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November 24, 2020

KIMBELL ART MUSEUM .....

 



KIMBELL ART MUSEUM 
LOUIS KAHN & RENZO PIANO




THEORIES OF MAGICAL REALISM BY ERIK CAMAYD FREIXAS

The term “magical realism” was coined by art critic Franz Roh in 1925 to describe German post-expressionist painting. It was independently applied to literature for the first time, with a diverging meaning, by Italian novelist Massimo Bontempelli in 1927 to characterize modernist fiction. While soon the concept was virtually forgotten in Europe, it was resurrected in Latin American literature, again with varying meanings, starting in 1940. By the mid 1970s it had become very popular in the context of the so-called “Boom” of the Latin American novel (1967-1984). Thereafter, as magical realism declined in Latin American fiction, it was picked up by many different national traditions of world literature, and continues to enjoy a successful afterlife. This has further expanded the already varied conceptions of the term, making its definition one of the most challenging and interesting theoretical problems in contemporary literature.

 Franz Roh published his 1925 book Nach-Expressionismus, Magischer Realismus: Probleme der neuesten Europäischen Malerei (“Post-Expressionism, Magical Realism: Problems of the latest European Painting”) at the height of the modernist avantgarde movement in Europe and the beginning of a new tendency in German art, marked by a post-WWI return to a rather blunt realism (Arnason 317-23). Roh coined the oxymoron “magical realism” to describe this new style. Two years earlier, another German art critic, Gustav Hartlaub, had proposed a competing term: “new objectivity” (Neue Sachlichkeit). Roh sought to define post-expressionism as a synthesis of two opposing tendencies: impressionism and expressionism. On the one hand, the impressionism of Van Gogh and his contemporaries emphasized external objects and the effect (or impression) they have on our senses. For instance, an impressionist painting up close may look like a conglomerate of dotted brush strokes, but as we retreat, realistic figures begin to take shape. On the other hand, the expressionism of Emil Nolde, Ernst Kirchner, and the followers of Edvard Munch established the predominance of the subject, or inner self, over the object. The expressionists sought to project their emotions and existential angst onto the objects they depicted, thereby deforming them. They considered such distorted figures to be more “real” and humanly relevant than our proportionate everyday perceptions, because they embodied the emotions that the subject expressed upon the world.  Franz Roh believed that this tension between subject and object was a universal dichotomy in art. Today, postmodern critics shun such broad “universalist” or “essentialist” generalizations. Yet for Roh, this subject-object dialectics was finally resolved in the synthesis of the new post-expressionist “verism” of his contemporaries, such as painters Max Beckmann, Otto Dix, and George Grosz.

 Roh’s rationale for calling this new type of realism “magical,” as opposed to “mystical,” was scarcely convincing, given the spiritual connotation of a “primitive” belief in the supernatural, which the word “magic” had acquired with the rise of ethnology and anthropology. In contrast, Roh meant the “wonder” that the constant movement of atoms and molecules should generate the sensation of concrete objects. He was drawing from Husserl’s phenomenology, introduced in 1913. Edmund Husserl suspended in brackets the old impasse of whether the world is fundamentally matter or spirit, noting that our perception of phenomena is the only given fact from which to approach reality. This became the philosophical foundation for Roh’s theory of post-expressionism. But the critic did not persist in the use of the term magical realism; he occasionally employed “ideal realism” instead, and later opted for Hartlaub’s competing term, “new objectivity.” Meanwhile in European painting, as post-expressionism intersected French surrealism as well as Russian and Italian futurism, leftist artists became associated with “new objectivity,” while right-wing fascist sympathizers were more closely identified with Bontempelli’s “magical realism.” The increasingly negative overtone that fascism and fascist art accrued during the 1930s contributed to the term’s waning popularity in Europe (Guenther 33-73).

 In 1927, Roh’s work on magical realism was translated into Spanish and published by the influential Revista de Occidente, directed by José Ortega y Gasset. Given the diffusion of Spain’s premiere cultural journal among the literary circles of Buenos Aires, Mexico City, Havana, and other centers of culture in Latin America, it is presumed that his concept of magical realism may have enjoyed a certain currency across the Atlantic. Nevertheless, the first Latin American literati to use the term in writing (Usigli 1940; Lins 1944; Uslar 1948; Portuondo 1955) make no mention of Roh and use the term with totally different meanings, to include poetic-lyrical-symbolic realism and psycho-existential realism. With this first acceptation of the term in Latin America, writers sought to transcend traditional realism, naturalism, and regionalism by internalizing the narrative point of view through techniques such as the interior monologue and the then popular “stream of consciousness.” They narrated from inside the protagonist’s mind in order to express, either a poetic view of the world and the self, or else a psychological and existential search for authenticity in a lurid world, viewed through the distorting prism of an alienated individual, who nevertheless succeeded in exposing disquieting existential truths.

 Notwithstanding this literature’s vague affinity with post-expressionism, Enrique Anderson-Imbert (1956) and Luis Leal (1967) would be the first to point out Roh’s forgotten paternity, at a time when the term “realismo mágico” had already become, in its own right, a commonplace of Latin American letters. With few exceptions (e.g., Seymour Menton), the prevailing view among critics is that Roh’s concept, and German post-expressionism for that matter, have very little to do with Latin American literature (González Echevarría 25-27).

 A more direct connection, however, may be found with Bontempelli’s original literary version of realismo magico. In 1926, Massimo Bontempelli founded the literary journal 900 (novecento), which circulated in Italy and France, bringing together modernist figures like James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Rilke, Max Jacob, and Blaise Cendrars. Purportedly without any knowledge of Roh, Bontempelli proposed his own avant-garde literary formula: “precisione realistica e atmosfera magica.” This formula—normalizing a supernatural atmosphere by describing it or narrating it in precise realistic detail—remains to this day a core technique of magical realism. In addition, Bontempelli urged his fellow writers to become primitives with a past. “Adam and Eve had no past”—he contended, alluding to the surrealist ideal of a return to the primal. “We cannot be Adams again: Siamo dei primitivi con un passato” (188). Being “primitives with a past” meant returning to one’s national traditions, archetypes, and foundational myths—a very meaningful proposal for the young Latin American writers who were flocking to Europe at the time, and who would launch a few years later their own magic-realist proposals. Venezuelan essayist Arturo Uslar-Pietri, who had met Bontempelli in Paris and joined the debates of 900 in Italy, was a key contact. He would soon befriend Guatemalan Miguel Ángel Asturias and Cuban Alejo Carpentier in Paris, where all three contributed to Asturias’s journal Ensayo and Carpentier’s journal Imán. 





Significantly, Bontempelli’s proposals had very different cultural and political implications in Europe as opposed to Latin America. In a European hegemonic context, the idea of evoking a pure national archetype, so dear to fascism, was eventually hijacked by the Third Reich. By the end of the 1920s, Bontempelli, like other Italian futurists, had become an active fascist, leading to a rupture with many of his former literary friends. Yet in 1938, as political conditions deteriorated and it became evident that fascism was going too far, Bontempelli was expelled from the fascist party for refusing to take over a university post that had belonged to a Jewish professor. In a Latin American post-colonial context, on the contrary, that same search for national archetypes led to reclaiming indigenous traditions (in the case of Asturias’s Latin American highlands) and neo-African culture (in the case of Carpentier’s Caribbean basin). After their European experience, both Asturias and Carpentier became active Marxists. By 1949, Asturias had become the first Latin American novelist to describe his own work as magic-realist, based on his surrealist interpretation of the “primitive” Mayan psyche; whereas Carpentier had launched his own concept of lo real maravilloso americano (“the American marvelous real”), inspired by Cuban santería and Haitian vodou. Henceforth magical realism has remained primarily a countercultural and counter-hegemonic literary style.

 According to Carpentier (1949), the marvelous resides in the cultural reality of Latin America itself, by virtue of the continuous clashes of disparate belief systems (European, indigenous, African) over five centuries of tumultuous history, and the hidden syncretism generated by such clashes. The task of the artist is not to create the marvelous through any technical means, but rather to perceive and bring forth the hidden cultural and historical marvels that have long been waiting to be discovered. Due to this radical negation of artificiality, Carpentier refuses to recognize any “-ism” or literary style other than the (neo-) Baroque, precisely because of the Baroque’s capacity for accepting and incorporating onto itself the most varied cultural elements. Following Carpentier, and yet admitting the role of technique, Haitian novelist Jacques Stephen Alexis (1956) opted instead for the term “réalisme merveilleux.”

 A second moment in the development of the term in Latin American literature came with the early attempts at a more precise critical definition. Initially, this took the form of a debate between critics Ángel Flores and Luis Leal. Flores (1955) took a formalist approach, describing the term as an “amalgamation of realism and fantasy” distinguished by its preoccupation with style, precision and succinctness, a tight and logical plot, the transformation of everyday life into the awesome and unreal, the intemporal fluidity of the narrative, the rejection of sentimentality and lyrical effusions, and the predilection for the new and the surprising (112). These traits, however, characterized modernist fiction as a whole, and therefore were lacking in specificity. Flores cited as early precursors a wide array of authors of non-realist fiction, such as Gogol, Dostoyevsky, Hoffman, the Grimm brothers, the dramatist Strindberg, Poe, Melville, and even Proust. But he held Kafka to be the purest literary exemplar and Giorgio de Chirico to be his counterpart in painting, arguing that their “cold and cerebral” style is what distinguished magical realism from the earlier, more romantic flights of fantasy that were based on atmosphere rather than technique (113). Indeed, with his reference to de Chirico and to “atmosphere” Flores appears to be alluding to, and revising, Bontempelli’s “precisione realistica e atmosfera magica.” In regard to Latin American literature, Flores points to Borges as the initiator of magical realism, followed by the Argentines Bioy Casares, Silvina Ocampo, Mallea, Sábato, and Cortázar, the Uruguayan Onetti, the Chilean María Luisa Bombal, the Mexicans Arreola and Rulfo, and the Cubans Novás Calvo and Labrador Ruiz. Meanwhile, Borges, Bioy Casares, and Ocampo had famously edited their influential collection Antología de la literatura fantástica (1940), including a sampling of world literature since ancient times. Significantly, they defined their own work, not as magical realism, but as “fantastic literature.”

