Colby Museum receives 184 pieces of art from Norma Marin

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Colby Museum receives 184 pieces of art from Norma Marin
John Marin, The Tyrol, 1910. Watercolor on paper, 17 3/4 in. x 15 1/8 in. (45.09 cm x 38.42 cm). Gift of John Marin, Jr. and Norma B. Marin, 1973.041.



WATERVILLE, ME.- The Colby College Museum of Art recently announced that it has received 184 pieces of art from Norma Marin. Ms. Marin, who passed away in 2022 and was married to John Marin Jr. .—son of the modernist painter John Marin—had a long relationship with the Colby Museum as a donor, lifetime member of the Museum Board of Governors.

Over the last 50 year the Marin family has gifted numerous works by John Marin to the museum, including watercolors, oil paintings, drawings, and prints. Lisa Marin, Norma’s daughter and the painter’s granddaughter, currently serves on the Museum’s Board of Governors and chairs its Collections and Impact Committee, continuing the family’s history of service to the museum.

“The museum was established in 1959, and relatively soon after that received its first Marin artwork,” said Elizabeth Finch, head curator of the Colby Museum. “That gift began to establish the museum as a destination for the appreciation and study of John Marin and more broadly American modernism, and it has grown and continued ever since.”

The 184 works, which were long-term loans and have now been converted into permanent gifts, include 28 Marin prints; a family portrait, painted in oil in 1953, the year Marin died, titled A Looking Back–The Marin Family; and more than 150 photographs that represented Norma Marin’s personal collecting passion. The gift also includes a James McNeill Whistler watercolor and a Eugène Atget photo, given in honor of Peter H. Lunder ’56, D.F.A.’98 and Life Trustee Paula Crane Lunder, D.F.A. ’98.

“Sadly, Mother is not around to mark this occasion, but I know she would be very proud and honored,” said Lisa Marin. “She cared deeply about the Colby Museum and was always happy to support it and represent it over a very long period of time.”

The Marin prints that are part of the latest gift range from his views of European landmarks from the early 20th century, as well as later works depicting the New York skyline. They evoke a time and place, and are both timeless and specific.

“When you look at Marin’s New York prints, you can hear jazz,” said Finch. “They are wonderful. They capture the brilliance of Marin’s mature style. We are so lucky to have them in our collection.”

Finch added that the museum benefitted from Norma Marin’s generosity and sophistication for more than 50 years. While Norma Marin earned her reputation as a staunch defender and promoter of John Marin’s work and place in art history, she developed her own sensibilities as a collector.

She expressed those interests in her collections of photography and German Expressionist prints. Norma Marin gave the museum a trove of German Expressionist prints in 2018.

“I had the pleasure of knowing Norma, and I had such respect for her great love of art and artists,” Finch said. “She had a terrific eye, and she was able to balance her advocacy for John Marin with her own areas of collecting, photography and German Expressionism among them. She was truly a unique person, very special, and very independent-minded. She had strong passions and strong convictions, and she lived by them.”

The photography collection, which the museum has employed in exhibitions and in the collection galleries for several years and whose strength has attracted other gifts of photography, includes 25 prints by Norma Marin’s friend Berenice Abbott, as well as prints by Abbott’s peers Ansel Adams, Harry Callahan, Imogen Cunningham, Walker Evans, Paul Strand, and many others. A subset of the collection includes formal and informal portraits of John Marin and his artistic peers.

Lisa Marin said her mother enjoyed collecting photographs because they allowed her to express herself and her personal interests apart from the Marin legacy.

“Usually every Saturday, my parents would go to galleries and whatnot, and at a certain point, I would say in the late ’60s, early ’70s, Mother became very interested in photography,” Lisa Marin said. “For her, photography was a little more low-key than some other kinds of art, and photography gallery owners were maybe a little more laid back. It was a little less formal, and she liked that.”

She became friendly with many of the photographers living in New York, including Abbott, who also had Maine connections. “Personal relationships were very important to her,” Lisa Marin said.

Those same personal relationships were the foundation of the friendship between the Marin family and the Colby museum.










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