PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Philadelphia Museum of Art has published a new handbookthe first in more than 20 yearsof its encyclopedic collections. Featuring some 550 masterpieces from the Museums world renowned holdings of Asian, European, American, and modern and contemporary art, this volume includes a broad range of media from each of the Museums curatorial departments, including paintings, prints, drawings, photographs, sculptures, the decorative arts, costumes and textiles, arms and armor, and architectural settings. Expanded entries provide in depth information on some of the most significant works, among them Thomas Eakinss masterpiece The Gross Clinic (1875) and a superb man and horse armor acquired in 2009.
The introduction to the handbook, written by Timothy Rub, the George D. Widener Director and CEO, recounts the Museums institutional history and the formation and distinctive characteristics of its collection. It has been organized into four sectionsAsia, Europe, the Americas, and Contemporary Artwhich cut across traditional curatorial departments and freely mix different media. Each section includes expanded entries on the most significant works in the collection, from a sixteenth-century Indian temple hall and Rogier van der Weydens monumental Crucifixion to Grace Kellys wedding dress to Marcel Duchamps Nude Descending a Staircase. It also highlights the areas of greatest strength within the collectionfrom early gifts of Chinese art to the sculpture of Auguste Rodin, the Museums remarkable holdings of Impressionist paintings, the art of the Pennsylvania Germans, the work of Thomas Eakins, as well as contemporary art.
The handbook ($19.95; 468 pages) explores the concept of the Philadelphia Museum of Art as a collection of collections, calling attention to the many individuals whose generous gifts have transformed the institution. Among these were Carl Otto Kretzschmar von Kienbusch, who donated to the Museum his remarkable collection of arms and armor; Robert L. McNeil, Jr., who bequeathed his exceptional collection of American art; Stella Kramrisch, who greatly enhanced the Museums holdings of Indian art; and Louise and Walter Arensberg and A. E. Gallatin, who donated so many of the Museums important modernist masterworks. This new edition of the Museums handbook has been made possible thanks to the generosity of many members of the Philadelphia Museum of Art Associates and Chairmans Council on the occasion of the fortieth anniversary of the Associates in 2011.