 Luis Leal (1967) credits Flores with producing the first critical study of magical realism in literature, but disagrees with his definition and with his catalogue of magic-realist authors. He also recognizes Roh’s first use of the term, but notes that in Latin America it is Carpentier who presents a more systematic and coherent view based on his concept of lo real maravilloso. Leal concludes that “magical realism cannot be identified either with fantastic literature or with psychological literature . . . neither does it distort reality or create imagined worlds. . . . The existence of the marvelous real is what started magical realist literature, which some critics claim is the truly American literature” (121-22). Thus, he sides with Carpentier’s thematic approach, and not with Borges’s formalism. He agrees with some of the authors cited by Flores and adds a few of his own, notably the Venezuelan Rómulo Gallegos and the Cuban Félix Pita Rodríguez. The core difference between Flores and Leal, as well as between Borges and Carpentier, ultimately hinges on their emphasis on form (technique) versus content (the theme of the marvelous real).

 A third moment in the development of the term, relevant not only to Latin America, but now also to world literature, arises in 1970 with the publication of Todorov’s systematic study, The Fantastic. Todorov defined the fantastic as the tension between the possibility of a rational explanation and the disquieting acceptance of the supernatural—the unsettling prospect that the “laws of nature” have been violated, thereby compromising the reader’s sense of certainty and understanding of the world. To promote this tension it is best if the narrator has a skeptical scientific mind, such as that of a detective, who is constantly engaging in deductive reasoning, and looking for clues that may lead to a rational explanation. Therefore, the fantastic is structurally related to detective fiction, as can be seen in the works of authors like Borges and Cortázar, whom critic Jaime Alazraki fittingly classified as “neo-fantastic”—as opposed to magic-realist (1990, 21-33). As long as this tension or doubt persists, the effect of the fantastic is maintained. On the other hand, if the characters and narrator do not care to look for a rational explanation but instead accept the events as normal, then the story belongs to the genre of the merveilleux (the marvelous), such as in the case of the fairy tale, which requires from the reader a suspension of disbelief. Todorov emphasizes that any poetical or allegorical meaning would serve to naturalize or normalize the story, eliminate the doubt, and therefore destroy the tension of the fantastic, which requires a strictly literal reading. Finally, if a rational explanation prevails in the end, then the story is neither fantastic nor marvelous, but simply strange or uncanny (unheimlich, to use the psychological term developed by Sigmund Freud for that which is taboo or uncomfortably strange).

 Todorov’s systematic definition of the fantastic was supposed to lead, by elimination, to a more specific definition of magical realism, but that would not turn out to be such a straightforward result. By the mid 1970s, the popularity of the term had grown so much as to lead to numerous studies and almost as many competing definitions. At the landmark 1973 magical realism conference in Michigan, Yale critic Emir Rodríguez Monegal called the debate “a dialogue among the deaf” and suggested that the term be discarded altogether (Yates 1975). To begin with, one of the problems with Todorov’s theory is that it reduces fiction to only three types of narrated events: the natural, the supernatural, and the strange or preternatural. Following this simplification, Anderson-Imbert suggested that Franz Roh’s original dialectics (impressionism + expressionism = magical realism) could be transposed to literature as “a thesis: the category of the veridical, which produces ‘realism’; an antithesis: the category of the supernatural, which produces the literature of ‘the fantastic’; and a synthesis: the category of the strange, which produces ‘magical realism’” (1975, 9). This failed to resolve the problem because the delineation of the fantastic, while helping to narrow down the possibilities, ultimately could not establish what magical realism is, but only what it is not. 





In O Realismo Maravilhoso (”Marvelous Realism,” 1980), Brazilian critic Irlemar Chiampi revisits Todorov’s opposition between the “fantastic” (based on doubt and sketicism) and the “marvelous” (where the supernatural is unquestioningly accepted as normal). Following both Leal and Monegal, she discards the term “magical realism” as being too imprecise and problematic, and replaces it with “marvelous realism,” which she argues is more amenable to definition because of its relation, not only to Todorov’s theory, but also to Carpentier’s doctrine that the marvelous real is a normal everyday occurrence in Latin America’s marginalized cultures. Although Chiampi’s study, published in the heyday of structuralism, appears excessively technical and abstract today, it does contribute the view that in “marvelous realism” the natural and the supernatural appear as non-contradictory, and that its core narrative technique is “the denaturalization of the real and the naturalization of the marvelous” (157-58). That is, the commonplace becomes defamiliarized when seen from a naïve perspective, whereas the miraculous is rendered commonplace from the standpoint of the believer. As Carpentier famously held in his prologue to The Kingdom of This World, “the phenomenon of the marvelous presupposes faith” (86).

  In a different take on Todorov, Amaryll Chanady (1985) proposes three criteria for defining magical realism in contrast to the fantastic. She notes that the fantastic establishes an antinomy between the natural and the supernatural; it affirms the natural as valid, such that the irruption of the supernatural creates an ilogical situation; and it presents a narrator who is reluctant to explain matters and resolve the antinomy. In contrast, magical realism presents as an antinomy two coherent perspectives in conflict, one based on a rational view of reality, and the other one on an acceptance of the supernatural as a normal everyday occurrence. However, according to Chanady, this second, coherent (but non-rational) perspective should not be unnecessarily restricted to that of a marginalized ethnic culture, but could also be that of an individual psyche (dreams, hallucinations, psychopathology, a child’s perspective, etc.). The main difference vis-à-vis the fantastic would reside in the natural attitude with which the narrator accepts the irrational, thereby “resolving” the antinomy. Nevertheless, it may be objected that the narrator’s natural attitude may be recognized as a necessary but not as a sufficient condition for an accurate definition of magical realism. Accepting both a collective (culturally bound) and an individual (sui generis) point of view as equally conforming to magical realism, results in grouping together works of very different styles, traditions, and periods under a single, all-inclusive rubric. For instance, García Márquez admired Kafka’s penchant for narrating the absurd (as opposed to the supernatural) “with a straight face” and even recognized this as a major influence; yet both authors ultimately have very different styles (30, 52). In consequence, despite some important advances, Chanady’s definition remains vague in as much as it reduces magical realism to a “mode” or technique that may be employed in very different types of fiction.

 Notwithstanding the limited results of such contrastive method, Todorov’s delineation of the fantastic did lead most critics to associate modernist authors like Borges and Cortázar with the (neo-) fantastic, while more regionalist authors like Carpentier, Asturias, Rulfo, and García Márquez became the most often cited as representatives of Latin American magical realism. This ushered a fourth moment in the development of the term, marked by an ethnological approach. From such anthropological perspective, the reader’s modern-Western-industrial culture is confronted with the collective worldview of a pre-industrial-ethnic-rural society of believers, for whom the natural and the supernatural coexist within a single, culturally-bound belief system. Fernando Alegría (1960) was the first critic to point out this contextual dependence of magical realism on the Latin American hinterland, particularly what he called the “Afro-Indian” zone. Along these lines, I contended that, contrary to Carpentier’s myth of the marvelous real, subsequent magic-realist authors produced instead a sort of “narrative primitivism” where Latin American authochthonous culture was technically and therefore artificially constructed as a conventionalized pastiche or simulacrum based on classical anthropology’s creation of a generic “primitive society”—a composite of early ethnographic depictions of traditional non-Western cultures across the globe, as popularized in twentieth-century ethnology, literature, and film (2000, 112-31). These “primitive” conventions for what constitutes habitual everyday reality (perceived as “magical thinking” by the modern reader) came to replace the rational causality of traditional realism, and became a given, an unquestionable norm in the magic-realist text. According to this theory, Latin American magical realism is not a “mode” but a historically specific style shared by particular works of contemporary authors who exhibit a definite relation of literary influence, including: Carpentier’s El reino de este mundo (The Kingdom of This World, 1949), Asturias’s Hombres de maíz (Men of Maize,1949), Rulfo’s Pedro Páramo (Pedro Paramo, 1955), García Márquez’s Cien años de soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude, 1967), Isabel Allende’s La casa de los espíritus (The House of the Spirits, 1982), Laura Esquivel’s Como agua para chocolate (Like Water for Chocolate, 1990), and Vargas Llosa’s El hablador (The Storyteller, 1992). Their style is defined by three common denominators: The adoption of a “primitive” or provincial narrative viewpoint (production); the transculturation of reality norms from modern to archaic (text); and the virtual reader’s dual role as believer and skeptic (reception), resulting in an alternate, allegorical interpretation of Latin American history, as opposed to the “official” version of history perpetuated by the structures of power.

 In the 1990s, as magical realism declined in Latin American literature after having attained international acclaim, it began to be applied globally to numerous authors in the rest of the world (Moreiras 84). Formerly competing terms, such as “marvelous realism,” “the marvelous real,” “fantastic realism,” and others became eclipsed by magical realism’s sheer popularity. But also, as a term of international literature, its earlier Latin American definition became too narrow and had to be complemented by a broader, more inclusive scope. Meanwhile, the fantastic was also experiencing an expansion of scope. Todorov’s delineation of the traditional fantastic, applicable mostly to nineteenth-century literature, and even the notion of a neo-fantastic modernist literature in the twentieth century, developed into what Brian McHale defined as a postmodern fantastic. Thus, in the actual practice of contemporary literature, even in Latin America, as Morales and Sardiñas have shown, previously separate elements of the fantastic and of magical realism have begun to coallesce within the same literary works, requiring new and more flexible theoretical formulations of both terms. This has led to a fifth moment in the development of the term: magical realism as a global poetics.

 A leading theorist of international magical realism, Wendy Faris, has returned to Chanady’s broader concept of magical realism as a literary “mode,” and has identified five primary characteristics: an irreducible element of magic; a strong presence of the phenomenal world; some unsettling doubts on the part of the reader in the effort to reconcile two contradictory understandings of events; the narrative’s merging of different realms; and the predilection for disturbing received ideas about time, space, and identity (7). Faris observes that “magical realism often originates in the peripheral and colonized regions of the West: Latin America and the Caribbean, India, Eastern Europe, Africa. But the mode is becoming less and less marginal” (29). She then adds, “Magical realism is currently moving out of that primitivist phase” (36). Among the many contemporary authors associated with this tendency are Günter Grass, Wilson Harris, Milan Kundera, Kenzaburō Ōe, Salman Rushdie, D. M. Thomas, Toni Morrison, Thomas Pynchon, José Saramago, Ben Okri, and Tahar Ben Jelloun. “The danger of studying magical realism globally, from a broad, comparative perspective,’ warns Faris, “is to colonize diverse cultural traditions by considering them under a general rubric” (40).

