LANCASTER, PA.- The Demuth Museum unveiled seven new additions to the permanent collection on Saturday evening at the annual Bastille Day Party. All of the works by Charles Demuth (1883-1935) were donated, giving the Demuth Museum forty-seven Demuth works in its permanent collection, the most held in any single collection worldwide.
Three of the gifts are from Ann Hill, the niece of Richard Weyand, who lived in Demuth's home with Robert Locher until his untimely death in 1956. The three gifts consist of a crayon drawing of two women gossiping under an umbrella and their dogs, a landscape with windmill from Demuths time spent in Provincetown and a landscape of lush green hills. These works have not been seen publicly in decades and give us new insight to Demuths working methods and use of color. Executive Director, Anne M. Lampe notes, Charles whimsical nature and his quick wit are shown in how he captures these local ladies whove met up during their daily dog walk. He had the unique ability to infuse everyday observations with his own sense of humor. The landscape with windmill gives us another look into the magical summer he spent in Provincetown working towards his mature, precisionist style.
The other four gifts to the collection are three pencil drawings and a wonderful Marine scene, that are all given in honor of Executive Director, Anne M. Lampe. The Marine watercolor is a particularly notable addition to the collection as it has not been seen publicly in over fifty years and is an exhibit of the Fauvist influence in Charles early work. Lampe says of the pencil drawings, They give us great insight into the working mind of the artist and flesh out portions of the collection heretofore unexplored.
These new acquisitions will be on view until September 1, 2013 in conjunction with our current exhibition, Charles Demuth: Gardens and More, which features Demuths masterful watercolors of flowers inspired by his mother Augustas garden. The garden today is filled with the same flowers and plants that inspired Demuth and is enjoyed by museum visitors year round.