education, exhibitions, research, and the building and stewardship of collections that focus on Michigan and its relationship to the Great Lakes, and the world beyond.

The museum, initiated in 1857, is one of the oldest museums in the Midwest and is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums. In 2001, the MSU Museum became the first museum in the state to receive Smithsonian affiliate status from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., the world’s largest museum and research complex, thereby giving the MSU Museum broader access to Smithsonian cultural and scientific resources.

Designated an anchor organization by the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs, the museum is Michigan’s leading public natural and cultural history museum.

The museum is a public steward for nearly a million objects and specimens of cultural and natural history from around the world.

It serves as a major state repository for the Department of Natural Resources (biological collections) and the Bureau of History (archaeological collections) and is the home of the Michigan Traditional Arts Program, a statewide program in partnership with Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs.

The Museum reaches a broad and diverse audience through strong, varied, and accessible collections, field- and collections-based research, public service and education programs, traveling exhibits, and innovative partnerships with Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs (MCACA), the Great Lakes Fisheries Trust, and Michigan State University Extension (MSUE).

As the science and culture museum at Michigan State University, the MSU Museum “is committed to understanding, interpreting, and respecting natural and cultural diversity through education, exhibitions, research, and the building and stewardship of collections that focus on Michigan and its relationship to the Great Lakes, and the world beyond.” 

The Museum houses extensive collections of Great Lakes and other Indigenous material. Also, the Michigan Traditional Arts program has selected a large number of Native artists from Michigan.  

The Museum generously shared images from their collections of quilts, baskets, and quillwork used throughout the AIIS website.

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CONTACT

409 W. Circle Drive
East Lansing, MI 48824

Email | (517) 355-2370