 In conclusion, there is a tradeoff in theorizing magical realism: the more precise and rigorous the definition, the fewer the works that meet such strict criteria; conversely, the more inclusive the term, the more vague the definition.

 In order to arrive at a suitable compromise, it is important to note that the single characteristic on which critics agree is that magical realism makes the extraordinary seem commonplace and vice versa. This is dependent on the non-conventional point of view of the (“naïve” or “unreliable”) narrator, and on naturalizing devices such as the extremely detailed and matter-of-fact description and narration of a rationally implausible event. In any case, the narrative point of view is key. In this regard, a further distinction may be drawn as to whether the point of view should be collective and culturally bound (that is, tied to a set of traditional beliefs shared by a particular cultural group) or individual and psychologically bound (that is, relative to an individual as a universal representative of the species, or of the human condition).

 Aside from these primary traits, a host of secondary characteristics may be found in some works but not in others. Epistemologically, therefore, primary characteristics should be considered common denominators, while secondary characteristics would be best conceptualized in terms of Wittgenstein’s family resemblance—where a wide number of works are linked together as sharing some, though not all, of a set of overlapping traits, much like members of an extended family. By the same token, a group of works within the same national or linguistic tradition may be linked together by strict common denominators, forming a core or nucleus of magical realism, while other works that share a family resemblance may be placed in closer or farther proximity to this relational nucleus. Such is, for example, the general relationship between the Latin American and the international brands of magical realism.





HEAD OF MELEAGER, 50 B.C.–A.D. 100

PERIOD: LATE REPUBLICAN – EARLY IMPERIAL

 (1st cent. B.C.–2nd cent. A.D.)

Marble

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 29.8 x 20.3 x 24.1 cm

 

This head is from a Roman copy of a full-length statue by the famed fourth-century-B.C. Greek sculptor Skopas. It showed the mythological hero Meleager with a hunting dog and the head of the Kalydonian boar.

Along with Praxiteles and Lysippos, Skopas was one of the great sculptors of his age, renowned especially for his depictions of gods. His style was notable for its introduction of an intense depiction of human emotion into the previously more reserved psychology of Greek classicism. Typical of Skopas’s innovations are the slightly parted lips, the low forehead that protrudes over the bridge of the nose and eyes, and the heavy roll of flesh swelling over the outer corners of the eyes. These elements—all of which would be further exaggerated in Hellenistic sculpture—contribute to the quality of barely suppressed agitation.

According to Homer, the Kalydonian boar was sent by Artemis to ravage the countryside after Oeneus, king of Kalydon and Meleager’s father, failed to sacrifice to the goddess. Meleager then led the hunt to kill the boar, but in its aftermath quarreled with his mother’s two brothers and killed them. Learning of this, his mother, Althaea, set in motion the dire prophecy that the Fates had decreed soon after Meleager’s birth—that he would die when a brand, then on the fire, had burned out. Althaea now took out the brand, which she had hidden for years in a chest, and brought about her son’s death. Fourth-century-B.C. artists favored narratives such as this, which humanized the gods and involved mythic heroes in the sufferings and imperfections of man.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196710





NICOLAS POUSSIN (1594 – 1665)

VENUS & ADONIS C. 1628–29

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 98.5 x 134.6 cm
Framed: 136.2 x 172.1 x 12.7 cm

 

Early in his career Poussin traveled to Italy and was introduced to a circle of important Roman patrons including the antiquarian Cassiano dal Pozzo. Poussin’s classicism, nurtured by his knowledge of antique literature and art, was warmed by his study of Venetian painting. Venus and Adonis reveals the influence of Titian in composition, coloration, and mood. The composition is built in a series of opposing diagonals, highlighting Venus’s shapely limbs and soft belly and casting the lovers into shadow, foreboding Adonis’s imminent doom.

According to Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Venus and her mortal lover Adonis sought the shade of a poplar tree during an interlude from the hunt. The goddess mingled kisses and words, telling Adonis why she forbade him to pursue dangerous, wild animals—her mortal enemies. The lovers are attended by a host of putti who prepare Venus’s golden chariot. A pair of reclining putti, along with a couple of billing doves, mimic the lovers’ postures. Lance in hand and helical horn and dog nearby, Adonis is ready to disobey Venus and heed the call of the hunt. The tragic outcome––for Adonis is killed by a wild boar––is foreshadowed in the sleeping putto, unattended torch, and menacing clouds. Adonis wears a wreath of anemones, the flower that Venus would create in his memory by sprinkling his blood with nectar.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198501





PORTRAIT OF JACOB OBRECHT, 1496

PERIOD: 15th CENTURY

Tempera, Oil, and Gold on Panel

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 51.4 x 36.2 cm

 

The gilt Gothic inscription on this masterpiece of Renaissance portraiture identifies the sitter as Jacob Obrecht (1457/58-1505), a renowned choirmaster and one of the greatest composers of his age. On the original attached frame is inscribed both the date of the painting, 1496, and the sitter's age, 38. Born in Ghent, Obrecht led a peripatetic career, taking posts in Bergen op Zoom, Cambrai, Bruges, and Antwerp. Such was his international standing, he was invited to the court of Ferrara by Duke Ercole I d'Este. He died from the plague, eulogized as "a most learned musician, second in the art to no one, in respect to either voice or cleverness of invention." The painting, possibly the left-hand side of a diptych, would have faced a complementary panel of a religious subject. Preserved in exceptional condition, it is remarkable for the virtuosity of details such as the folds of Obrecht's lace-trimmed surplice and the soft gray fur of the almuce (the badge of office of a canon, including the choral clergy) draped over his arm.

The identity of the artist has long remained a mystery. Recent study of the portrait in the Museum's department of conservation has led to a new attribution: the painting is the earliest dated work by the Netherlandish master Quinten Metsys. Just thirty years old when the painting was completed, Metsys went on to become one of the most successful painters residing in the city of Antwerp. The technical refinement of the paint layers, from the finely hatched brushstrokes in the hands to the smoothly blended flesh tones, suggests that the artist used a mixed medium of egg tempera and oil. Metsys was skilled at the representation of telling details of his sitters' appearance: the gentle textures of skin on Obrecht's fingers or on his neck; his carefully delineated fingernails or the shape of his mouth; the discreet stubble of his beard or his clear, bright eye.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199302





JOSHUA REYNOLDS (1723 – 1792)

PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN, POSSIBLY ELIZABETH WARREN, 1759

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 238.1 x 147.8 cm
Framed: 268 x 177.2 x 13.3 cm

 

Having established a portrait practice in London, in 1749 Joshua Reynolds embarked on a journey to Italy, where during a two-year stay in Rome he studied the artistic canon of the antique, Michelangelo, Raphael, and the great Venetian masters. Upon his return he often cast his sitters in poses from these sources, creating a new historical or grand style based on “the simplicity of the antique air and attitude.” Reynolds’s position as the first president of the Royal Academy of Arts enabled him to fulfill his goal of elevating the status of the painter in his native Britain to that of a man of learning. Through the exposure of his works at the annual exhibitions at the Academy, and the Discourses on Art he delivered to its members and students, Reynolds became the preeminent arbiter of style in his day and exerted tremendous influence on the arts.

The sitter in the Kimbell portrait may be identifiable as the “Miss Warren” who appears in Reynolds’s records as sitting for the artist between January 1758 and May 1759. Often incorrectly identified as Frances Warren, second wife of Sir George Warren, the wealthy member of parliament for Lancaster, she is, in fact, more likely to be his sister, Elizabeth Warren. This portrait is one of Reynolds’s earliest essays in the grand manner, in which beauty and grandeur are achieved by avoiding the particularities of local fashions. Miss Warren’s simple, wrap-around morning gown displays the contours of her figure and lends the portrait a timeless, classical effect. Her idealized form has something of the quality and dignity of sculpture, with smooth, alabaster skin and graceful drapery folds. The proportions of the figure above the high waist are deliberately diminished, while her hips and thighs swell like the oversized urn beside her, perhaps alluding to her female role as a fecund vessel.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/acf-196102





GUSTAVE COURBET (1819 – 1877)

PORTRAIT OF J. VAN WISSELINGH, 1846

Medium

Oil on Panel

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 57.2 x 46 cm
Framed: 79.7 x 69.9 x 10.2 cm

 

Courbet was born at Ornans, near the Swiss border of France. After he went to Paris in 1840, he evolved a vigorous Realism with profound and influential philosophical and political implications. Already in the Salon of 1846, Courbet’s work was noticed by the Dutch art dealer H. J. van Wisselingh, who bought two paintings and presumably commissioned this portrait. Van Wisselingh also invited Courbet to visit Holland the following year so that he could study Rembrandt.

Rembrandt’s art was a touchstone for Courbet—as is evident in this portrait, in which deep shadows obscure physical fact and at the same time suggest poetic insights into the melancholy of the sitter and his world. Courbet’s emulation of Rembrandt and other seventeenth-century Dutch masters put him at odds with his most powerful contemporaries in the French Academy, for whom the idealizing art of the Italian Renaissance was paradigmatic.

