 I'm James Stewart and I'm Director of the Princeton University Art Museum and it's a pleasure to welcome visitors to this wonderful institution. The museum is now 129 years old. Over the course of those years we've assembled one of the greatest collections of art held in any university in the world. A collection that now numbers over 72,000 objects. There are many things I think that really set us apart and make a visit to the Princeton Museum and especially rewarding one. We are inevitably a part of one of the world's greatest research universities and that means that we have the capacity to do things very different from what many of our peers can do as otherwise equally wonderful art museums. We bring a very fresh set of perspectives to thinking about the world of art. We bring tremendous breadth and diversity. Our collections span thousands of years and really the entirety of the globe making us one of only a handful of university museums in North America that has the capacity to think about and show extraordinary works of art from pre-Columbian South America to contemporary China. And I think in that sense coming to an intimate museum that can be at least superficially absorbed in only a couple of hours means that you're going to have a breadth of exposure really unusual to a place of this kind of accessible scale. As a museum we mount something in the order of a dozen or 15 temporary exhibitions each year in addition to always showing changing highlights from our collections. We are using our collections in a more and more animated set of ways. We are integrating works from different cultures from multiple media in our collections galleries so that every visit would offer an opportunity to make new discoveries as well as to visit with old friends in the case of visitors coming back for a repeat visit.