:Maxfield Parrish's record-setting masterpiece "Daybreak" is on
loan to the National Museum of American Illustration (NMAI)
through August 25. The announcement of the viewing came on the
heels of the May 25 auction at Christie's where "Daybreak" set a
new record for a work by Parrish of $7.6 million dollars. Now
privately owned, the loan of "Daybreak" to the NMAI presents the
only opportunity available to the public to view this masterpiece
before it enters a closed collection.
To celebrate this milestone exhibit, the NMAI is offering special
weekends of general admissions in addition to its daily guided
tours available by reservation Mondays through Fridays.
"The recent results of America illustrators at auctions this
spring has confirmed their importance in American art," said the
museum's director and co-founder, Judy Goffman Cutler. "Works by
Maxfield Parrish and Norman Rockwell set new records at auction,
indicating the current level of respect and appreciation of these
artists, and this genre, today.
"Although the loan of 'Daybreak' was arranged with little advance
notice, we are thrilled beyond belief to offer to the public the
only opportunity to view this work," she continued. "'Daybreak'
has been privately held since 1922 and only rarely exhibited to
the public in the last 80 years. In conjunction with 'Daybreak,'
we have arranged the loan of other significant works by Parrish -
'My Duty Towards My Neighbor/ My Duty Towards God,' 'Dream
Garden' and 'Presentation Piece for the Florentine Fete A Call To
Joy.'' Like 'Daybreak,' 'My Duty Towards My Neighbor/ My Duty
Towards God' is also entering a private collection after being
exhibited at the NMAI."
In 1922, Parrish produced "Daybreak," which he referred to as
"the great painting." Distributed as an art print through the
House of Art, "Daybreak" became the most successful art print of
the last century and secured Parrish's position as the most
popular illustrator after World War I. In composition it
resembles a stage set, which is appropriate, since Parrish loved
the theater and had designed a number of sets for masques in
Cornish, N.H., as well as for a New York performance of
Shakespeare's The Tempest. It was laid out according to
dynamic symmetry using photographs of Kitty Owen, his daughter
Jean and Susan Lewin as models, posed amid a backdrop of
architectural elements, columns, urns and fantastical landscape.
The print was the sensation of the decade and was displayed in
one of every four American homes. It is said to be the most
reproduced art image in history, surpassing "The Last Supper" and
Andy Warhol's soup cans.
To celebrate the loan, two special weekends of general admissions
for self-guided tours are being offered - July 22 and 23, and
August 19 and 20, open each day 10 am to 3 pm. Additionally, the
museum is open for guided tours by advance reservation, Mondays
through Fridays, through November 3.
The National Museum of American Illustration is on Bellevue
Avenue at Vernon Court, a Beaux-Arts adaptation of an Eighteenth
Century French chateau. For information, 401-851-8949 or
www.americanillustration.org.