BOSTON, MASS.- This spring, the
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston presents Off the Wall: Gardner and Her Masterpieces, displaying 25 of the collections most esteemed works of art by masters including Rembrandt, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Raphael, and Rubens, which will be moved from the Museums original palace into the contemporary Hostetter Gallery. The exhibition opens March 10 and runs through Aug. 15, 2016.
This once-in-lifetime exhibition will provide visitors with direct access to extraordinary works, said Dr. Christina Nielsen, William and Lia Poorvu Curator of the Collection. Placing a select group of paintings and drawings in our contemporary exhibition space, seen up close and lit to best advantage, allows us to reconsider the museums rich holdings and to think anew about how works from the Renaissance to the Rococo speak to us today.
Off the Wall: Gardner and Her Masterpieces tells the story of the formation of one of the premier collections in America of Renaissance and Baroque Art through individual works, gathered and curated by Gardner, a singularly determined woman who was not only a collector of art but also a collector of experiences, ideas, and people at the turn of the century. As she said herself: Years ago, I decided the greatest need in our Country was Art
. I determined to make it my life work if I could.
The works selected for Off the Wall allow visitors to trace Gardners extraordinary journey as a collector of Northern European, Italian, and Spanish art. They include: Rembrandts Self-Portrait, Aged 23 (1629); Anders Zorns portrait of Isabella Stewart Gardner in Venice (1894); Raphaels Procession of Pope Sylvester I (1516-1517); Michelangelos Pietà (1540); Fra Angelicos The Death and Assumption of the Virgin (1430-1434); Raphaels Lamentation over the Dead Christ (1503-1505); Piero della Francescas Hercules (1470); Sandro Botticellis The Tragedy of Lucretia (1499-1500); and Raphaels portrait, Count Tommaso Inghirami (1515-1516).
Every time we move one of our artworkseven the most iconic onesout of the palace for photography or conservation analysis, we see new details that we had not before noticed, Dr. Nielsen said. We are thrilled to give our visitors the opportunity to go behind the scenes, in a way, and make new discoveries of their own. In contrast to the museums permanent collection galleries, interpretive tools will provide information about the individual works of art and will also shed light on how they were acquired by Gardner.
A small new exhibition space called the Vatichino is also being renovated near the Museums original entrance in the historic palace to showcase a selection of Gardners vast collection of archival materials, letters, albums, souvenirs, and photos. About 40 rarely seen mementoes will be featured as part of the Off the Wall exhibition, helping to share the story of Gardner as a collector, a traveler, and a cultural impresario.
Although some of these items are under glass in cases around the Museum today, many have also been kept out of view in areas where Gardner chose to store them. Among the treasured artifacts that will be showcased in the Vatichino are a travel diary that Gardner hand-illustrated in Egypt and a preparatory drawing by John Singer Sargent for his iconic painting of a Spanish dancer, El Jaleo. A pencil and watercolor drawing of the Museums original design will be on view as well as letters and photographs from prominent leaders, artists, and intellectuals of the day, including Bernard Berenson, Henry James, Rabindranath Tagore, John Singer Sargent, and Julia Ward Howe. Between both locations, the exhibition will unfold in two parts across the Museum from the 1901 historic palace to the 2012 Renzo Piano-designed Hostetter Gallery.
The exhibition is organized by Dr. Christina Nielsen, William and Lia Poorvu Curator of the Collection; and Dr. Casey Riley, Curatorial Fellow.