Courbet’s relentless and outspoken disregard for academic principles, and the example of paintings like this Rembrandtesque portrait of a Dutch tradesman, quickly set the stage for a sweeping revolution in mid-nineteenth-century art. In concert with his extraordinary friend the poet Charles Baudelaire, Courbet advocated a popular art based on modern life, its dark sides included, inspiring the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists to find poetry in the prose of everyday activities and locales—as Rembrandt had done before them.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198404





EL GRECO (DOMENIKOS THEOTOKOPOULOS) (1541 – 1614)

PORTRAIT OF DR. FRANCISCO DE PISA, C. 1610–14

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 107 x 90 cm
Framed: 149.5 x 132.1 x 8.3 cm

 

The painter known as El Greco (“the Greek”) was born Domenikos Theotokopoulos in Crete, then a territory of the Venetian Republic, where he trained as an icon painter. Talented and ambitious, he left Crete around 1568 for Venice, and later Rome. In Italy he studied the coloring and light of the Venetian masters, the figures of Michelangelo, as well as the grace and dynamism of the Emilian artists, all of which informed his own highly original style. In 1577, El Greco departed for Spain and settled in the city of Toledo. He was patronized there by members of the city’s wealthy and educated elite. This portrait, which dates from the last period of El Greco’s career, attests to the artist’s profound gifts as a portraitist, which were praised since his years in Italy and remained undiminished in old age.

The sitter is Dr. Francisco de Pisa (1534–1616), an important Toledan cleric and official historian of the city, who in 1610 expressed the intention to endow the Convent of the Purísima Concepción de Nuestra Señora, also known as the Convent of the Benitas. A portrait of Pisa probably identifiable as the Kimbell painting was bequeathed by him to the convent and recorded there in 1616 and 1623, along with other paintings by El Greco.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197705





THOMAS LAWRENCE (1769 – 1830)

PORTRAIT OF FREDERICK H. HEMMING, C. 1824–25

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 76.2 x 64.5 cm
Framed: 104.1 x 91.4 x 12.7 cm

 

After the death of Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1792, Thomas Lawrence was appointed Painter in Ordinary to King George III. Drawing inspiration from Reynolds’s style, with its allusions to the old masters, Lawrence dominated society portraiture in England. He was knighted in 1815 and elected president of the Royal Academy in 1820. His accession to this office no doubt prompted his desire to own the original design by Giovanni Cipriani for the diploma awarded to new Royal Academicians. Cipriani’s drawing belonged to Richard Baker, who offered to give it to Lawrence. In return Lawrence volunteered to paint a portrait of Baker’s great-nephew, Frederick Hemming. Sittings for the portrait were underway when Baker died and Hemming inherited his collection. Lawrence also coveted Baker’s drawings by Raphael and offered Hemming a companion portrait of his fiancée, Mary Anne Bloxam, in exchange for them. Bloxam was reputedly an accomplished porcelain painter, and in her portrait holds a brush as if busy at work; she is depicted in a modish white Grecian dress.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/acf-196301





CARAVAGGIO (MICHELANGELO MERISI) (1571 – 1610)

THE CARDSHARPS, C. 1595

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 94.2 x 130.9 cm

 

Caravaggio was one of the pivotal figures in the history of Western art. In his short lifetime, he created a theatrical style that was as shocking to some as it was new, inspiring others to probe their subject matter for the drama of psychological relationships.

Apprenticed in Milan, Caravaggio came to Rome in the early 1590s. There his early masterpiece The Cardsharps came to the attention of the influential Cardinal Francesco Maria del Monte, who not only purchased it but also offered the artist quarters in his palace. Caravaggio was thus introduced to the elite stratum of Roman ecclesiastical society, which soon gave him his first significant opportunity to work on a large scale and for a public forum.

In The Cardsharps, the players are engaged in a game of primero, a forerunner of poker. Engrossed in his cards at left is the dupe, unaware that the older cardsharp signals his accomplice with a raised, gloved hand (the fingertips exposed, better to feel marked cards). At right, the young cheat looks expectantly toward the boy and reaches behind his back to pull a hidden card from his breeches. Caravaggio has treated this subject not as a caricature of vice but in a novelistic way, in which the interaction of gesture and glance evokes the drama of deception and lost innocence in the most human of terms.

The Cardsharps spawned countless paintings on related themes by artists throughout Europe—not the least of which was Georges de La Tour’s Cheat with the Ace of Clubs in the Kimbell.

The Cardsharps was stamped on the back with the seal of Cardinal del Monte and inventoried among his possessions after his death in 1627. Its location had been unknown for some ninety years when it was rediscovered in 1987 in a European private collection.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198706





JACQUES LOUIS DAVID (1748 – 1825)

THE ANGER OF ACHILLES, 1819

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 105.3 x 145 cm
Framed: 132.7 x 172.7 x 10.2 cm

 

Jacques-Louis David, the leading Neoclassical painter in Europe during the French Revolution and under Napoleon, took exile in Brussels after the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. There he painted and exhibited The Anger of Achilles, which he prized highly as the culmination of his career-long efforts to recapture the perfection of ancient Greek art.

The complex episode, which challenged David to render a spectrum of interacting emotions from stoic courage and calm, heroic resolve to grief and anger, is drawn from Euripides’ tragedy Iphigenia in Aulis and Racine’s seventeenth-century dramatic version of the same story. Agamemnon, king of the Greeks, has just revealed to the youthful Achilles that his daughter Iphigenia is not to be married to him but sacrificed in order to appease the goddess Diana and so allow the Greek fleet to set sail for Troy. As Iphigenia’s mother, Clytemnestra, looks on tearfully, Achilles angrily reaches for his sword. In David’s treatment of the subject, Agamemnon’s magnetic gaze and authoritative gesture appear to freeze Achilles’ outburst. Apparently dressed as a bride, the angelic-looking Iphigenia clutches her heart, oblivious to the display of male confrontation. Her mother’s reaction, composed of disappointment at Achilles’ inability to act as well as grief for her daughter, is apparently intended to mirror the mixed reactions that any spectator must feel as filial, spousal, and civic duties compete with one another.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198007









CROUCHING APHRODITE, C. 50 B.C.–A.D. 140

PERIOD: LATE REPUBLICAN – EARLY IMPERIAL

 (1st cent. B.C.–2nd cent. A.D.)

Marble

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 63.5 x 35.3 x 49.2 cm

 

According to the primal Greek myth recounted in Hesiod’s Theogony (genealogy of the gods), Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was born of the aphros, the foam created when Kronos threw the genitals of his father, Uranos (Heaven), into the sea. The impregnated foam floated first to Kythera, then across the Mediterranean to Cyprus, where the goddess was born as she stepped ashore fully grown. Reflecting this aqueous origin, Aphrodite is frequently depicted in relation to water—bathing, or drying herself after her bath, sometimes accompanied by a seashell or dolphin.

Aphrodite was a highly popular subject in Greek art. The most famous sculptural representation—by Praxiteles in the fourth century B.C., showing the goddess unrobing to bathe—established the first ideal of nude female beauty that could stand alongside the canon of the athletic male. The theme of Aphrodite crouching in her bath also enjoyed great popularity and was the subject of numerous sculptures known from ancient authors and Roman copies. The Kimbell version, one of many variations on a famous Hellenistic original, embodies the qualities of beauty and voluptuous sensuality that characterize the goddess of love. She was shown crouching to bathe, her head turned sharply to the right, her left arm brought across the body to touch the right thigh, her right arm held up to near the left breast and shoulder. The somewhat spiral effect of her stance appealed to the Hellenistic taste for animated poses that embrace and engage with the space around them.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196709







PRIESTESS OF THE IMPERIAL CULT, A.D. 170–180

PERIOD: 2 ND CENTURY A.D.

Marble

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 33.6 x 27 x 24.5 cm

 

This head of a young woman was originally part of a full-length, draped statue. It was formerly identified as a portrait of Faustina the Younger, wife of the emperor Marcus Aurelius and daughter of Antoninus Pius. But it does not conform closely to any of Faustina’s accepted numismatic or sculptural likenesses, and is more plausibly identified as a priestess of the imperial cult. The work is datable on stylistic grounds to the period A.D. 170–80, and the three now-headless busts emerging from the headband represented Marcus Aurelius (reigned A.D. 161–80) and other members of the Antonine line—perhaps Hadrian and Antoninus Pius.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196918





FRANCOIS BOUCHER (1703 – 1770)

JUNO ASKING AEOLUS TO RELEASE THE WINDS, 1769

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 278.2 x 203.2 cm
Framed: 284.5 x 210.8 x 7.6 cm

 

As told by the Roman author Virgil in the first book of The Aeneid, the goddess Juno, consumed by jealousy toward Venus, schemed to prevent the fleet of her rival’s son, Aeneas, from reaching shore and founding a Trojan colony in Italy. In Boucher’s faithful depiction of this myth, Juno visits Aeolus, keeper of the winds, and urges him to unleash their fury, thus provoking a violent storm that would destroy Aeneas’s fleet. As enticement, Juno offers Aeolus her most beautiful nymph, Deiopea, in marriage. She aims the torch directly at his heart as love-struck Aeolus releases the winds, while a cupid unsheathes an arrow to target the compliant nymph, her wrists bound with pearls. The presence of an alluring sea nymph reclining in the foreground signals the outcome: mighty Neptune, god of the sea, will prevail over the winds, and calm the insurgent waters.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197208





FRANCOIS BOUCHER (1703 – 1770)

VENUS AT VULCAN’S FORGE, 1769

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 273.5 x 204.7 cm
Framed: 281.3 x 212.7 x 6.4 cm

 

In this canvas, Boucher goes to the heart of Virgil’s narrative in the eighth book of The Aeneid, in which Venus induces Vulcan to forge arms for her mortal son Aeneas, champion of the Trojans against the Greeks. Vulcan strains forward, presenting the sword toward Venus with a sense of urgency and yearning clearly visible on his face. Seized by passion, he is totally under the sway of Venus, a fact Boucher stresses by the doves and putto reclining on his lap and by the putto at Venus’s side, who aims his arrow directly at Vulcan’s heart. Vulcan has succumbed to love, a fire more subtle and more powerful than that with which he forges steel.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197209





FRANCOIS BOUCHER (1703 – 1770)

MERCURY CONFIDING THE INFANT BACCHUS TO

THE NYMPHS OF NYSA, 1769

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 272.5 x 201.6 cm
Framed: 280.7 x 209.6 x 6.4 cm

 

At the center of this painting is the infant god Bacchus. Born of Jupiter’s illicit union with the princess Semele, Bacchus was transported by Mercury to Nysa for safekeeping from Juno’s jealous rage. Nestled in the clouds beside Mercury, the eagle bearing a lightning shaft alludes to the circumstances of Bacchus’s fiery birth. As recounted in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Zeus had fallen in love with Semele, daughter of Cadmus and Harmonia. To punish her wayward consort, Juno tricked Semele into asking the god to appear to her in all his majesty. Powerless to deny her wish, Jupiter came to Semele, who was consumed by fire. However, the baby gestating in her womb was stitched into his father’s thigh and spirited away to Nysa as soon as he was born. In Boucher’s painting, the nymphs marvel at the miraculous infant, whose intoxicating powers as god of the vine are displayed by putti bearing grapes and the leaf-entwined thyrsos with which he will lead his band of followers.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197207





FRANCISCO DE GOYA (1746 – 1828)

PORTRAIT OF THE MATADOR PEDRO ROMERO, C. 1795–98

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: Unframed: 84.1 x 65 cm
Framed: 105.41 × 87 × 6.35 cm

 

Francisco de Goya, the most important Spanish painter after Velázquez, was, like his predecessor, a master portraitist. This portrait depicts Pedro Romero (1754–1839), one of the greatest toreadors of all time, idolized for his courage and control as well as his handsome appearance. He was the foremost exponent of the classical school of bullfighting established by his family in Ronda, Andalusia. Romero posed for Goya shortly before he retired from the bullring in 1799, at age forty-five, and several years after the artist had become completely deaf as a result of a serious illness.

