CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- The Harvard Art Museums announce an extraordinary gift from the collection of Philip A. and Lynn G. Straus; the gift comprises sixty-two prints and two paintings by Edvard Munch as well as one print by Jasper Johns. The bequest is a final act of generosity from the Strauses following a relationship with the museums that began in the 1980s and that includes multiple gifts of artworks over the years; the support of a 1990s-era expansion, renovation, and endowment of the museums conservation center; and the endowment of specific conservation and curatorial positions. The Spring 2025 exhibition Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking will feature many of the recently gifted works.
Explore Munch's Life and Art: While 'The Scream' is his most famous painting, Munch's oeuvre is vast and complex. Discover the full range of his artistic expression, from his haunting landscapes to his intimate portraits.
The works by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (18631944) in the Strauses bequest join an important concentration of paintings and prints by the artist already at Harvard and build upon multiple past gifts and assisted purchases of Munchs work by the couple117 works altogether. The total number of works by the artist in the Harvard Art Museums collections is now 142 (8 paintings and 134 prints), constituting one of the largest and most significant collections of works by Munch in the United States.
Lynn G. and Philip A. Straus (Harvard Class of 1937) have been among the Harvard Art Museums most generous benefactors. Both were dedicated patrons of the arts and education, supporting libraries, museums, and institutions affiliated with early childhood education, civil rights, and human services. In 1969, the couple purchased their first print by Munch, Salome (1903), an acquisition that marked the start of their passion for the artists work. Following a commitment to a $7.5 million gift in 1994, the museums conservation centerthe oldest fine arts conservation treatment, research, and training facility in the United Stateswas renamed the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies. The couple have also supported vital conservation positions of staff who specialize in works on paper, as well as curatorial internship and fellowship positions in the museums prints and drawings departments. Philip, a New York investment advisor and portfolio manager, passed away in 2004, and their bequest comes to Harvard following Lynns passing in 2023. In total, the couple gifted or enabled purchases of 128 works to the Harvard Art Museums over their lifetimes, including works by Max Beckmann, Georges Braque, Alexander Calder, Timothy David Mayhew, and Emil Nolde.
We are immensely grateful to Philip and Lynn Straus for their generosity and stewardship over these many years, said Sarah Ganz Blythe, the Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of the Harvard Art Museums. Their enthusiasm for the work of Edvard Munch ensures generations of students and visitors can experience and study his prints and paintings here in Cambridge. Through their distinct style of collecting Munchs printsseeking out and acquiring multiple images of the same themethey created a collection that affords deep insights into the artists practice and is therefore a perfect match for a university museum with a strong teaching and research mission.
Ganz Blythe continued: Their support of the conservators and conservation scientists in the Straus Center has had a transformative impact on the numerous fellows who have trained there, as well as provided a facility where every object in our collections can be cared for and scientifically researched.
The Strauses recent bequest includes Munchs iconic painting Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones) (19068) and Train Smoke (1910), both of which are now in the collection of the Busch-Reisinger Museum, one of the Harvard Art Museums three constituent museums. These paintings join Winter in Kragerø (1915) and Inger in a Red Dress (1896), previously given to the museum by Lynn in memory of Philip in 2012.
In Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones), a man and woman stand side by side yet still feel isolated from one another, facing toward the sea and away from the viewer, each embedded in a colorfully sedimented landscape. Munch first painted this subject around 1892 and returned to it repeatedly in his printmaking and painting thereafter. Train Smoke, which depicts nature disrupted but also dynamically animated by the Industrial Revolution, is a landscape unlike those by Munch already in the collection. Both paintings demonstrate Munchs experimentation with color and surface texture, through his varied use of thick impasto, diluted paint drips, and even areas of bare canvas, a hallmark of Munchs artistic legacy.
It is hard to overestimate the significance of Munchs painting Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones). Capturing the tension between proximity and distancespatial as well as emotionalthe work addresses the universal theme of the human condition, said Lynette Roth, the Daimler Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum at the Harvard Art Museums. The Strauses had generously loaned their painting for the inaugural installation of the renovated Harvard Art Museums building that opened in November 2014, and we are thrilled to be able to teach with and display it alongside the other significant paintings from their collection going forward.
