LONDON.- The Courtauld Gallery will present an exceptional selection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings in the first ever exhibition of the Oskar Reinhart Collection Am Römerholz to be staged outside of Winterthur, Switzerland. The Griffin Catalyst Exhibition: Goya to Impressionism. Masterpieces from the Oskar Reinhart Collection will be on display from 14 February 26 May 2025.
The exhibition will open with a selection of major paintings by artists who preceded the Impressionists, including Goyas highly charged Still Life with Three Salmon Steaks (c.1808-12), Géricaults moving A Man Suffering from Delusions of Military Rank (c.1819-22) and Courbets provocative The Hammock (1844).
Learn about the Courtauld Gallery's iconic works through scholarly publications and catalogues.
At the heart of the exhibition will be some of the greatest paintings of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, including Toulouse-Lautrecs striking representation of the female performer The Clown Cha-U-Kao (1895), Manets groundbreaking depiction of modern life Au Café (1878), and a group of sensational works by Renoir and Cezanne. A further highlight is the pair of celebrated paintings by Van Gogh, A Ward in the Hospital at Arles and The Courtyard of the Hospital at Arles (1889), which illustrate the hospital where he had been a patient following his earlier mental breakdown and the mutilation of his ear, as seen in Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear in The Courtaulds collection.
The Oskar Reinhart Collection Am Römerholz in Winterthur, Switzerland, is one of the most remarkable art museums of its kind, with a collection that ranges from superlative old master paintings and drawings to a fabled group of Impressionist art. Featuring over 200 paintings, the collection was assembled in the first half of the 20th century by Oskar Reinhart (1885-1965), whose family was associated with one of the worlds leading trading companies. Reinhart bequeathed his collection and house to the Swiss confederation, and it opened as a public museum in 1970 in his beautiful, large villa on the outskirts of Winterthur, close to Zurich, called Am Römerholz.
Oskar Reinhart was a direct contemporary of Samuel Courtauld, founder of The Courtauld Institute of Art. They shared a similar taste in artists and are known to have met. The Reinhart Collections close affinities with that of The Courtauld Gallerys permanent collection provide the perfect context to stage this unprecedented exhibition, which brings many of Reinharts paintings to the United Kingdom for the very first time.
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