01
February
2015
|
18:00 PM
America/New_York

Museum Acquires Important Paintings by Cézanne, Manet, Pissarro, Morisot, and Duchamp

The Philadelphia Museum of Art announced today several important gifts to its collection. As a bequest from longtime supporter Helen Tyson Madeira are five paintings by French artists, including Mont Sainte-Victoire (1902–6) by Paul Cézanne; Basket of Fruit (1864) by Édouard Manet; Railroad to Dieppe (1886) and Avenue de l’Opéra: Morning Sunshine (1898), both by Camille Pissarro; and Young Girl with Basket (1892) by Berthe Morisot. In addition, two rare early portraits by Marcel Duchamp have been received from Yolande Candel, the daughter of Duchamp’s lifelong friend, Gustave Candel. They depict her grandparents and were painted in Paris in 1911–12.

These works, all of which are currently on view in the galleries, add greater depth to areas of the collection that are already very strong. The Philadelphia Museum of Art has extensive holdings of the works of Cézanne and houses the world’s largest collection of works by Duchamp.

Timothy Rub, the George D. Widener Director and CEO, stated: “The distinctive character of our collection is due largely to transformational gifts, almost all of which have come from Philadelphians who cared deeply about both this institution and their city. The extraordinary paintings bequeathed to us by Helen Madeira had long been promised to the Museum and can now be seen in the context of the great collection that was a bequest from her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll S. Tyson, Jr., more than five decades ago.

“We are also deeply grateful for every opportunity we have to strengthen our holdings of works by Marcel Duchamp, one of the key figures in the history of modern art. In this regard, the gift of the portraits that Duchamp painted of his friend Gustave Candel’s parents in 1912—a critical year in the artist’s career—represent a wonderful addition to the Museum’s collection. Donated by their granddaughter, Mme. Yolande Candel, these portraits represent a welcome addition to a group of paintings through which Duchamp’s development as a young artist can be carefully documented.”

Monumental in form and yet lyrical in character, Cézanne’s view of Mont Sainte-Victoire is among the masterpieces of the last decade of the artist’s life. Depicting one of his favorite motifs—a mountain near his home in Aix-en-Provence—the painting is composed of closely valued tones of blue, green, and ochre that form a sumptuous, tapestry-like surface of rich color. This work is presently installed in Women’s Committee Gallery 164 with two other late major works by Cézanne: a closely related painting of the same title executed from almost the same vantage point, and his celebrated The Large Bathers (1900–1906).

Manet’s Basket of Fruit is the first still life by this great nineteenth-century painter to enter the Museum’s collection. Depicting a small wicker basket filled with fruit atop a white tablecloth, its surface punctuated with prominent creases, the small painting is a superb example of Manet’s ability to animate the simplest forms through lively brushwork and the use of a simple, yet rich palette of colors. Basket of Fruit, on view in Lassin Gallery 153, approaches abstraction by taking simple objects as subject and concentrating on the physical aspects of the paint.

Pissarro’s charming canvas Railroad to Dieppe depicts planted fields in summer under a blue sky inflected with notes of cream. In the middle distance a train approaches, smoke billowing, and to the right a dirt road leads past a country house stretching toward a low line of hills in the distance. The oldest of the Impressionists, Pissarro briefly embraced Pointillism in the 1880s, the decade in which he painted this picture. Later in his career he turned to the urban landscape for inspiration, producing a series of impressive panoramic views of Rouen and Paris, of which Avenue de l’Opéra: Morning Sunshine is a fine example. Both works are on view in Toll Gallery 152.

In Berthe Morisot’s loosely brushed Young Girl with Basket, a seated figure relaxes on a cane chair, her back turned from the viewer and a hat covering her eyes. The painting hangs in the Alice Jones Eshleman and William Thomas Vogt Gallery 162.

Duchamp’s portraits of the parents of his friend Gustave Candel, on view in Anne d’Harnoncourt Gallery 182, were painted at a pivotal moment in Duchamp’s career and reflect the beginning of a radical shift in his approach to representation and, ultimately, to the function of the work of art itself. Portrait of Gustave Candel’s Father presents a realistically rendered figure seated comfortably in a three-quarter view. Portrait of Gustave Candel’s Mother is enigmatic in character. Her head and shoulders appear to be mounted on a vase-like, pedestaled stand. By contrast with the depiction of the husband, the treatment is cool and precise.

Yolande Candel said: “While growing up, I vividly recall Marcel expressing to my father his personal satisfaction with the fact that so much of his work remained together at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. . . . Furthermore, I think that both paintings would nicely complement the other early canvases by Marcel already in the Museum’s collection.”

Despite Duchamp’s status as one of the great artists of the twentieth century, he produced a relatively small number of works. The Museum’s collection contains 22 paintings, including these new gifts, executed between 1902 and 1914, and nearly 180 works in other media. The two portraits have been exhibited in a number of important exhibitions but have been the subject of little study until recently. Portrait of Gustave Candel’s Mother was recently on view in the exhibition Marcel Duchamp: Painting, Even at the Centre Georges Pompidou.

NOTE TO EDITORS

About Mrs. Helen Tyson Madeira
Mrs. Helen Tyson Madeira was an Honorary Trustee from 1994 until her death in 2014. She generously endowed as part of the Lenfest Challenge the position of the Louis C. Madeira Associate Curator of European Decorative Arts after her late husband, who held it. She supported the Museum in a variety of areas, but was particularly interested in music programs and conservation. She also supported The Gross Clinic acquisition in 2006, the Annual Fund, the Director's Discretionary Fund, and the exhibition Gauguin, Cezanne, Matisse: Visions of Arcadia in 2012. In 1963, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll S. Tyson, bequeathed 22 Impressionist masterpieces, including Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s The Large Bathers; Claude Monet’s The Japanese Footbridge and the Water Lily Pool, Giverny; and Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers. Many works from the Mr. and Mrs. Carroll S. Tyson, Jr., Collection are on view in Resnick Rotunda (161). Her late husband contributed to create, catalogue, and exhibit the Museum’s extensive collection of decorative arts. Her great-grandfather was John A. Roebling, the designer of the Brooklyn Bridge.

About the Candels
Gustave Candel and Duchamp met in Paris around 1906, soon after the artist moved to the rue Caulaincourt, just down the street from the Candel family. Gustave Candel became an early collector of Duchamp’s work, acquiring about 10 paintings between 1907 and 1912. Yolande Candel met Duchamp during her childhood. It was out of respect for her father’s lifelong friendship with Duchamp that Mme. Candel decided to give the two pictures to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

About the Duchamp collection
Since 1954, when the Philadelphia Museum of Art inaugurated new galleries to display the renowned Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection, the Museum has housed a collection of Marcel Duchamp’s work. This has now grown to more than 200 works and a comprehensive archive. Duchamp felt strongly about keeping his oeuvre, as far as possible, as a “coherent whole.” As he wrote in 1937, “I am still convinced that because my output is limited, my things should not be subjected to speculation, i.e., traveling from one collection to another and being scattered about.” In a 1955 interview, Duchamp said: “I always felt like showing one painting in one place and the other place is just like amputating one finger each time or a leg. Here I feel at home—my house—and I’ve never had such, really, a feeling of complete satisfaction, I suppose."

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