NEW YORK, N.Y.- The
Museum of Modern Art will acquire two landmark paintings from the 1950s and a group of seven sculptures ranging in date from 1954 to 2005 by Cy Twombly, widely regarded as one of todays most important living artists, announces MoMA Director Glenn D. Lowry. All of the works are from the artists personal collection, and the sculptures will be the first by Twombly to enter MoMAs collection. With these additions to the eight paintings and numerous works on paper by Twombly, the Museum will immeasurably strengthen its holdings of works by Twombly, representing all six decades of the artists career.
The nine works will be exhibited together in the Museum from May 20 to October 3, 2011.
It has long been a priority for the Museum to build an in-depth collection of Twomblys work, and the addition of these two major paintings and seven sculptures make a powerful statement about a transformative moment in the history of the American avant-garde, said Mr. Lowry. We are extremely grateful to the donors who have made this possible, and especially to the artist, who was willing to share with the Museum these great works, which he has kept in his own collection for many years.
Tiznit, one of a small number of paintings that Twombly made in New York City during the summer of 1953, will become the earliest work by the artist in MoMAs collection. Made just after a nine-month trip with Robert Rauschenberg in Italy and North Africa, the painting is named for a town in Morocco. Primitivist in character, Tiznit is made with lead white enamel house paint, pencil, and crayon. Evident in the painting are the connections it makes to the European and American artists crucial to Twomblys formation, revealing the 25 year-old artists keen awareness of the work of New York artists such as Willem de Kooning, Franz Kline, and Jean Dubuffet. It was shown at the Stable gallery in a joint exhibition with Robert Rauschenberg in 1953. The painting is a promised gift of anonymous donors.
Academy was painted in New York in the summer of 1955 and was first shown in January 1956 in Twomblys second solo exhibition at the Stable Gallery. Academy presents the birth of Twomblys own artistic language: legible letters and words give way to scrawling and scribbling, jittery lines, and scratches, with the artist reconfiguring the acts of writing, drawing, and painting in order to provoke a new way of seeing. This canvas represents the moment at which Twombly declared his independence from the Abstract Expressionist idiom and invented a mode of working that would govern his next half-century of his art. Made in the same year as Jasper Johnss Flag and Robert Rauschenbergs Rebus, it forms with these two paintings already in the Museums collection an astoundingly powerful statement about a transformative moment in the history of the American avant-garde. The painting was purchased for the collection by the Museum.
The Museums last major acquisition of Twomblys paintings was on the occasion of the major 1994 retrospective of the artists work, organized by Kirk Varnedoe, at which time the paintings Leda and the Swan (1962), Untitled (1970), and the Four Seasons (1993-94) entered the collection.
Twomblys sculptures are an integral but little known aspect of his practice over the course of the last six decades. These works generally are made from found materials, plaster, wood, and white paint, and their humble origins remain readily evident in the finished works. All are of relatively small scale, as Twombly has wished them to be things that he himself can construct, manipulate and move around the studio. Their dialogue with Twomblys paintings rests not only in the fact of the material of white paint, but in their classical sources and their expressive majesty. Like the works of Constantin Brancusi or Alberto Giacometti, they function especially beautifully in relation to one another, and the artists preference is that they be presented in groups.
The seven sculptures represent the full span of Twomblys career, beginning with two of the few surviving sculptures of the 1950s: Untitled (Funerary Box for a Lime-Green Python) (1954) and Untitled (1955), which represent the beginning of Twomblys sculptural activity and show a relationship to his painting at this pivotal moment in his work. The remaining sculptures were executed between 1976 and 2005, all representing different moments during which Twombly has been at his most inventive and audacious as a sculptor. One of the sculptures is a promised gift of Steven and Alexandra Cohen, one is a promised gift of anonymous donors, and one is a gift of the Cy Twombly Foundation. Four were purchased for the collection with Museum funds and generous gifts from trustees.
Ann Temkin, the Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture, notes that, Until the past decade or so, Twomblys sculptures have been overlooked in relation to his paintings. In fact the two practices are closely related, and we will now be able to present a fuller and more accurate portrayal of Twomblys achievements as an artist. Similarly, these two early paintings finally provide a true beginning to our account of this remarkable career.