Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, or VMFA, is an art museum in Richmond, Virginia, in the United States, which opened in 1936.
   The museum is owned and operated by the Commonwealth of Virginia, while private donations, endowments, and funds are used for the support of specific programs and all acquisition of artwork, as well as additional general support. Admission itself is free.
   It is one of the first museums in the American South to be operated by state funds. It is also one of the largest art museums in North America.
   VMFA ranks as one of the top ten comprehensive art museums in the United States. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, together with the adjacent Virginia Historical Society, anchors the eponymous Museum District of Richmond.
   The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts has its origins in a 1919 donation of 50 paintings to the Commonwealth of Virginia by Judge and prominent Virginian John Barton Payne. Payne, in collaboration with Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard and the Federal Works Projects Administration, secured federal funding to augment state funding for the museum in 1932. Eventually, a site was chosen on Richmond's Boulevard. The site was toward the corner of a contiguous six-block tract of land which was then being used as an American Civil War veterans' home, with additional services for their wives and daughters. The main building was designed by Peebles and
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