Showing posts with label Paul Cézanne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Cézanne. Show all posts

06/10/25

Pearlman Collection gifts to Brooklyn Museum, LACMA, and MoMA - Upcoming Exhibitions

Pearlman Collection gifts to the Brooklyn Museum, the LACMA, and the MoMA 
Upcoming Exhibitions at the three museums

Amedeo Modigliani - Jean Cocteau
Amedeo Modigliani 
Jean Cocteau, 1916
Promised gift from the Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation 
to the Brooklyn Museum
Photo by Bruce White

Vincent van Gogh - Tarascon Stagecoach
Vincent van Gogh
Tarascon Stagecoach, 1888 
Promised gift from the Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation 
to the LACMA
Photo by Bruce White

Paul Cézanne - Mont Sainte-Victoire
Paul Cézanne 
Mont Sainte-Victoire, c. 1904–06 
Promised gift from the Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation 
to the MoMA
Photo by Bruce White

The Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation entire collection will be gifted to three major institutions: the Brooklyn Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), and The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. Comprising an exceptional group of Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, and modern artworks, the Pearlman Collection will be gifted across the three institutions in a novel sharing arrangement that will enhance access to larger and more diverse audiences through continually changing contexts.

In recognition of Henry and Rose’s generous spirit, the collection will travel as an exhibition before being placed under the care of the respective institutions. From February to July 2026, the exhibition Village Square: Gifts of Modern Art from the Pearlman Collection to the Brooklyn Museum, LACMA, and MoMA will be on view at LACMA, and in the fall of 2026 the collection will travel to the Brooklyn Museum. In the near future, MoMA will also present an exhibition of the Pearlman gifts.

Henry Pearlman (1895–1974) began purchasing avant-garde art in 1945 with a landscape by Chaïm Soutine, which led to a selfguided education in 19th- and 20th-century European art and a passion for collecting that endured for the rest of his life. From the very start of this collection, he and his wife, Rose, maintained a fundamental interest in sharing their experience of art as widely as possible, instilling populist values in their children and grandchildren that are the Foundation’s inspiration for making this extraordinary gift. 

As part of this gift, 29 works will join the Brooklyn Museum’s collection, with exceptional paintings and sculpture by Chaïm Soutine, Paul Gauguin, Edgar Degas, and Amedeo Modigliani, including the latter’s 1916 portrait Jean Cocteau and an extremely rare limestone sculpture, Head (c. 1910–11); LACMA will receive six works, including Edouard Manet’s Young Woman in a Round Hat (c. 1877–79), and Vincent van Gogh’s Tarascon Stagecoach from 1888, the first paintings by either artist to enter the collection; and MoMA will receive 28 works, with a primary focus on Paul Cézanne, including the paintings Mont Sainte-Victoire (1904–06), and Cistern in the Park of Château Noir (c. 1900), as well as 15 of Cézanne’s most luminous watercolors.
“For years we have explored every model we could imagine for the future ownership and guardianship of this collection,” explained Daniel Edelman, President of the Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation. “We ultimately chose the Brooklyn Museum for the works that tell Henry’s story of discovery and for its commitment to engaging a diverse community; LACMA for works that specifically enhance their ability to innovate around bringing art to where people are; and MoMA, where Cézanne’s works on paper will be shared and cared for by one of the finest departments of drawings and prints that we know, as well as a half dozen of his paintings that together support the artist’s foundational role in the story of modern art. With very different collections, communities, and presentations of art, these three great institutions share an understanding that museums, their audiences, and how those audiences engage with art, are constantly changing. All three are committed to leading that challenge and inspiring others to meet it as well.

“Rather than put conditions on the gift that would become limiting in a future that none of us can know, we created a set of guidelines to encourage these three institutions to collaborate on a flexible movement of the art among them. Our aim is to bring these major works to new audiences, allowing them to be seen in different contexts, reuniting our collection’s works with one another on a regular basis, and perhaps even inspiring collectors and museums to consider new models for ownership of art.”

“We’re thrilled to welcome this extraordinary gift from the Pearlman Collection—the most significant addition to our European art holdings in nearly a century,” said Anne Pasternak, Shelby White and Leon Levy Director of the Brooklyn Museum. “Henry Pearlman collected with the public in mind, believing that modern art should inspire audiences of all backgrounds. Between 1960 and 1986, the Brooklyn Museum presented six exhibitions dedicated to the collection, and now, nearly 40 years after the last of those presentations, we’re honored to give a group of these masterworks a permanent home in the borough where the Pearlman family grew up. As important, we are excited by the Foundation’s strategy of collection sharing with our wonderful peers, MoMA and LACMA.”

