
Regionally Rooted. Globally Engaged.

Our Collection
The Hilliard Art Museum’s permanent collection preserves art of cultural and historical significance while providing accessible educational and research opportunities for ULL students, scholars, and the greater Gulf South community. Numbering approximately 3,000 objects, the collection ranges from ancient Egyptian artifacts to vernacular self-taught and internationally recognized contemporary artists.


The mission of the Hilliard’s art collection is to establish a high-quality, focused collection of national importance that builds upon the strength of our current holdings of American art from the 1950s to the present, including works by Louisiana-based artists or works pertaining to our Gulf Coast regional history and culture. The museum strives for exhibitions and additions to its collection that provide cultural context for local and regional audiences and foster educational collaborations across the University of Louisiana at Lafayette campus.

The History of the Hilliard Art Museum Collection
The Museum began as a university art exhibition program in 1957 under the direction of University of Southwestern Louisiana Professor of Art, Fred Daspit, when it attracted the attention of W. E. Groves and architect A. Hays Town, who gave the University its first major donations of artwork. Ten years later, thanks to a donation of land by Maurice Heymann, construction began on the Art Center of Southwest Louisiana.
Significant collections within the permanent collection are the Jacqueline Heymann Cohn Japanese Print Collection, Sylvia & Warren Lowe Collection of American Vernacular (folk) Art, Marais Press Collection, Ambassador Jefferson Caffery Collection of Egyptian Artifacts, Andy Warhol Collection, The Louisiana Collection, Henry Botkin Collection, Drawings by Eilshemius, and Print portfolios by Picasso and Dali. Each has a distinctive area of focus and art historical context.


Accessing the Collection
Over 1,200 digital catalogue entries (and growing!) are available in the museum’s online collections database. You can search by keyword, suggested terms, creators, or object for information and artist biographies.