The finery of Romero’s costume does not upstage his charismatic good looks. Goya’s study of Velázquez is apparent in the deft brushwork defining the rich fabric of his black jacket and the silver and pearl tones of his waistcoat, painted wet-in-wet, against the bright white of his shirt. The composure of the figure is in keeping with Romero’s style of bullfighting; in contrast to the recklessness of his Sevillian rivals, Romero—who was said to have killed over five thousand bulls without suffering injury to himself—relied on the skill and agility of his maneuvers and his elegant use of the cape, killing the animal with a single sword-thrust. He asserted that “the bullfighter should rely not on his feet but on his hands, and in the ring when confronting the bulls he must kill or be killed before running or showing fear.”

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196612





ELISABETH LOUISE VIGÉE LE BRUN (1755 – 1842)

SELF PORTRAIT, C. 1781

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 64.8 x 54 cm
Framed: 86.4 x 73.7 x 12.7 cm 

 

This youthful self-portrait depicts Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun at the age of about twenty-six, several years after she painted the first of her many portraits of Queen Marie-Antoinette. Here she presents herself not as an artist, with palette and brushes, but as a charming and attractive lady of society––indistinguishable from her own patrons, including the queen and aristocratic ladies, whom she sometimes painted in similar informal attire. Largely self-taught, Vigée Le Brun was recommended by the queen for membership in the Royal Academy in 1783 and soon acquired considerable fame and renown. When shown at the Salon her paintings were “the most highly praised . . . the topics of conversation at court and in Paris, in suppers, in literary circles."

Her radiant self-portrait highlights Vigée Le Brun’s healthy good looks and creamy complexion, a sparkling light catching her eyes and crystal earrings. Attentive to the latest fashions, she outfitted her sitters in comfortable Grecian gowns and scarves. Here her simple muslin gown and elegant scheme of white, black, and cherry, along with her loose curls of hair, convey an appealingly glamorous persona.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ack-194902





THOMAS LAWRENCE (1769 – 1830)

PORTRAIT OF MARY ANNE BLOXAM

(LATER MRS. FREDERICK H. HEMMING), C. 1824–25

Oil on Panel

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 76.2 x 62.2 cm
Framed: 104.1 x 91.4 x 12.7 cm

 

After the death of Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1792, Thomas Lawrence was appointed Painter in Ordinary to King George III. Drawing inspiration from Reynolds’s style, with its allusions to the old masters, Lawrence dominated society portraiture in England. He was knighted in 1815 and elected president of the Royal Academy in 1820. His accession to this office no doubt prompted his desire to own the original design by Giovanni Cipriani for the diploma awarded to new Royal Academicians. Cipriani’s drawing belonged to Richard Baker, who offered to give it to Lawrence. In return Lawrence volunteered to paint a portrait of Baker’s great-nephew, Frederick Hemming. Sittings for the portrait were underway when Baker died and Hemming inherited his collection. Lawrence also coveted Baker’s drawings by Raphael and offered Hemming a companion portrait of his fiancée, Mary Anne Bloxam, in exchange for them. Bloxam was reputedly an accomplished porcelain painter, and in her portrait holds a brush as if busy at work; she is depicted in a modish white Grecian dress.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/acf-196302





JACOPO BASSANO (JACOPO DAL PONTE) (1510 – 1592)

PORTRAIR OF A FRANCISCAN FRIAR, C. 1540 - 1542

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 80.5 x 69 cm
Framed: 123.8 x 113.7 x 9.2 cm

 

In this imposing portrait, Jacopo Bassano applies a vigorous and sharply focused naturalism to portray the distinctive features as well as the spiritual temperament and preoccupations of an unidentified Franciscan friar.

The skull, a reminder of the vanity of earthly life, supports the contemplative aspect of the friar’s piety, and the pen holder that hangs from the rope at his waist attests to his learning. A sensitive colorist, Jacopo creates a rich tonal range, contrasting the cool gray of the wool habit with the warm flesh areas, which derive luminosity from the reflection of the white ground through the glazes.

Portraits of Franciscans, who avow humility in a life devoted to prayer and penance, are not common. This early work is datable to around the time that Jacopo painted the Saint Anne altarpiece (1541, Gallerie dell’Accademia, Venice, on deposit in the Museo Civico, Bassano del Grappa) for the church of the reformed Franciscans in Asolo; possibly the sitter was one of its members.

Portrait of a Franciscan Friar, which once belonged to the Marquess of Lansdowne, is one of three works in the Kimbell from the Earl of Shelburne’s historic collection in Bowood House, Wiltshire. The others are Domenichino’s Abraham Leading Isaac to Sacrifice and Jacob van Ruisdael’s Rough Sea at a Jetty.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199702





CANALETTO (GIOVANNI ANTONIO CANALE) (1697 – 1768)

THE MOLO VENICE, C. 1735

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 62.3 x 101.3 cm
Framed: 85.7 x 124.8 x 7 cm

 

Trained by his father as a painter of theatrical scenery, Canaletto gained international renown painting scenes of his native Venice. These vivid and compelling cityscapes were much sought after by British aristocrats who traveled to Italy on the Grand Tour. In this painting from the collection of the Earl of Rosebery, Mentmore, Canaletto depicts one of his most popular views of Venice––the Molo, a wharf just west of the Doge’s Palace. At the far right is the column of Saint Theodore, set before the ornate library, which is next to the Zecca (the mint where the Republic’s gold ducats, or zecchini, were coined) and the terracotta-colored public granaries. Across the water at the far left, marking the opening of the Grand Canal, is the church of Santa Maria della Salute. Canaletto imposes order and balance on the busy scene, observed from an ideally high viewpoint, omitting or adjusting architectural motifs and bringing them into alignment.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196922











KIMBELL ART MUSEUM 

KAHN BUILDING IN DETAIL





KAHN BUILDING IN DETAIL

The building was commissioned in 1966 by the Board of Directors of the Kimbell Art Foundation, working closely with the Kimbell's first director, Richard F. (Ric) Brown, who enthusiastically supported his appointment.

‘’ The museum has as many moods as there are moments in time, and never… will there be a single day like the other. ‘’

Louis I. Kahn

LIGHT:

Natural light enters through narrow plexiglass skylights along the top of cycloid barrel vaults and is diffused by wing-shaped pierced-aluminum reflectors that hang below, giving a silvery gleam to the smooth concrete of the vault surfaces and providing a perfect, subtly fluctuating illumination for the works of art.

The main (west) facade of the building consists of three 100-foot bays, each fronted by an open, barrel-vaulted portico, with the central, entrance bay recessed and glazed. The porticos express on the exterior the light-filled vaulted spaces that are the defining feature of the interior, which are five deep behind each of the side porticos and three deep behind the central one. Additionally, three courtyards punctuate the interior space. Though thoroughly modern in its lack of ornament or revivalist detail, the building suggests the grand arches and vaults of Roman architecture, a source of inspiration that Kahn himself acknowledged. The principal materials are concrete, travertine, and white oak.

STRUCTURE:

One of the architect’s fundamental tasks is formulating the structure, or arrangement of forms, that the building will assume. Each architect has an individual approach to developing that initial concept. Kahn is often quoted as first asking, “What does this building want to be?” He believed that the essence of the structure started with the room, and thinking about how that space would be used and how it should feel. From that point, the building evolved as a “family of rooms” with a simple plan based on classical proportion, repetition, and variation.

In the case of the Kimbell, director Richard Brown provided an initial list of important considerations for generating ideas for the structure. In that “Pre-Architectural Program,” Brown specifically stated that “natural light should play a vital part in illumination.” This stipulation, along with Kahn’s own strong interest in the use of natural light, resulted in Kahn’s early concept of a room with a vaulted ceiling that would allow natural light to enter the space from above. The vault also appealed to Kahn’s admiration for ancient structures—from Roman arches and storage warehouses to Egyptian granaries.

Kahn determined the exact shape of the vault through his collaboration with a structural engineer, Dr. August E. Komendant. As opposed to semicircular vaults, the cycloid vault has gently rising sides that give the impression of monumentality without overpowering the visitor. By mathematical definition, the cycloid is the curve traced by a point on the circumference of a circle that rolls on a straight line without slipping. This geometric form is capable of supporting its own weight and has been likened to an eggshell for its ability to withstand heavy pressure. At the Kimbell, the weight for each vault is directed through four corner columns measuring two square feet. Unlike classical precedents, Kahn’s vaults are interrupted at the top by skylights and require concrete struts that connect the shells at ten-foot intervals. Additionally, Kahn and his engineers placed long steel cables inside along the length of each vault. After the concrete had hardened for a week, hydraulic jacks were used tighten the cables to create a system of post-tensioning that distributes and supports the weight of the roof—similar to a suspension bridge.