Over the course of 2024, both paintings have undergone cleaning and other treatments by Kate Smith, Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of the Paintings Lab, and Ellen Davis, Associate Paintings Conservator, both in the museums Straus Center. Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones) had been varnished at some point in its history, which is not consistent with Munchs practice of leaving his canvases without a unified glossy surface. Train Smoke needed paint stabilization and cleaning to remove atmospheric grime. After careful study, removal of the varnish and grime from the paint surface, and treatment of small areas of paint loss, the paintings are now in closer alignment with their original appearance.
The 62 prints in the Strauses recent bequest have entered the collection of the Fogg Museum. The majority are highly prized impressions that Munch exhibited in his lifetime, and they speak to the aesthetic he preferred for the display of his prints: some of the impressions are cut to the image, and adhered to larger, heavy brown paper, which Munch signed and often dated. Also included are multiple states of single compositions. They showcase the range of techniques the artist used in his printmaking practice: drypoint, etching, lithography, mezzotint, and woodcut, and innovations through the addition of hand-applied color such as watercolor, crayon, and oil, or printing with woodblocks sawn into pieces.
With this bequest, the Harvard Art Museums have become an important destination for the research of Munchs prints, said Elizabeth M. Rudy, the Carl A. Weyerhaeuser Curator of Prints at the Harvard Art Museums. There are innumerable ways the collection offers opportunities for teaching, exhibition, and further study. Noteworthy for its groups of versions, states, and variations of single compositions, this collection offers wide-ranging insights into Munchs innovative practice as a printmaker.
Highlights from the Strauses recent gift of prints by Munch include:
Six prints from the series Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones), ranging in date from 1894 to 1917, join an impression that the couple previously gifted in 1991. Together, they showcase the various intriguing woodcut and etching techniques the artist utilized and also show how he manipulated his jigsaw woodblocks to print different parts of a single work in different colors. Closely related to this group is the gift of Young Woman on the Beach (1896), which is a rare example of the artists brief exploration of the mezzotint technique.
Three versions of Vampire II, dated 18951902 and all either hand colored or printed in color, join a black lithographic state from 1895 that the couple previously assisted with purchasing. These prints show how Munch sometimes combined lithographs with hand coloring and also used woodblocks to add color.
Four impressions of Madonna, dated 18951902, join a black lithographic state and a drypoint from 1894 that the couple previously assisted with purchasing. The lithographic prints show a range of examples of hand-applied color (drawn/painted) and printed color.
One impression of the woodcut Womans Head against the Shore (1899) joins two other impressions from the same year, both previous gifts from the Strauses: Womans Head against the Shore (1899), printed in turquoise-green and pale and dark orange inks; and Womans Head against the Shore (1899), printed in red and three different colors of green ink. These prints show how Munch selectively printed his jigsaw woodblocks, omitting a piece from one of the blocks (the water) in two of the impressions.
Four different self-portraits are the first such representations of the artist to enter the collection: Self-Portrait (1895), lithograph in crayon and tusche printed in black ink; Self-Portrait with Cigar (19089), lithograph printed in black ink; Self-Portrait (191112), woodcut; and Self-Portrait with a Bottle of Wine (1930), lithograph printed in black ink.
There are also rare examples of prints that Munch printed himself with his small hand-crank press, including Melancholy II (1898), a woodcut (sawn in three pieces) printed in black, red, blue, and yellow inks.
The Jasper Johns print included in the bequest, Savarin (1982), is a lithograph and monotype; it depicts a Savarin-brand coffee can filled with paintbrushes of various sizes. The backdrop incorporates the artists signature crosshatch work of the 1970s, which is represented in other prints by Johns in the museums collections. The arm shown at the bottom of the print is a reference to the skeletal arm shown in Munchs Self-Portrait from 1895a connection the couple noted by hanging the two prints near each other in their own home.
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