:On view February 20 to May 29 at the Cleveland Museum of Art,
"Masterworks of the Phillips Collection" will exhibit 56
celebrated European paintings from the Nineteenth and early
Twentieth centuries, including works by Degas, Van Gogh, Klee,
Monet and El Greco.
The centerpiece of the show is Auguste Renoir's "Luncheon of the
Boating Party," a masterpiece that has rarely traveled to venues
outside The Phillips Collection. The exhibition also includes
works by Paul Cézanne, Gustave Courbet, Honoré Daumier, Edgar
Degas, Vincent van Gogh, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Henri
Matisse, Claude Monet and Pablo Picasso, among others. Earlier
works by El Greco, Chardin, Delacroix and Ingres add to the
comprehensive examination of the evolution of modern art.
Duncan Phillips (1886-1966), founder of The Phillips Collection,
spent more than 50 years assembling his extraordinary collection
of European and American works, said to be among the best in
private hands. His goal was to assemble works that would resonate
off one another, revealing visual harmonies that tied together
historical masterworks with the art of his own time. In 1921 he
opened two rooms of his Washington home to the public, becoming
the first museum of modern art in the country. This exhibition
focuses on the European treasures in the museum's holdings,
although Phillips also collected American masters.
The installation of this exhibition in Cleveland is curated by
CMA curator Tom E. Hinson.
Art Beyond Isms: Masterworks from El Greco to Picasso in The
Phillips Collection a 106-page catalog (The Phillips
Collection, Washington D.C.; 2002, published by Third Millennium
Publishing, London) is $ 22.
The CMA will have a complementary exhibition entitled "Drawn with
Light: French Photography from the Cleveland Museum of Art"
February 26 to June 8. Admission to this show is free. The desire
to represent reality had long been a strong impulse in Western
art. With the invention of photography in 1839, this new
mechanical means provided for an unprecedented level of
exactitude. The show surveys through about 30 works by such
pictorially inventive and technically accomplished Nineteenth and
early Twentieth Century photographers as Édouard Baldus, Adolphe
Braun, Gustave Le Gray, Henri Le Secq, Nadar (Gaspard-Féliz
Tournachon), Charles Marville, Louis Robert and Eugène Atget.
Admission is $10 weekdays and $12 weekends for adults; $9 for
seniors and college students; $8 for groups of 15 or more; $7 for
students ages 6 to 18; free to CMA members and children 5 and
under at all times. The audio tour price is included in the price
of the ticket. Advance reservations are recommended; call
216-421-7350 or 888-CMA-0033 or visit .