Date: Fri 27-Nov-1998
Date: Fri 27-Nov-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Gauguin-Waller-Indianapolis
Full Text:
Indianapolis Museum Of Art Acquires World Renowned Collection Of Art By
Gauguin And His Followers
(with 3 cuts)
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. -- Bret Waller, director of the Indianapolis Museum of Art,
has announced the museum's acquisition of 101 paintings and prints by Paul
Gauguin and the artists who gathered around him a century ago in the
picturesque French village of Pont-Aven, forming one of the pivotal movements
in Modern art.
The works will be unveiled in a special exhibition scheduled to open in March
1999 and continue through July in the Allen Whitehill Clowes Special
Exhibition Gallery of the IMA. In the fall of 1999, they will be incorporated
into the museum's permanent collection galleries.
The 17 paintings (including three by Gauguin) and 84 prints all come from the
renowned collection of Swiss entrepreneur Samuel Josefowitz, considered one of
the world's foremost collectors.
The Pont-Aven paintings, valued in excess of $30 million, are coming to the
IMA as a combination gift/purchase made possible by a $20 million challenge
grant from Lilly Endowment, Inc -- the largest foundation grant the museum has
ever received -- and the generosity of the Josefowitz family and other museum
supporters. The 84 Pont-Aven prints are an additional gift from Samuel
Josefowitz.
"The IMA has now enhanced its collection to the point that it will become a
magnet for people who are interested in art of the Post-Impressionist era,"
Waller said.
According to Waller, the collection is of international significance; its
acquisition by the IMA "is as meaningful to this city and state as securing a
major corporate headquarters or professional sports team."
Securing a key portion of the world's leading private collection of the
Pont-Aven School represents a coup for the IMA. "The Josefowitz collection,
assembled over the course of more than 40 years, simply could not be formed
today," said chief curator Ellen Lee. "It is the finest, most comprehensive
private collection of its kind in the world. This acquisition is strategic for
the IMA -- it is a landmark event in our collection's growth."
"The Pont-Aven works have never been for sale," Samuel Josefowitz stated. "But
in the course of my association with the IMA -- especially Ellen Lee and Bret
Waller -- I decided Indianapolis would be the right place to have a
significant group of these pictures. Also, the pictures have a tremendous
synergy with the works the museum already owns."
According to Lee, the Pont-Aven School works are especially significant to the
IMA's collection because they represent one of two key schools in late
Nineteenth Century European painting -- the other school being
Neo-Impressionism, which was pioneered by Georges Seurat. Lee said the IMA
already holds the finest collection of Neo-Impressionist paintings in the
United States. With the addition of the Pont-Aven works, the IMA collection
documents the two leading movements of the Post-Impressionist era.
"If you think of the four artists who became the grandfathers of modernism --
Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat, Paul Cezanne, and Vincent van Gogh -- only the
first two had an immediate following," Waller said. "There was no School of
Cezanne or van Gogh, but both Seurat and Gauguin gave rise to movements that
were in many respects rivals."
It was Lee's research on the IMA's Neo-Impressionist collection that led to
her first meeting with Josefowitz in 1983. Since that time, the collector and
the museum have been in steady contact, and special exhibitions and individual
loans from the Josefowitz collection have appeared at the IMA since 1988. That
year the IMA hosted the exhibition "The Prints of the Pont-Aven School:
Gauguin and his Circle in Brittany," drawn entirely from the Josefowitz
collection. In 1994 the IMA premiered the US tour of a painting exhibition
from his collection, Gauguin and the School of Pont-Aven. Josefowitz has said
that the idea of making the IMA the permanent home for a large portion of his
Pont-Aven collection came to him when Lee approached him in the hope of
purchasing additional Neo-Impressionist works with help from Lilly Endowment,
Inc.
Although many people are more familiar with the paintings of Gauguin made
during his later years in Tahiti, it was actually in the village of Pont-Aven,
in the French province of Brittany, that Gauguin developed the style for which
he is best known. Gauguin first visited the remote artists' colony in 1886,
and an international group of artists soon gathered around him.
During Gauguin's era, Pont-Aven was culturally and psychologically distant
from the cosmopolitan capital of Paris. The people of the region cherished
their religious rituals, spoke a Gaelic language, and often wore traditional
costumes. Pont-Aven's rugged landscape added to the area's romantic appeal.
Among those who joined Gauguin was 20-year-old French artist Emile Bernard.
Together, the two men formulated the principles of the Pont-Aven School,
calling for a fusion of the artist's subjective reaction to nature and his
sense of design. Rejecting the Impressionists' emphasis on close observation
of nature, Gauguin and his colleagues explored the decorative and expressive
potential of line, color and pattern.
"As to me, the most striking thing about the Pont-Aven School was the honesty
of vision," Josefowitz said. "This is not only a story of individual painters
but of a rare moment in history, when a group of people came together and
created something new."
The IMA's new acquisition features three paintings by Gauguin, four works by
Emile Bernard, two paintings by both Maurice Denis and Paul Serusier, as well
as individual works by Charles Laval, Charles Filiger, Henry Moret, Jan
Verkade, Armand Seguin and Cuno Amiet.
"Now we will be able to exhibit all the critical players, providing a full
picture of their motifs and aesthetics," Lee commented.
The 84 pieces in the print collection represent the work of Gauguin, Bernard,
Seguin and Serusier, as well as rare prints by Henri Delavallee, Roderic
O'Conor and Maxime Maufra.
"This collection of prints is virtually unique in the world. It reveals the
universe, experimental approaches that made the Pont-Aven School so
progressive," Lee said.