Michener Art Museum Celebrates the Legacy of Bucks County Arts Collector and Curator Lewis Tanner Moore with New Exhibition, Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real
Reported on January 22, 2025

Pictured Above: Ron Tarver (b. 1957), Legends (Philadelphia, PA), 1993. Pigment print, 20 x 26 ½ inches. James A. Michener Art Museum. Museum purchase funded by the Bette and Nelson Pfundt Endowment. 2024.25.3. Photo Credit: Contributed.
NEWSROOM POST: DOYLESTOWN, PA
Exhibition on collecting Black art features 35 artists who shaped the Delaware Valley’s creative community
Doylestown, PA – Michener Art Museum celebrates the legacy of Bucks County art collector Lewis Tanner Moore in a new exhibition on collecting Black art, Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real. Moore (1953-2024) championed the work of Black artists throughout his life, challenging arts institutions to prioritize diversity in their collecting and exhibition practices.
On view from February 15–July 27, 2025, Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real includes paintings, photographs, sculptures, and works on paper by 35 artists from the collections of Moore and Michener Art Museum.
“I collect [this work] because these are voices that need to be heard, and because they are voices that we need to hear,” Moore said. Thanks to Moore’s guidance and encouragement, the Museum added 65 artworks by artists of color to its collection in the past five years.
Moore built a collection of hundreds of artworks over four decades. His love for the arts started in high school when he was struck by the absence of African American artists in his art history textbook at Chestnut Hill Academy. This realization spurred Moore to organize an exhibition at the school in 1969, marking the beginning of his lifelong commitment to elevating Black voices in the art world.

Pictured Above: Syd Carpenter (b. 1953), Daughter of Old Soul, n.d. Ceramic, 10 ½ x 17 x 7 ½ inches. The Collection of Lewis Tanner Moore. Photo Credit: Christian Giannelli.
“It was amazing to watch Lewis interact with artists and to bear witness to their discourse,” said Curlee Raven Holton, a featured artist in the Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real exhibition. “Some artists were local and others were nationally recognized, but all prized their connection with him. The artworks that captured Lewis’s attention and interest spoke to his deeply held concerns for social justice, personal redemption, cultural values, and assertions of historical relevance.”
A memorial for Moore was held at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in July 2024, where his great uncle, the nineteenth-century painter Henry Ossawa Tanner (1859–1937), started his art career. The exhibition showcases two paintings by Tanner that were owned by Moore, along with etchings by the artist from the Michener’s collection. Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real also highlights work by Barbara Bullock, James Brantley, Moe Brooker, Selma Burke, Donald E. Camp, Syd Carpenter, Allan Randall Freelon, Curlee Raven Holton, Paul F. Keene Jr., Louis B. Sloan, Ellen Powell Tiberino, and others who helped shape the DelawareValley’s creative community. The exhibition’s title is inspired by a mixed media piece by artist Moe Brooker, which the Michener acquired in 2023.

Pictured Above: Roland Ayers (1932-2014), Spirits and Figures, 1972. Watercolor on paper, 30 ½ x 21 7/8 inches. James A. Michener Art Museum. Gift of Sheila Whitelaw. Photo Credit: Christian Giannelli.
“Moore sought to connect with, learn about, and support Black artists, relishing the journey of discovery itself. I hope visitors share this sense of discovery and adventure in their experience of the artwork in the exhibition,” said Gerry and Maguerite Lenfest Chief Curator, Dr. Laura Turner Igoe. With Moore’s industry- wide contributions, the Michener is closer to telling a richer and more comprehensive story about the diverse artists who live and work in greater Philadelphia.
Related Exhibition Programming for Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real, on view February 15–July 27, 2025:
The Art and Artists of Yesterday’s Dreams Are Real: Artist Panel Discussion
Thursday, February 27, 7 p.m.
$15 Member/ $25 Non-Member
Exploring the Exhibition: Gallery Talk
Thursday, May 8, 2:30 p.m.
$10 Member/ $20 Non-Member
About the Michener Art Museum:
Address: 138 S. Pine Street, Doylestown PA 18901
Website: michenerartmuseum.org
Hours: Wednesday—Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Open until 8 p.m. on the first Thursday of the month. Admission is free on the second Sunday of the month.
Admission is free on the second Sunday of the month with support from Art Bridges Foundation.

Pictured Above: Barbara Bullock (b. 1938), I Go There All The Time (Spirit House), 1995. Gouache on paper, 51 ¾ x 31 ¾ x 5 ½ inches. The Collection of Lewis Tanner Moore. Photo Credit: Christian Giannelli.
Michener Art Museum in Doylestown is dedicated to preserving, interpreting, and exhibiting the art and cultural heritage of the Bucks County region. Home to the largest public collection of Pennsylvania Impressionist paintings, the Michener is named for Doylestown’s most famous son James A. Michener, a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer who first dreamed of a regional art museum in the early 1960s. The Museum was originally home to the 19th-century Bucks County Prison and is surrounded by the historic stone prison walls which are part of the Patricia D. Pfundt Sculpture Garden, terraces, and a landscaped courtyard. The Museum features nationally touring special exhibitions, work from regional artists in distinctive galleries, and the quiet and serene Nakashima Reading Room.