A museum collection evolves over time, and its shape results from the dual influences of accident and intention. With the exception of museums established by a single collector or those with a very specific focus, most institutional collections express the developing mission of the institution, the diverse cultural values of the community, and the changing tastes of various curators, directors, and trustees. A museum collection typically includes art acquired by purchase and by gift, works that are actively sought after and works that arrive unheralded, masterworks on virtually perpetual display and pieces that are almost never shown. Museums typically exhibit a small fraction of their collection at any given time: one to five percent is the norm. So a collection is a largely invisible, sprawling thing, containing works that reinforce our expectations as well as others that may confuse and mystify. The constellation of works in Galaxy: A Hundred or So Stars Visible to the Naked Eye, on view in Galleries 4, 5, and 6, illuminates the Berkeley Art Museum collection and reflects its particular evolution. When the museum was founded in 1963, it inherited, among other things, several nineteenth-century landscapes by artists such as Albert Bierstadt and Théodore Rousseau that had belonged to the University for decades. Yet the museum's founding was also made possible by the donation of forty-seven of his own canvases by the Abstract Expressionist painter Hans Hofmann. So, from the start, BAMPFA's collection expressed the interests and imperatives of diverse cultural moments. Our first director, Peter Selz, built the nascent collection around the Hofmann donation, acquiring by gift and purchase paintings and sculptures by many of the leading American and European postwar artists working in an abstract mode. Selz, who organized important early shows of kinetic and Funk art, also grew the museum's collection in these areas. By acquiring works by artists who were considered at the time to be relatively untested and “emerging,” he set the tone for future acquisitions of contemporary works. We have certainly benefited from this approach, acquiring major pieces by artists such as Luc Tuymans, Adrian Piper, Lorna Simpson, Catherine Opie, and John Zurier well before they achieved their current renown. The BAMPFA collection has a number of other strengths that are the result of our unique institutional history and the special passions of our staff and admirers. Our holdings of Old Master prints and drawings are thanks largely to the generosity of astute connoisseurs and donors such as Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Goldyne and Dr. and Mrs. Werner Z. Hirsch. Our exceptional collection of photographs, including many rare daguerreotypes, has been deepened thanks to Berkeley collector and BAMPFA Trustee Robert Harshorn Shimshak and Marion Brenner. BAMPFA has become one of the leading museums in the country in which to see Ming and Ching dynasty Chinese painting, mostly thanks to Professor James Cahill, regarded as one of the most important scholars of Chinese painting in the world and a longtime faculty member at Cal. And BAMPFA's extraordinary collection of Conceptual art and related archives grew around the donation of a very large group of works by Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, a Cal alumna and a highly influential artist. Galaxy is a very personal exploration of the BAMPFA collection. Having worked at BAMPFA as a curator from 1988 to 1998, I was already aware of many of the museum's holdings. Since returning to BAMPFA as director I have spent as much time as possible viewing works added to the collection since I left, as well as exploring areas previously unfamiliar to me. I have benefited greatly from the collaboration of Curatorial Associate Stephanie Cannizzo, who possesses comprehensive knowledge of the collection as well as a keen sensitivity to artistic quality and historical detail. Julia White, senior curator for Asian art, has generously offered her time to begin the long process of educating me about our historical Chinese, Japanese, and Indian holdings. There is nothing quite like looking through a museum's collection in storage, where the art-often stripped of its honorific framing and flattering lighting-becomes a vulnerable thing, but also extremely potent in its raw, unglamorized presence. In storage, too, the works are not arranged chronologically or thematically, which makes possible the experience of many unexpected, often jarring, and occasionally illuminating juxtapositions. I have tried to preserve this sense of fortuitous association in arranging the current show. Not all of my favorites are on view, but these are all works that I love and want to know better. I invite you to get to know them along with me, and to discover new favorites of your own. The stars that are visible in the night sky represent only a small corner of our own relatively modest galaxy; yet they provide for an experience of unfathomable wonder . . . and they will always be there.