CAMBRIDGE.- After a £7.83 million campaign to acquire Édouard Manets magnificent Portrait of Mademoiselle Claus in 2012, the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford is now lending the painting to the
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge as part of a nationwide tour.
The Ashmolean will in turn display Nicolas Poussins moving masterpiece, Extreme Unction (c.1638-40) , one of a series of paintings of the seven sacraments, bought by the Fitzwilliam in the same year. Both acquisitions were the result of major fundraising campaigns, generously supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Art Fund and numerous other charities and private donors.
The Portrait of Mademoiselle Claus (1868) is on display at the Fitzwilliam Museum from 18 September to 13 December 2015. It is Manets first version of his famous painting The Balcony (18689, Musée dOrsay, Paris), which was inspired by Francisco Goyas Majas on a Balcony painted in 1810 (Metropolitan Museum, New York).
The portraits subject is Fanny Claus (184677), the closest friend of Manets wife Suzanne Leenhoff. A concert violinist, Fanny was one of the artists favourite sitters and a member of a close-knit group of friends who also provided him with models. She died of tuberculosis at the age of 30.
The acquisition of Manets Portrait of Mademoiselle Claus was the most significant in the Ashmoleans history, supported with £5.9 million from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF), and a grant of £850,000 from the Art Fund. The final £1,080,000 was contributed via grants and donations from trusts, foundations and private individuals.
The Fitzwilliam also has been generously lent Perspective II, Manets Balcony (1950) by René Magritte (1898-1967) from the Museum of Fine Arts in Ghent.
By displaying Magrittes painting alongside Manets preliminary version of The Balcony, the Fitzwilliam shows how the line of descent from Goyas original painting extended into the 20th century, with the twist in Magrittes painting that the sitters in Manets, including Fanny Claus, are replaced by coffins.
Magritte's brand of surrealism made frequent references to other painters making art itself the subject of discussion. After he transformed Manets painting, Magritte 'coffined' two other famous works by the French artists François Gérard (17701837) and Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825). Magritte intended his title to be a pun on the word perspective, which in French can also mean prospect - here, presumably a reference to the inescapability of death - although he may also have meant it as a commentary on the stiffness of the sitters in Manets original painting. Magritte himself felt unable to explain his intentions, claiming that whatever explanation he might give would make the painting no less mysterious; the typically-narrow French balcony appeared to him simply as a suitable place to put coffins.
Jane Munro, Keeper of Paintings, Drawings and Prints at the Fitzwilliam Museum, commented: It is an enormous privilege to be able to display Manets extraordinary portrait of Mademoiselle Claus in the context of the Fitzwilliams own superb Impressionist collections, and in particular to be able to display it alongside Magrittes witty if macabre surrealist take on Manets original composition , The Balcony . Juxtaposing these works not only offers compelling evidence of the visual potency of Manets original but also provides a fascinating insight as to how artists respond to, recycle and reinterpret the art of the past. Just as Manet reinvents Goya, Magritte allows us to see Manet from his perspective.