Like classical buildings (such as the Parthenon), the Kimbell’s structure is based on a consistent mathematical model. The basic plan is composed of sixteen cycloid vaults (100 x 20 feet) that are arranged in three parallel units of six, four, and six in the Kimbell. Other elements are based on a ratio of 20 to 10. For example, on the floor, wood sections measure 20 feet and travertine sections are 10 feet. The building is based on these “rules” of logic, enabling the visitor to easily follow and “read” the structure.

Although the structure is based on a simple plan of unadorned, repeated forms, Kahn also introduced variations on those basic forms and “themes.” The porticos at the Kimbell’s entrance on the west side of the building first introduce the vault to the approaching visitor and demonstrate the form’s versatility. Within the Museum, visitors see that vaults cover the galleries, an auditorium, and the Buffet Restaurant. Kahn also varied the size of the courtyards. The North courtyard is 40 square feet, while the South courtyard is 20 square feet.

The “rooms” were designed to relate to the visitor on an intimate level to enhance their experience of the artworks on view. The space, in fact, was designed to be as flexible as possible within the confines of the vaulted spaces. Moveable walls can be attached to the soffits (the underside joint between arches) in various configurations to best suit the Museum’s display needs.

MATERIALS:

To make a structure that will stand the test of time, architects choose materials that are strong and durable, as well as pleasing to the eye. Kahn preferred simple forms and natural materials. To achieve a sense of serenity and elegance in the Kimbell, Kahn selected materials that complemented each other in tone and surface: travertine, concrete, white oak, metal, and glass. Simple and unadorned, each of these materials shows its innate character by its variation of texture.

Concrete, according to Kahn, was “a noble material if used nobly.” Revolutionizing the modern use of materials, Kahn viewed concrete as both an aesthetic and structural choice. In the Kimbell’s galleries, concrete vaults shimmer with light to create a subtle luminosity that Kahn compared to a “silvery powdered moth’s wing.” Reinforced concrete also supports the weight of the structure in the form of vaults, walls, and piers. Creating the right look to the concrete was a matter of serious importance to Kahn, who went to great lengths to select the proper color (soft gray with lavender tones) determined by the mixture of sand and cement. Numerous wall tests were poured and allowed to cure in the Texas sun until they found the right surface qualities and perfect match for the soft tones of the travertine. Kahn believed that buildings should tell the story of how they were made and that incidents of the construction process should be left as a visual record. Accordingly, when they occurred, marks from plywood mold forms, bits of rubber, and air pockets remain for all to see (although the workmen practiced to attain perfection).

Travertine, on the other hand, acts only as “in-fill” material. Kahn even called it wallpaper. (Glass and wood are also non-weight-bearing materials in the museum.) The travertine (a type of colored limestone) used for the Kimbell was imported from Tivoli, near Rome, Italy. This material is riddled with irregularly shaped holes left by gases and pieces of vegetation trapped in hardened layers of calcium carbonate. Despite its “Swiss-cheese” texture, travertine is a durable material and has been used since antiquity for countless buildings. Kahn was deeply influenced by monuments and ancient ruins that he studied as a student and sketched on his travels through Italy, Greece, and Egypt. In his own buildings, Kahn used such materials as travertine to emulate the timeless and monolithic qualities he so admired in those ancient structures. Over one million pounds of travertine sheath much of the Kimbell’s interior and exterior walls, gallery floors, porches, and stairs. These thin, rough-hewn pre-cut slabs (5/8 inches thick) were shipped from Italy in 17 boatloads over nine months. Fissures and openings were not filled. Every attempt was made to retain the material’s natural appearance.

Lead was selected for the roof cover for its color, dull sheen, and discreet, natural appearance. Because this soft metal ages quickly, Kahn believed that it would look consistent with the travertine and concrete. In keeping with his palette of warm and cool tonal harmonies, Kahn also selected white oak for the gallery floors, doors, and cabinetry; anodized aluminum (a light-weight metal noted for its high reflectivity that has been covered with a protective oxide coating) for the soffits and reflectors; and mill-finished steel for windows and door frames, elevators, and handrails, as well as in the kitchen, conservation studio, and darkroom. The Kimbell’s uniquely shaped handrails are made of folded metal, because Kahn preferred emphasizing the sheet quality of the material instead of pretending that it was worked like a solid material, such as wood.

https://www.kimbellart.org/content/kahn-building-detail
















































EDGAR DEGAS (1834 – 1917)

DANCER STRETCHING, C. 1882–85

Pastel on Pale Blue Gray Paper

Classification: Drawing

Dimensions: Unframed: 46.7 x 29.7 cm
Framed: 67.95 × 51.75 × 6.35 cm

 

By 1872 Degas had begun to specialize in genre scenes of women at work, especially music-hall performers and ballet dancers. In his paintings of these subjects he often included background figures pausing from tedious labors to stretch or yawn, as if to underline his goal of capturing unedited glimpses of daily life. It has been suggested that the Kimbell drawing might have originated as a study for a never-realized detail in one of these multifigured paintings.

Degas, who signed works only when he sold or exhibited them (and rarely did either), never signed this particular drawing. But the executors of his estate stamped imitation signatures in red ink on all the works left in his studio, and Dancer Stretching was among them. The status of its signature aside, the drawing features many of the hallmarks of Degas’s influential style. As if by oversight, he miscalculated the size of the figure to that of the sheet of paper, with the result that there is no room in the composition for her feet and the fingers of her left hand. Nor did he choose to erase the first lines with which he searched to capture the figure’s form, even after he had finalized his observations. The visibility of the preliminary drawings underneath the final one seems intended to suggest how Degas needed to rush in order to capture such a split-second subject. The smudges and leftover lines also serve as “background” to the final figure, who inhabits not a recognizable space, such as a ballet rehearsal room, but the sheet of drawing paper, evolving from the marks on it as the result of an artistic process. Degas’s decision to leave traces of this process visible—to represent not simply a dancer but the act of drawing her—gives this work an expressly modern character.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196804





JOHN MIRÓ

WOMAN ADDRESSING THE PUBLIC:

PROJECT FOR A MONUMENT 1980 - 1981

Bronze

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 372.1 x 243.8 cm

Kahn Building, East Entrance

 

With its peculiar proportions and anatomy, Miró’s huge fantasy monument Woman Addressing the Public is indebted to the artist’s lifelong study of the imaginative and expressive powers of the art of children. He first realized its design in 1971 as a twenty-inch plaster maquette painted white, with color accents for the eyes, arms, and sexual organs. He then made a collage with a photograph of the maquette pasted onto a photograph of the entrance to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, intending the work as a monument of welcome and maternity. Unable to realize the project in Los Angeles, Miró submitted it as a proposal for Central Park, dedicated to the children of New York City, which did not materialize. In 1978, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, in Washington, expressed interest in commissioning the still unrealized Woman Addressing the Public, but the project was once again abandoned. It would be nearly a quarter of a century before his playful “monster” would finally have a place of honor outside an important museum, the Kimbell. The final work, cast in an edition of four when the artist was eighty-seven, weighs roughly three tons.

The art of children was indeed a major source of inspiration for Miró, and whimsical creatures related in appearance to Woman Addressing the Public began to appear in his paintings and drawings in the 1920s. It was only after World War II, however, that he began to fashion little statuettes of similar figures, perhaps inspired by the surreal sculptures of his fellow countryman Picasso. Miró began to develop his ideas as sculpture at full scale in the 1950s and 1960s, in effect embarking on a second career as a sculptor expressly interested in art for public spaces. The female creature with arms outspread was his favorite sculptural subject, and Woman Addressing the Public is his grandest and ultimate statement of the theme. 

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199601







AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884 – 1920)

HEAD C. 1913

Limestone

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 52.4 × 24.8 × 37.5 cm, 51 kg

Credit: Given in Honor of Ted and Lucile Weiner

by Their Daughter Gwendolyn, 2017

 

The Kimbell Art Museum is honored to receive the gift of a masterpiece of modern sculpture, a carved limestone Head by the Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani. This rare work is one of about twenty-seven surviving sculptures by the artist. The Weiner Head is distinguished from others by its complex balance of brutality and refinement, as the delicate head emerges from the roughly hewn mass of the stone block. The lively and varied surface celebrates the process of its creation: blunt gouges and sensual striations of the sculptor’s chisels mark the tapered neck and head, countered by the sharp incisions of the hair and more refined finish of the oval face and cheeks. Its expressive sophistication reveals a sculptor at the height of his talents.

Although renowned today for his more numerous paintings, Modigliani considered himself foremost a sculptor. Having left his hometown of Livorno in 1906 to join the Parisian avant-garde and stimulated by the example of Constantin Brancusi, who became his neighbor when he moved to a studio in the community of Montparnasse in 1909, Modigliani championed direct carving in stone, seeking to revitalize sculpture by returning to its ancient methods. Scavenging limestone from construction sites including the Paris subway, he created a series of elegantly stylized, mostly elongated heads, with slender necks and geometric features such as almond-shaped eyes and small round or smiling mouths.

Modigliani’s distinctive aesthetic—born from the tension between figuration and abstraction—was inspired by a range of works that he admired in Paris, including African, Egyptian, ancient Greek, and Cambodian statuary. His powerful—even mystical—sculptures invoke deities or timeless beings. Seven of the heads were displayed as a “decorative ensemble” in the 1912 Salon d’Automne in a room with Cubist paintings. Paul Guillaume, Modigliani’s dealer, later wrote that the artist envisioned his heads as “columns of tenderness” in a “temple of beauty.” Around 1914, ill health and poverty forced Modigliani to abandon sculpture and return to painting portraits and nude figures. He died at age thirty-five of tubercular meningitis.

Oilman Ted Weiner, with his wife Lucile and their daughter Gwendolyn, acquired important modern artworks, particularly sculpture, in the 1950s and 1960s. This major pioneering private collection was displayed in their modernist home and garden in Fort Worth.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ag-201701





PIET MONDRIAN (1872 – 1944)

COMPOSITION, 1914

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 120.6 x 101.3 cm
Framed: 122.2 x 102.4 x 2.1 cm

Credit: Gift of The Burnett Foundation of Fort Worth

 in Memory of Anne Burnett Tandy, 1983

 

From the age of fourteen, when Mondrian decided to become a painter, he specialized in calm landscapes, often with isolated buildings and shadowy twilight effects of dull gold and silver. Starting around 1908, he was deeply influenced by the bright colors of Fauvism, applied in rows of rectangular brushstrokes to indicate such textures as stonework. But his exposure to the Cubism of Braque and Picasso in 1911 quickly converted him to ever deeper abstraction, and brought him back to the coloration of the poetic works of his early career. The scumbled atmospheric tones of ocher, blue gray, and pink in Composition are typical of this development.

