:The James A. Michener Art Museum announces "An Enduring Gift: The
Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest Collection" on view March 18 through
July 2. This exhibition commemorates the Lenfests' entire gift of
paintings and is the first time the complete collection of 62
paintings will be on exhibit at the museum. It will take three
galleries to exhibit the entire collection.
In 1999, the Lenfests placed their collection of 59 exceptional
Pennsylvania Impressionist paintings in trust to the Michener and
provided a $3 million endowment to help care for the collection.
A few years later the Lenfests assisted the Michener in acquiring
three additional works, including two major paintings by Edward
W. Redfield that were saved from the auction block. Last year the
Lenfests converted this entire trust to an outright gift. The
addition of these 62 paintings means that the Michener Art Museum
has the finest collection of Bucks County art in public hands.
"An Enduring Gift: The Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest Collection"
provides an opportunity to view the work of the major
Pennsylvania Impressionist painters whose names have become
synonymous with Bucks County's visual heritage: Edward W.
Redfield, Fern I. Coppedge, Daniel Garber, William L. Lathrop,
John F. Folinsbee, Robert Spencer, Charles Rosen and others.
During this exhibition visitors can see the quality of the entire
Lenfest collection, which depicts the grandeur and rustic beauty
of the Bucks County landscape.
Edward W. Redfield, "The Trout Brook," 1916, oil on canvas, 50
by 56 inches, James A. Michener Art Museum, gift of Marguerite
and Gerry Lenfest.
In 2000, the Michener opened the permanent exhibition The
Lenfest Exhibition of Pennsylvania Impressionism. This exhibition
is drawn largely from the Lenfests' gift, as well as other museum
holdings. This permanent exhibition tells the story of the renowned
impressionist art colony centered in New Hope in the early
Twentieth century. At the close of An Enduring Gift: The Marguerite
and Gerry Lenfest Collection in July, the permanent exhibition will
return to the Museum's Putnam-Smith Gallery.
The Lenfests have been building their art collection since the
early 1990s, when they began to collect art created by painters
who lived and worked in areas covered by Suburban Cable, which
they owned. At that time the collection was displayed in the
offices of the cable company. Since coming to the Michener, the
Lenfest Collection has enhanced the museum's collecting, research
and educational functions at the most fundamental levels.
Curator of Collections Constance Kimmerle said, "The
interpretation of Pennsylvania Impressionism goes beyond
explaining a work's composition and form to understanding its
cultural reality. In gifting this collection back to the region
in which it was created, the Lenfests have made it possible for
museum visitors to engage the New Hope painters on their native
ground and explore the environment that shaped their creations."
The James A. Michener Art Museum is at 138 South Pine Street in
Doylestown and at 500 Union Square Drive in New Hope. For
information, www.michenerartmuseum.org or 215-340-9800.