“LACMA is deeply grateful to welcome these masterpieces to the museum’s collection, and especially for van Gogh and Manet, two towering figures of 19th-century art, whose paintings will be represented in our collection for the first time,” said Michael Govan, LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director. “It is also an honor to help fulfill Henry and Rose’s wish to share their collection with our vast public, together with the Brooklyn Museum and MoMA. We look forward to presenting the collection to LACMA’s visitors in an upcoming exhibition next year, as well as in future exhibitions at LACMA and our colleague institutions both locally and around the world.”

“This generous gift significantly expands MoMA’s collection of works by Paul Cézanne and Edgar Degas, and underscores the enduring legacy of Henry and Rose’s vision,” said Glenn D. Lowry, The David Rockefeller Director of The Museum of Modern Art. “We are honored to work with our colleagues in Los Angeles and Brooklyn to ensure that the Pearlmans’ commitment to research, scholarship and access, and their belief in the artists they acquired will continue to inspire the public now and in the future.”
About the Pearlman Foundation

Since 1976, the Henry and Rose Pearlman Collection has remained on long-term loan at the Princeton University Art Museum. While in the Art Museum’s care, and in collaboration with the Foundation, there have been three traveling shows of the collection, some 500 individual loans of artworks to exhibitions across the globe, and two tour publications, including a recent one offered online and free to the public.

Meanwhile the Foundation created a website that allows high resolution viewing of works, including those that can’t always be on exhibition. It supported the digitalization of the history of the collection by the American Archives of American Art and its availability online. And it encouraged proactive lending, offering individual and small groupings of works to museums to exhibit within their permanent collection galleries.

LACMA - Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA, 90036

17/09/25

Monet – Cézanne – Matisse. The Scharf Collection @ Kunstpalast, Dusseldorf

Monet – Cézanne – Matisse
The Scharf Collection
Kunstpalast, Dusseldorf
March 12 – August 9, 2026

Paul Cézanne
Paul Cézanne
River Landscape with Houses, circa 1904
Oil on canvas, 65.5 x 81 cm 
© The Scharf Collection, Photo: Ruland Photodesign

Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Pierre-Auguste Renoir 
Young woman with flowered hat, 1877-1879
Pastels on paper, 48 × 43 cm
© The Scharf Collection, Photo: Ruland Photodesign

The Scharf Collection – a German private collection of French art from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and international contemporary art – is being presented for the first time.

It continues the fourth generation of a branch of the renowned Otto Gerstenberg Collection in Berlin, which encompasses everything from the beginnings of modernism, represented by Francisco de Goya, to the French avant-garde of the second half of the nineteenth century, represented by Gustave Courbet, Edgar Degas and the entire graphic oeuvre of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.

Despite many wartime losses, Gerstenberg’s daughter Margarethe Scharf was able to save the majority of the collection and bequeath it to her two sons Walther and Dieter Scharf.

Following the division of the collection between the grandchildren, Walther Scharf, his wife Eve and son René developed the French focus further and added works by Claude Monet, Paul Cézanne, Pierre Bonnard, Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso, among others. 

Claude Monet
Claude Monet 
Waterloo Bridge, 1903
Oil on canvas, 65 x 100 cm 
© The Scharf Collection, Photo: Ruland Photodesign

Pierre Bonnard
Pierre Bonnard 
Vase with flowers, 1933 
Oil on canvas, 99.5 x 48.5 cm 
© The Scharf Collection, Photo: Ruland Photodesign

Today, René Scharf and his wife Christiane Scharf specialise in international contemporary artists, including works by Sam Francis, Daniel Richter and Katharina Grosse. With a particular interest in the boundaries of the medium of painting and the relationship between figurative and abstract pictorial worlds, they have brought the family tradition of collecting into the present day.

An exhibition by the Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, in cooperation with the Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin.

KUNSTPALAST, DUSSELDORF
Ehrenhof 4-5, 40479 Düsseldorf

10/12/24

Lillie P. Bliss and the Birth of the Modern - Exhibition @ MoMA, New York + Book

Lillie P. Bliss and the Birth of the Modern
MoMA, New York
November 17, 2024 – March 29, 2025

Lillie P. Bliss. c. 1924 
The Museum of Modern Art Archives, New York

The music room in Bliss’s apartment
1001 Park Avenue, c. 1929–1931
The Museum of Modern Art Archives, New York

Installation view of the exhibition 
“The Lillie P. Bliss Collection, 1934.”
May 14, 1934 – September 12, 1934
The Museum of Modern Art Archives, New York

Installation view of Lillie P. Bliss and the Birth of the Modern 
on view at The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
from November 17, 2024, through March 29, 2025 
Photo: Emile Askey

The Museum of Modern Art presents Lillie P. Bliss and the Birth of the Modern, an exhibition focusing on the collection and legacy of LILLIE P. BLISS, one of the Museum’s three founders and an early advocate for modern art in the United States. The exhibition which marks the 90th anniversary of Bliss’s bequest coming to MoMA, includes iconic works such as Paul Cézanne’s The Bather (c. 1885) and Amedeo Modigliani’s Anna Zborowska (1917). The exhibition, which features about 40 works as well as archival materials, highlights Bliss’s critical role in the reception of modern art in the US and in the founding of MoMA.

