Date: Fri 09-Jul-1999
Date: Fri 09-Jul-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: MARYG
Quick Words:
Baselitz-acquisition-CMA
Full Text:
Major German Painting Acquired by CMA
CLEVELAND, OHIO -- Kate M. Sellers, acting director of the Cleveland Museum of
Art (CMA), announced June 9 that the museum's most recent acquisitions include
the painting "View Out the Window" (1982) by contemporary German master Georg
Baselitz. Acquisitions also include several important gifts of art from
friends of the CMA in memory of director Robert P. Bergman, who died last
month. A vessel that Bergman had particularly wished to add to the museum's
renowned medieval collection has also been acquired.
"Bob Bergman loved introducing the museum's public to unfamiliar works of art
from all cultures through CMA's acquisitions process. It is with a mixture of
pride and sadness and deep gratitude to our donors that we present these
latest acquisitions," said Sellers.
The Baselitz painting adds another of the leading post-war German artists to a
collection in which Anselm Kiefer and Gerhard Richter are already represented
by major paintings. It is a classic topsy-turvy Baselitz image, over eight
feet high, of a haunting, upside-down man's face next to a window view of a
bare black and red tree.
Tom E. Hinson, CMA's curator of contemporary art and photography, described
Baselitz as the successor to Willem de Kooning in his "desire to move the
physicality of abstract painting toward a new kind of figuration." Elaborating
on "View Out the Window," Hinson said, "Its great visual and visceral
qualities come from the strength of the facial expression, the intense palette
dominated by acid yellows, the persona of the inverted figure, and the
painting's rich surface."
The tiny medieval flask that captured Bergman's imagination before his illness
is an "ampulla" from early Byzantine Palestine (about 600 ad). Only two other
ampullae are known to be in the United States. Ampullae were made for
Christian pilgrims to carry oils, sanctified by contact with sacred relics, on
their journeys home from the Holy Land. Like other rare examples made of lead,
this includes two of the earliest images relating to the life of Christ -- a
crucifixion scene on one side and ascension on the other.
CMA chief curator Diane De Grazi recalled Bergman's conversations with her
about this work of art. "Bob couldn't put this piece out of his mind once he
saw it. He seemed to suspect it was his own scholarly bent toward life in
Byzantine Europe, and his interest in art intended for ordinary people, more
than the aesthetic value of the rather primitive relief sculptures on this
piece, that attracted him. Its potency as a religious object also held him.
After his death, none of the curators or trustees involved in the acquisitions
process could imagine letting it go to some other collection."
It will particularly complement CMA's famous tapestry "Icon of the Virgin"
(Byzantine, Sixth Century), which Bergman often cited as a personal favorite
among the museum's holdings.
Significant works of art donated in Bergman's memory include three gifts of
Asian art: an Eighth Century Japanese stoneware jug with oblong body; a
"spirit house," table, and chair that are the central elements of a memorial
altar used in a Korean Confucian home of the Eighteenth Century; and a
Seventeenth Century Korean folding screen, "Buddhist Deities."
The other donations are modern American works: the large color etching "Curved
Plane/Figure I" (1994) by Robert Mangold, and a 1950s copper enamel punch bowl
and ladle by long-time Cleveland artists Doric Hall and Kalman Kubinyi.
In addition to these timely gifts, CMA has just received the first 16 leaves
of an entire collection of about 80 medieval illuminated manuscripts promised
to the museum by retired Vassar College faculty member Jeanne Miles Blackburn.
In this first group are several "historiated" initial letters on vellum,
including an "S" from a Fifteenth Century choral book whose illustrations,
within the double curves of the letter, tell the story of the birth of the
Virgin Mary.
Stephen N. Fliegel, assistant curator of medieval art, is planning an
exhibition of the whole collection for this coming winter. Describing CMA's
existing collection as one of the finest collections of medieval manuscript
pages in the country, Fliegal said, "Jeanne's collecting priorities have been
similar to CMA's -- she has sought single-page masterpieces in tempera, ink,
and gold leaf. I'm delighted that she has made Cleveland the permanent home
for her treasures."
CMA also accepted the offer of five works in glass and one ceramic -- all by
living artists -- from Francine and Benson Pilloff, whose extensive collection
and whose support were critical to the major 1997 exhibition "Glass Today:
American Studio Glass from Cleveland Collections." Most are large-scale works,
including William Morris's mold-blown glass "Standing Stone," nearly four feet
tall, which was included in the 1997 exhibition.
In addition to the donated screen and altar furnishings, the CMA Korean
collection has also grown by three other works: a Seventeenth Century glazed
white porcelain wine flask, the only example known in the West with underglaze
painting, in this case a lively decoration of bamboo and plum blossom motifs;
an Eighteenth Century panel painting, "Portrait of an Official," meant for
solemn Confucian rites expressing gratitude to one's predecessors in
government; and a Fifteenth to Sixteenth Century hanging scroll, "Grapes," a
favored still-life subject for Korean painters.
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, well-known for beautifully expressive drawings of heads,
created the red-chalk study of "Caracalla" -- which has just joined CMA's
collection -- for his once-controversial salon painting, "Septimius Severus
Reproaching Caracalla," now in the Louvre (Paris), one of the most important
French paintings of the Eighteenth Century.
Greuze portrayed Septimius' conspiratorial son Caracalla with head downturned
in anger and shame. As curator of drawings, chief curator De Grazia is
responsible for this acquisition as well as "End of the Harvest," a late
Nineteenth Century drawing by new-Impressionist artist Charles Angrand. De
Grazia described this picture of haystacks as "a hazy, ethereal, black-chalk
drawing, beautiful as a composition -- an important addition because it is a
masterpiece by a less well-known artist."
CMA has one other drawing by Greuze, a moralizing family scene of an
unwed-mother-to-be called "The Guilty and Repentant Daughter." "End of the
Harvest" is CMA's first work by Angrand. A woodcut by the Old Master Lucas
Cranach the Elder, court painter to Freidrich the Wise, Elector of Saxony,
depicts "Saint George and the Dragon," (circa 1512). This rare, early
impression was printed before any breaks in the woodblock had developed. In
remarkably fresh condition, it has never been bleached or pressed, so the
paper is still embossed from the block and each fine line is sharp and clear.
Major photographs ranging over the roughly 150-year history of the medium
joined the collection also. A sumptuously colored, monumental two-part
Cibachrome print by Sarah Charlesworth is the enigmatic "Buddha of
Immeasurable Light" (1987, printed 1999). It combines an image of a Japanese
Buddha sculpture with a circular ceiling opening revealing a patch of blue
sky. A set of 33 vintage gelatin silver prints by James VanDerZee chronicles
life among his Harlem neighbors and clients in a variety of studio and
location shots.
CMA is located at 11150 East Boulevard. Telephone, 216/421-7340.