Mondrian moved to Paris in 1912 and developed his own luminous style of Cubism with paintings of trees and clusters of buildings. He based a series of compositions, including the Kimbell painting, on the complicated geometry of the streetscape near his studio in Montparnasse. He may have been inspired in part by Monet’s close-up images of Rouen Cathedral from the early 1890s, each recording delicate golden, pink, and blue tones of reflected daylight. In these Cubist-inspired works, Mondrian “drew” his subject with a scaffold of black lines within, across, and around which he delicately added color as if orchestrating atmospheric effects.“The masses generally find my work rather vague,” he wrote in January 1914, around the time he painted Composition. “I construct lines and color combinations on a flat surface, in order to express general beauty with the utmost awareness.”

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/apg-198303





JOAN MIRÓ (1893 – 1983)

CONSTELLATION: AWAKENING IN THE EARLY MORNING, 1941

Gouache and Oil Wash on Paper

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 46 x 38 cm
Framed: 66 x 57.5 cm

Credit: Acquired With the Generous Assistance of

a Grant From Mr. and Mrs. Perry R. Bass

© 2005 Successió Miró / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris

  

This is one of a series of twenty-three small gouache and oil wash paintings known as the Constellations. The series evolved, surprisingly enough, from Miró’s aspirations in the late 1930s to work on a mural scale. As he wrote to his dealer, Pierre Matisse early in 1940: “I feel that it is one of the most important things I have done, and even though the formats are small, they give the impression of large frescoes.” By July 1940 Miró and his family had fled Nazi-occupied France, where he began the series, and were living in Majorca. It was there that the Kimbell Constellation was finished. At this time, Miró later explained, “The night, music, and stars began to play a major role in suggesting my paintings.”

The Constellations series was smuggled to New York, where part of it was exhibited at the Pierre Matisse Gallery in January 1945. Symbolic of the survival of great art in the face of the ongoing war, these small works had important implications for American painters such as Jackson Pollock as they created abstract compositions permeated with free-floating lines and forms.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/apg-199305





PABLO PICASSO (1881 – 1973)

MAN WITH A PIPE, 1911

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 90.7 x 71 cm
Framed: 113 x 95.3 x 6.4 cm

© 2019 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

 

In early July 1911, Picasso left Paris for Céret, a small town in southwestern France, near the Spanish border. Braque joined him there in August and the two painted their ultimate “Analytical Cubist” works in intense dialogue. Analytical Cubist painting is characterized by complex linear scaffolds—in this case long vertical lines at roughly equal intervals and sets of isosceles triangles—and by scores of small brush marks, interlocking and overlapping like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle in progress. While most of the marks in Man with a Pipe are baffling in terms of representation and serve primarily to establish visual rhythms, a few fragments of graphic information are legible. Easily spotted just above the middle of the painting, the white clay pipe helps locate the man’s head, with its half-lightened, half-darkened mustache, suggesting how one side of his face is turned toward some source of light. The eye and nose can be discerned by extrapolating from the placement of the mustache. A white rectangular shape at the bottom, a piece of paper, indicates where to look for the man’s hands. Man with a Pipe presumably represents the interior of a dimly lit, smoke-filled café—hence the letters est detached from the word Restaurant and the letters AL to suggest JOURNAL (“newspaper” in French).

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-196608





PAUL GAUGUIN (1848 – 1903)

SELF PORTRAIT, 1885

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 65.2 x 54.3 cm
Framed: 95.3 x 84.5 x 7 cm

 

Gauguin assumed his role as renegade artist in 1885. Rather than remain jobless in Copenhagen with his Danish wife and their five children, the former stockbroker decided now to return to Paris to follow his restless artistic conscience. Painted in Denmark just before reaching this momentous decision in his life, this painting is both somber and defiant in mood and is the first of the many self-portraits in which Gauguin sought to explore his dark inner psyche.

Examination of the Kimbell painting under infrared light and with radiographs has revealed that Gauguin made important changes in his self-image as he developed it ever more starkly. At first he portrayed himself in profile and included reproductions of his own paintings on the background wall. Turned to confront the viewer in the final work, he shows himself left-handed, like his image in a mirror, crowded in an attic space with a slanted beam, and cold, with the lapels of his heavy jacket wrapped together. Only his piercing eye escapes the bleak atmosphere. When he made a self-portrait for his new friend Vincent van Gogh, in 1888, he compared himself to Jean Valjean, the criminal hero of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables: “It is the face of an outlaw, ill-clad and powerful like Jean Valjean—with an inner nobility and gentleness . . . . As for this Jean Valjean, whom society has oppressed, cast out—for all his love and vigor—is he not equally a symbol of the contemporary Impressionist painter? In endowing him with my own features, I offer you—as well as an image of myself—a portrait of all wretched victims of society who avenge us by doing good.”

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199703





GEORGES BRAQUE (1882 – 1963)

GIRL WITH A CROSS, 1911

Oil on canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 55 x 43 cm
Framed: 76.2 × 63.82 × 5.08 cm

© 2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris

 

Beginning in late 1907, Braque and his new acquaintance Pablo Picasso began to paint objects as highly simplified geometric forms, expressing solidarity with the most idiosyncratic tendencies in the art of Cézanne—especially that of putting together unaligned observations of adjacent parts. Matisse, whose own works at this time emphasized rich color, is generally credited with coining the term “Cubism”—and he used it to describe Braque’s overcast landscapes and shadowy still lifes. By late 1909, however, Braque and Picasso had extended the Cubist premise to such a degree of analysis by fragmentation that their somber gray and ocher paintings appeared mostly abstract, except for scattered, geometric-shaped vestiges of recognizable imagery—an eye, the bridge of a nose, a cascade of hair in curls, or a necklace with a cross. The implication was that solid matter and the space surrounding it had interpenetrated one another, resulting in a new visual order.

In Girl with a Cross, the head (or rather its disembodied details) emerges like an apparition amid a rich interplay of highlighted and shaded facets, thinly scumbled and atmospheric in mood. What appears to be a round white ceramic pot at the right, more solidly painted than the woman, mysteriously occupies the space where her shoulder should be. Orchestrating details in this way, Braque creates an unprecedented visual impression of presence, absence, and movement, all dissolved together into a single space-time diagram.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198902





PIET MONDRIAN (1872 – 1944)

ABSTRACTION 1939- 1942

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 74.9 x 67.9 cm
Framed: 90.2 x 82.9 x 3.8 cm

 

The austerely abstract style of Mondrian’s grid paintings restricts itself to straight horizontal and vertical lines, and the rectangular shapes resulting from their crossing; their palette is simply black, white, and the primaries: red, yellow, and blue. The artist’s intuitive arrangement of these elementary pictorial means in balance and harmony expressed his concept of “dynamic equilibrium.” He wrote: “Observing sea, sky, and stars, I sought to indicate their plastic function through a multiplicity of crossing verticals and horizontals. . . . The clarification of equilibrium through plastic art is of great importance for humanity. It reveals that although human life in time is doomed to disequilibrium, notwithstanding this, it is based on equilibrium. It demonstrates that equilibrium can become more and more living in us.”

Begun in 1939 in London, where Mondrian had fled from Paris the year before, Abstraction was completed in New York, where he arrived in 1940 to escape the quickly spreading dangers of World War II. The Axis attack on Pearl Harbor, in December 1941, took place just as he put the finishing touches to the work for a January 1942 exhibition. In most respects Abstraction is one of the culminating paintings in a stark, hallmark mode that Mondrian had developed by 1921 in dialogue with his fellow Dutch artists of the De Stijl movement. But a new sense of adventure, characteristic of Mondrian’s final New York works, is expressed in such details as the absence of black bordering lines for the red rectangles located along the right and bottom edges.

Abstraction retains its vibrant, unvarnished surface and also its original frame. Mondrian himself claimed, as far as he knew, to be the first artist to bring the painting forward from the frame rather than setting it within; in so doing, he eliminated the tendency of the traditional frame to lend an illusionistic depth to the painting. The wide, recessed borders enhance the ease and safety of handling his works and also harmonize with their spare aesthetic.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199405





FERNARD LÉGER (1881 – 1955)

COMPOSITION C. 1920

Oil on canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 60.3 x 73.4 cm
Framed: 91.4 x 106 x 12.7 cm

Credit: ©2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris

 

Léger commonly painted several different variations on each of his pictorial ideas, and many of the same elements in this painting appear in four others, arranged in similar interrelationships. Aside from what appear to be rods, wires, and the stenciled letters P, U, and V (presumably taken from some poster or sign observed on the street), it is impossible to identify specific objects. Judging from Léger’s more explicitly representational works of the immediate post–World War I era, however, the colorful fragmented and segmented forms, all geometrical in outline, are most likely related to elements of modern machinery and architecture. Already before the war, in a lecture presented in Paris, Léger stressed that condensation, variety, and fragmentation were the essential visual qualities of motorized, commercialized, twentieth-century experience and hence of modern painting.

Léger gave the Kimbell painting to his lifelong friend the poet and art critic Blaise Cendrars, who favored the rhythms of just such fractured and fragmentary observations in his influential writings. After the war, in which they both saw combat, Léger provided illustrations for Cendrars’s book I Have Killed (1918). Their close relationship is apparent in a poem entitled Construction, which Cendrars wrote in 1919: “Color, color, and more colors . . . / Here’s Léger who grows like the sun in the tertiary epoch. . . . Painting becomes this great thing that moves / The wheel / Life / The machine / The human soul / A 75 mm breech / My portrait.”