Paul Cézanne
The Bather. c. 1885 
Oil on canvas. 50 x 38 1/8″ (127 x 96.8 cm) 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
Lillie P. Bliss Collection, 1934 
Conservation was made possible by the Bank of America 
Art Conservation Project 
Photo: John Wronn

Amedeo Modigliani 
Anna Zborowska. 1917 
Oil on canvas. 51 1/4 x 32″ (130.2 x 81.3 cm) 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York  
Lillie P. Bliss Collection, 1934
Photo: John Wronn

When it opened in 1929, The Museum of Modem Art was a destination where visitors could see groundbreaking temporary exhibitions, but it did not have a significant collection. Just two years later, when Lillie P. Bliss died, she left approximately 120 works to the Museum in her will. In an effort to ensure the Museum's future success, Bliss stipulated that MoMA would receive her collection only if it could prove that it was on firm financial footing within three years of her death. 

In 1934 the Museum was able to secure the bequest, which became the core of MoMA's collection. This included key works by Paul Cézanne, Georges-Pierre Seurat, Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Amedeo Modigliani, Odilon Redon, Marie Laurencin, and Henri Matisse, as well as a selection of paintings by Bliss's friend, the American artist Arthur B. Davies. 

Georges-Pierre Seurat 
Port-en-Bessin, Entrance to the Harbor. 1888 
Oil on canvas. 21 5/8 x 25 5/8″ (54.9 x 65.1 cm) 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
Lillie P. Bliss Collection, 1934

Odilon Redon
 
Silence. c. 1911 
Oil on prepared paper. 21 1/2 x 21 1/4″ (54.6 x 54 cm) 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
Lillie P. Bliss Collection, 1934

Bliss's bequest also allowed for the sale of her works to fund new acquisitions, facilitating the purchase of many important artworks, including Vincent Van Gogh's The Starry Night, which is featured in the exhibition. Other favorites wholly or in part funded through the Bliss bequest, such as Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, and Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans, are on view in the collection galleries.

Vincent Van Gogh
The Starry Night. Saint Rémy, June 1889
Oil on canvas. 29 x 36 1/4″ (73.7 x 92.1 cm) 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
Acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest (by exchange), 1941 
Conservation was made possible by the Bank of America 
Art Conservation Project 
Photo: Jonathan Muzikar

At the end of her life, Lillie P. instructed her bother Cornelius Newton Bliss Jr. to burn her personal papers, making it challenging for future generations to recognize the essential part she played in the history of modern art. The exhibition showcases archival materials from MoMA's Archives and other collection, reconstructing Bliss's life before MoMA, including her passion for music, her involment in the Armory Show of 1913, and her interactions with fellow collectors and artists. It also highlight Bliss's critical role in MoMA's founding, and her continued impact on the Museum going forward, through scrapbooks, journals, photographs, and letters.
"It has been a joy to explore the life and work of this courageous woman whom we have known as little more than an important name. We are eager to share our discoveries, and to shine a spotlight on Lillie Bliss for the first time since 1934, when MoMA organized an exhibition to celebrate the new bequest," says Ann Temkin.
Inventing the Modern: 
Untold Stories of the Women Who Shaped The Museum of Modern Art
by Romy Silver-Kohn (Editor), Ann Temkin (Editor), 
Anna Deavere Smith (Foreword by), 
Mary Schmidt Campbell (Text by), Sloane Crosley (Text by)
Published by The Museum of Modern Art, 2024
384 p. - ISBN 9781633450790
 
The exhibition is presented on the occasion of the release of Inventing the Modem: Untold Stories of the Women Who Shaped The Museum of Modem Art, a revelatory account of the Museum's earliest years told through newly commissioned profiles of 14 women who had a decisive impact on the formation and development of the institution. Inventing the Modem comprises illuminating new essays on the women who, as founders, curators, patrons, and directors of various departments, made enduring contributions to MoMA during its early decades (especially between 1929 and 1945), creating new models for how to envision, establish, and operate a museum in an era when the field of modem art was uncharted territory.

Lillie P. Bliss and the Birth of the Modern is organized by Ann Temkin, The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture, and Romy Silver-Kohn, co-editor with Ann Temkin of Inventing the Modern: Untold Stories of the Women Who Shaped The Museum of Modern Art, with Rachel Remick, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Painting and Sculpture.

MoMA - Museum of Modern Art, New York
11 West 53 Street, New York, NY 10019