BASEL.- The Rudolf Staechelin Collection and the Im Obersteg Collection are two distinguished private collections with deep roots in Basel and a long history of affiliation with the
Kunstmuseum Basel. The temporary closure of the museum in 2015 creates the unprecedented opportunity to send the two collections on a joint international tour. Bringing the works of both collections together allows for an exhibition that will guarantee unique perspectives: the Rudolf Staechelin Collection includes works by leading nineteenth-century precursors of modernism, and the Im Obersteg Collection holds eminent masterworks of twentieth-century art. The traveling exhibition will be on display at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid (March 18 September 13, 2015, concurrently with the presentation of works from the Kunstmuseum Basel) and the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C. (October 10, 2015 January 10, 2016). The organizers expect around a million visitors.
The Rudolf Staechelin Family Trust and the Im Obersteg Foundation are pleased that their exhibition in Madrid has been coordinated with the Kunstmuseums projects, resulting in an extraordinarily rich presentation of Basels artistic treasures.
The two Basel collections have a shared history and have been described as sister collections. They were founded by the two prominent collectors Rudolf Staechelin (1881 1946) and Karl Im Obersteg (18831969). Encouraged by the intellectual atmosphere of their native Basel, the two entrepreneurs and friends developed a passionate interest in art; they also served as members of the Kunstmuseums board of trustees. Starting in 1914, Staechelin assembled an imposing collection of nineteenth-century French modern art; Im Obersteg began acquiring eminent modernist masters in 1916.
Taken together, the two collections form a panorama primarily of figurative modern painting from the late nineteenth century until around 1940. The quality of the collections is evident in holdings such as Vincent van Goghs epoch-making masterwork Jardin de Daubigny (1890) and a set of Picassos including Buveuse dAbsinthe (1910) and Arlequin au loup (1918). Also among the cornerstones of the collections are the three portraits of Jews Marc Chagall created in 1914, an ensemble that has left Switzerland only once, in 2003, for an exhibition in Vienna, and a large group of works by Alexej von Jawlensky. Next to representatives of international modernism, Swiss artists of the early twentieth century such as Ferdinand Hodler and Cuno Amiet define character of the collections.
Manuel J. Borja-Villel, director of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, and Dorothy Kosinski, director of the Phillips Collection, will curate the exhibitions at their respective institutions. The presentation will be accompanied by a catalogue with contributions by Dorothy Kosinski, Henriette Mentha, and others; the overall project management is in the hands of Henriette Mentha, project manager and curator at the Im Obersteg Collection.