Renoir to Matisse: The Eye of Duncan PhillipsOctober 17, 2004–January 9, 2005
A Rare Opportunity to Experience Modern Masterworks from The Phillips CollectionExhibition Includes 53 Paintings; All on View in Los Angeles for the First Time
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Luncheon of the Boating Party,1880–1881, oil on canvas. The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C
LOS ANGELES—More than 50 of the most outstanding modern masterworks will be on view for the first-time in Los Angeles from October 17, 2004 through January 9, 2005 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, LACMA. The exhibition Renoir to Matisse: The Eye of Duncan Phillips provides an opportunity to experience European masterpieces from The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., one of the first museums in the United States to present modern art. The LACMA exhibition is presented to evoke the domestic setting Duncan Phillips chose when he opened his collection and his home to the public in 1921. The 19th –20th century works by Pierre Bonnard, Paul Cézanne, Honoré Daumier, Edgar Degas, Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Franz Marc, Claude Monet, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir reveal both Duncan Phillips’ passion for contemporary art and how he came to form his collection. “Duncan Phillips felt that the encouragement of living artists was the most important function of art patronage. He purchased a wide range of works of art and was ready to change his mind often. His personal collection, now publicly available, reveals a keen eye and passion for particular artists. Seeing works of art at The Phillips Collection in Washington is a profoundly personal and intimate experience. We hope our visitor will be able to share some of that in LACMA’s presentation,” says LACMA Modern and Contemporary Art Chief Curator Stephanie Barron. Duncan Phillips collected art that he loved. From the early 1910s until his death in 1966, he studied art and sought the finest examples, often acquiring works that were truly contemporary. Some were shockingly unconventional, while others conformed to more traditional taste. Phillips simultaneously embodied two American traits – he was both a generous philanthropist and a maverick. Like other civic-minded collectors, he felt keenly the responsibility to make his personal collection publicly accessible. But he rejected the notion that art should be exhibited in large, imposing, and intimidating institutions. He chose instead to display his astonishing collection in the intimate, domestic setting of his own home.Phillips defied convention in another important way. Rather than relying on the advice of professionals, he formed his collection himself, together with his wife Marjorie (herself an artist). They traveled widely, seeking paintings and sculptures available in well-known galleries, but also buying directly from artists’ studios. Phillips was a firm believer in collecting the art of his own time.Rejecting the notion that a collection should encompass a cohesive presentation of a particular style, Phillips sought to “buy and exhibit what I can genuinely respect and enjoy.” The resulting collection, he concluded, was “made with enjoyment for the enjoyment of others.” He freely acknowledged “the essentially intimate character of the collection and its personal associations.” The Phillips Collection is the enduring legacy of one of America’s most astute art patrons.
General InformationFor general information, call 323 857-6000. For press information, images, or to schedule an interview, call 323 857-6543.TicketsWeekdays: Adults $17; Seniors (62+) and students (with valid ID) $14; Children (17 and under) Free; Twilight (starting at 5 PM) $12.00. Weekends: Adults $20; Seniors (62+) and students (with valid ID) $14; Children (17 and under) Free; Twilight (starting at 5 PM) $15. 1-877-522-6225.
Related ProgramsLACMA presents a range of education programs for students and teachers, children and families, and adults in conjunction with the exhibition. These programs include special tours, public lectures, and family day art activities.
LACMA’s Collection of Modern and Contemporary ArtThe Modern and Contemporary Art Department at LACMA produces important, world-renowned exhibitions of international art from 1900 to the present. The department also boasts a permanent collection of more than 5,000 objects, many of which are on display in the museum’s Anderson Building. Approximately half the galleries are devoted to modern European and American art through 1970, including art of the Russian Avant-Garde; Cubism; German Expressionism; Dada and Surrealism; and Abstract Expressionism. Among the modern masterworks in the permanent collection are Wassily Kandinsky’s Untitled Improvisation III (1914), Pablo Picasso’s Portrait of Sebastian Juñer Vidal (1903) and Weeping Woman with Handkerchief (1937), Georges Braque’s Still Life with Violin (1914), Henri Matisse’s Tea (1919), Fernand Léger’s The Discs (1918-19), Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s Two Women (1911-12), Yves Tanguy’s I Await You (1934), René Magritte’s The Treachery of Images (Ceci n’est pas une pipe) (c. 1928-29), Kurt Schwitters’s Construction for Noble Ladies (1919), Frank Stella’s Getty Tomb (1959), Robert Motherwell’s Elegy to the Spanish Republic, No. 100 (1963-75), Ed Kienholz’s The Back Seat Dodge ‘38 (1964), Ed Ruscha’s Actual Size (1962), and Bruce Nauman’s Human Nature/Life Death/Knows Doesn’t Know (1983). The other half of the modern and contemporary galleries devoted to LACMA’s permanent holdings present a continually growing and changing collection of contemporary art.
General Museum HoursMonday, Tuesday, and Thursday noon–8 pm; Friday noon–9 pm; Saturday and Sunday 11 am–8 pm; closed Wednesdays, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Free after 5 pm (except for specially ticketed exhibitions)..Call 323-857-6000, or visit our Web site at www.lacma.org.
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