SAN ANTONIO, TX.- The McNay Art Museum presents Monet to Matisse: A Century of French Moderns (March 1 to June 4, 2017) in its newly reconfigured Tobin Exhibition Galleries. Selected by McNay Director Richard Aste and Brooklyn Museum Curator of European Painting and Sculpture Lisa Small, the exhibition includes nearly 60 paintings and sculptures from Brooklyns renowned European art collection as well as selections from the McNays prized holdings. Bringing Brooklyns French collection to the McNay is a reunion decades in the making, says Aste. Our founder, Marion Koogler McNay, was a visionary collector. Putting her keen collecting eye back on a par with those of her mostly male peers at the Brooklyn Museum, one of the nations pioneering art institutions, is powerful, appropriate, and long overdue. At the McNay, Monet to Matisse is organized by René Paul Barilleaux, Chief Curator/Curator of Contemporary Art, and Heather Lammers, Director of Collections and Exhibitions.
Indeed, the McNay boasts artworks from the same eraModernismand by many of the same artists featured in Monet to Matisse. To reinforce collecting-practice parallels between the McNay and Brooklyn and to highlight the McNays growing Modern art collection, the Museum is introducing paintings, sculptures, and prints typically exhibited in the main collection galleries to the Tobin Exhibition Galleries, along with key works on loan from private collectors. Notable examples include:
Paul Gauguins Portrait of the Artist with the Idol, Raoul Dufys Seated Woman-Rosalie , and Vincent van Goghs Women Crossing the Fields, all bequests of Marion Koogler McNay.
An iconic suite of ten Mary Cassatt aquatints, graciously donated to the McNay by prominent philanthropist and collector Margaret Batts Tobin in 1977.
The Tobin Theatre Arts Funds Claude Monet masterpiece Nympheas (Water Lilies).
An arresting Paris-made still life by African American painter Lois Mailou Jones on loan from the Harmon and Harriet Kelley Foundation for the Arts. Frederick Carl Friesekes The Bathers, an exquisite painting on loan from the collection of Marie and Hugh Halff.
Also on view in the McNays Charles Butt Paperworks Gallery is the complementary exhibition Sur Papier: Works on Paper by Renoir, Chagall, and Other French Moderns, drawn entirely from the Museums renowned prints and drawings collection.
Monet to Matisse: A Century of French Moderns celebrates France as a major artistic center of international Modernism from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries. At the time, the genres of portraiture, landscape, the still life, and the nude were redefined in radical ways. The paintings, sculptures, and works on paper in this presentation exemplify the avant-garde movements that defined a hundred years, spanning early attempts to faithfully capture everyday life and concluding with introspective reflections of a disrupted landscape, beginning with the reign of naturalism and ending with the rise of abstraction.
Monet to Matisse inaugurates the McNays radically reconfigured Tobin Exhibition Galleries in the Jane & Arthur Stieren Center for Exhibitions as an homage to the vision of its architect, Jean-Paul Viguier. The result is an inspiring open plan that both showcases the beauty of Viguiers design to great effect and provides visitors with a fresh and dynamic experience. Artworks are presented along the outer walls while interactive educational areas fill the center of the galleries, demonstrating the McNays equal commitment to exhibitions and education. Education areas engage audience of all ages and provide points of entry for visitors to the masterworks on view. Activities focus especially on communities often overlooked during this 100-year period, including women, African Americans, and Hispanics. Additionally, the military is the focus of an interpretative section, connecting the period to San Antonios major active-duty population.
Introductory text and descriptive labels are presented in both English and Spanish. And a fully illustrated catalogue, co-edited by Aste and Small, is available at the McNays Museum Store. Additionally, throughout the run of Monet to Matisse, the McNay features #McNayFrenchModerns as part of its social media campaign highlighting the permanent collection with interactive content and videos.