LONDON.- Spanning over five hundred years of art history, Painters Paintings presents more than eighty works, which were once in the possession of great painters: pictures that artists were given or chose to acquire, works they lived with and were inspired by. This is an exceptional opportunity to glimpse inside the private world of these painters and to understand the motivations of artists as collectors of paintings.
The inspiration for this exhibition is a painters painting: Corots Italian Woman, left to the nation by Lucian Freud following his death in 2011. Freud had bought the 'Italian Woman' 10 years earlier, no doubt drawn to its solid brushwork and intense physical presence. A major work in its own right, the painting demands to be considered in the light of Freuds achievements, as a painter who tackled the representation of the human figure with vigour comparable to Corots.
In his will, Freud stated that he wanted to leave the painting to the nation as a thank you for welcoming his family so warmly when they arrived in the UK as refugees fleeing the Nazis. He also stipulated that the paintings new home should be the
National Gallery, where it could be enjoyed by future generations.
Anne Robbins, Curator of 'Painters Paintings' says: Since its acquisition the paintings notable provenance has attracted considerable attention in fact the picture is often appraised in the light of Freuds own achievements, almost eclipsing the intrinsic merits of Corots canvas. It made us start considering questions such as which paintings do artists choose to hang on their own walls? How do the works of art they have in their homes and studios influence their personal creative journeys? What can we learn about painters from their collection of paintings? 'Painters Paintings: From Freud to Van Dyck' is the result.
The National Gallery holds a number of important paintings which, like the Corot, once belonged to celebrated painters: Van Dycks Titian; Reynoldss Rembrandt, and Matisses Degas among many others. 'Painters Paintings' is organised as a series of case studies each devoted to a particular painter-collector: Freud, Matisse, Degas, Leighton, Watts, Lawrence, Reynolds, and Van Dyck.
'Painters Paintings' explores the motivations of these artists as patrons, rivals, speculators - to collect paintings. The exhibition looks at the significance of these works of art for the painters who owned them - as tokens of friendship, status symbols, models to emulate, cherished possessions, financial investments or sources of inspiration.
Works from these artists collections are juxtaposed with a number of their own paintings, highlighting the connections between their own creative production and the art they lived with. These pairings and confrontations shed new light on both the paintings and the creative process of the painters who owned them, creating a dynamic and original dialogue between possession and painterly creation.
Half the works in the exhibition are loans from public and private collections, from New York and Philadelphia to Copenhagen and Paris. A number of them have not been seen in public for several decades.
Dr Gabriele Finaldi, Director of the National Gallery says: Artists by definition live with their own pictures, but what motivates them to possess works by other painters, be they contemporaries friends or rivals or older masters? The exhibition looks for the answers in the collecting of Freud, Matisse, Degas, Leighton, Watts, Lawrence, Reynolds, and Van Dyck.