The work remained in Cendrars’s collection until acquired by the Kimbell in 1985. As a result, its condition remains pristine; never varnished nor relined, it provides a benchmark for understanding the delicate textures and matte surfaces essential to Léger’s aesthetic.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198511





EDGAR DEGAS (1834 – 1917)

AFTER THE BATH, WOMAN DRYING HER HAIR, C. 1895

Charcoal on Yellow Tracing Paper

Classification: Drawing

Dimensions: 62 x 69.3 cm

 

In 1855, the twenty-year-old Degas visited the acclaimed Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, who was seventy-four at the time, to report that a family friend had agreed to lend a painting of a nude by Ingres to an exhibition. At this meeting the elder artist encouraged his young admirer to draw constantly, from memory as well as from direct observation. Taking the advice to heart, Degas throughout his career championed drawings on a par with paintings.

Although Degas seldom dated or exhibited works after the last Impressionist group show of 1886, this drawing of a nude’s back is among many closely related works generally dated to the mid-1890s, when the artist’s longtime colleagues, including Renoir, Cézanne, and Monet, were all producing variations on single pictorial themes. Degas’s procedure was to make a drawing of the model in charcoal, then to lay a sheet of tracing paper over this in order to make duplicates. In the case of some images, such as After the Bath, Woman Drying Her Hair, he repeated the process many times, creating a sequence of sheets with identical-size figures on them, the sheets themselves varying in size, format, and setting details.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199504





HENRY MOORE (1898 – 1986)

FIGURE IN A SHALTER, CAST 1983

Bronze, Edition of 6

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions182.9 x 203.2 x 228.6 cm

Credit: Gift of The Burnett Foundation

© 2019 The Henry Moore Foundation

 

Henry Moore is one of the most important sculptors of the twentieth century. Beginning as a carver in wood and stone, Moore moved to modeling sculpture to be cast in bronze, taking the human form as his constant theme. A major figure in British art, he achieved greatest fame with large-scale commissions for public sculpture in civic spaces and in gardens across the world.

Figure in a Shelter is a work from the artist’s last creative phase, produced just three years before his death. Its forms, however, go back to sculptural ideas Moore first explored in the 1930s. The “shelter” that surrounds the figure within has its origins in a helmet-like head that Moore conceived about 1939–40, a shape in turn based on ancient armor. Greatly expanded, the two halves of the “helmet” become an enfolding architectural protection for the small, upright form, whose expanding and contracting columnar shape suggests a human body.

Shelter and protection are abiding themes in Moore’s art. Many of his best-known early sculptures show mothers and fathers holding their children. During the air attacks on London during the Second World War, Moore created hundreds of moving sketches and finished drawings of figures sleeping and waiting in underground shelters. Figure in a Shelter, a large-scale bronze that is both ominous and comforting, takes the theme to its most abstract end.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ag-201101





GUSTAVE CAILLEBOTTE (1848 – 1894)

ON THE PONT DE L’EUROPE, 1876 - 1877

Oil on Canvas

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 105.7 x 130.8 cm
Framed: 141.5 x 167 x 12.5 cm

 

Although his closest artist friends were Monet and Renoir, the key advocates for loose brushwork and bright color, Caillebotte preferred the sort of conventional draftsmanship and unaffected urban subjects dear to their fellow Impressionist Degas. Like Degas, he limited himself to strictly subdued visual means, and On the Pont de l’Europe is virtually monochromatic, the pervasive blue tones corresponding in visual terms to the chilling cold in which the figures stand. The man on the left with his collar turned up and the principal figure, their backs turned toward each other, are dressed in identical fashion. The implication, perhaps, is that modern urban society appears no less regularized than modern engineering, with its mass-produced prefabricated parapets, girders, and rivets. For his composition, Caillebotte has adopted the geometric structure of the bridge, one pier of which bisects his picture vertically into two arched bays, these each subdivided by diagonal cross-bracing struts. The humanity of the figures resides in their freedom to escape the rigid symmetry.

The Pont de l’Europe overlooks the Saint-Lazare train station, which was famously portrayed by Monet in a dozen paintings made early in 1877 and included at the third Impressionist exhibition that year. It is at least possible that Caillebotte (who soon purchased three of Monet’s variations on the station theme) refrained from showing his masterful On the Pont de l’Europe at the same exhibition in order not to compete.

As well as being a painter himsef, Caillebotte was the most important early patron of the Impressionists. They invited him to be in their second group exhibition in 1876, and later that year he wrote a will promising his controversial collection of works by the artists he championed to the French state. Today these works form the nucleus of the collection at the Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198201











KIMBELL ART MUSEUM 
RENZO PIANO PAVILION




RENZO PIANO PAVILION

Surrounded by elms and red oaks, Renzo Piano’s colonnaded pavilion stands as an expression of simplicity and lightness—glass, concrete, and wood—some sixty-five yards to the west of Louis I. Kahn’s signature cycloid-­vaulted museum of 1972.

Piano’s low-slung, colonnaded pavilion with overhanging eaves graciously acknowledges Kahn’s museum building by way of its kindred height, emphasis on natural light, and use of concrete as a primary material. The positioning of the pavilion on the site focuses attention on the west facade of the Kahn Building, which Kahn considered to be the main entrance.  

The pavilion is made up of two sections connected by a glass passageway. The front, or easternmost, section conveys an impression of weightlessness: a glass roof system seems to float high above wooden beams and concrete posts. Sleek, square concrete columns flank the central, recessed glass entrance and wrap around three sides of the building. The tripartite facade articulates the interior, with a spacious entrance lobby and large galleries to the north and south.  

Tucked under a green roof, the Piano Pavilion’s western section contains a gallery for light-sensitive works of art, three education studios, a large library with reading areas, and an auditorium with superior acoustics for music. The latter, located below ground level, is a design centerpiece: its raked seating faces the stage and the dramatic backdrop of a light well animated by shifting patterns of natural light.

https://www.kimbellart.org/art-architecture/architecture/renzo-piano-pavilion

 PIANO PAVILION IN DETAIL

MATERIALS

Walls made of soft, light gray concrete unlike any concrete ever produced in the United States appear throughout the Piano Pavilion’s exterior and interior. Tie holes appear in the concrete walls at only 30-foot intervals, which is unusual for architectural concrete. The resulting uninterrupted wall surfaces are ideal for the display of works of art.

Twenty-nine pairs of wood roof beams, weighing a total of 435 tons, span the interior and extend to the exterior beneath the overhanging canopy. In addition to providing support for the roof system, the 100-foot-long beams of laminated Douglas fir add visual weight and warmth within largely continuous, changeable, and airy interiors.

Glass lends transparency and lightness to the pavilion. In addition to the glass roof, natural light fills the north and south galleries through glazed walls, offering passersby a glimpse into the art-filled areas. From the pavilion’s entrance, five layers of glass provide a view through the lobby and garden separating the two sections of the pavilion, into the pavilion’s rear section with the auditorium, and out onto the light well that spans the length of the west section of the building.

ROOF:

A defining feature of the pavilion is one of Piano’s most elaborately engineered roof systems, which appears to float above the massive, coupled wood beams. The roof includes a layer of high-efficiency fritted glass supporting mechanical aluminum louvers with built-in photovoltaic cells. The ceiling glows as sunlight filters through the glass roof down through soft, silk-like scrims. Energy-efficient lighting with incorporated LED technology enhances the natural light provided by the roof.

LIGHT:

As always in his museum designs, Piano continues to experiment with ways to animate and direct natural light, here primarily with the complex roof system. He also channels light and provides unexpected sight lines by slanting some of the building’s walls, including the wall of the deep concrete light well that provides a spectacular backdrop to the stage in the 289-seat auditorium. Canted walls also channel light in two sets of stairwells connecting the upper and lower levels: one leading from the pavilion’s entrance to the underground garage, and the other descending from the upper level to the lower auditorium entrance.

GALLERY FEATURES:

In the galleries, Piano has developed what is referred to as a “breathing floor,” in which the entire floor functions as a vent. The floorboards, made of white oak, have been laid with small gaps, allowing low-velocity air to flow freely through the floor. A subtle pattern in the arrangement of the floorboards echoes the wooden beams of the roof above, and the floor’s warm color complements the cool concrete walls. 

The moveable gallery walls are specially designed to maintain the tranquility of the space and a feeling of weightlessness. They are unusually thin—10 ½ inches thick—and secured only to the floor, yet they can carry a weight of up to 1200 pounds. Light spills beneath them, making the innovative structures appear to float.

SUSTAINABILITY:

Using only half the amount of energy per square foot required by the Kahn Building, the new Piano Pavilion is highly energy efficient. Much of the structure is below ground level; only a third is above ground and requires full cooling and heating power. Even these spaces—comprised largely of the lobby and the north and south galleries—will benefit from the overhanging glass roof, which supports a system of photovoltaic panels that shade direct sun and generate enough power to offset up to twenty percent of the carbon produced by the building’s annual operations. In addition, 450-foot-deep geothermal wells—thirty-six in all—help to air condition the building by taking advantage of the natural heating and cooling provided by the earth. Other features, including lighting, air-conditioning systems, and fixtures, also contribute to the building’s energy efficiency.

FURNISHING:

Contemporary furniture in neutral tones of tan and white are accompanied by cherry-red accents, all designed by the Herman Miller Company, Geiger International, and Knoll. The auditorium is outfitted with rich red seats by the Italian design firm Poltrona Frau.

LANDSCAPE:

Placing the parking garage underground and creating a park-like green on top of the western section of the pavilion assisted in maintaining as much green space on the site as possible. On the three and a half acres of green recreation area, some 320 new trees have been planted, including forty-seven 30-foot-high elms between the two buildings that re-establish the previous planting. Louis I. Kahn’s conception for the site’s landscaping is retained as much as possible throughout the grounds, particularly in the iconic elements outside his building’s west entrance: the yaupon grove and the allée running between the two museum buildings. 



































RENZO PIANO BIOGRAPHY

Renowned architect Renzo Piano has won many architecture awards, most notably the Pritzker Prize, the AIA Gold Medal, and the Sonning Prize. The Renzo Piano Building Workshop (RPBW), based in Genoa, Paris, and New York, employs more than a hundred architects, engineers, and building specialists. Working with this exceptional team, Piano has executed designs as city-defining as The Shard in London—Europe’s tallest building—and as varied as department stores, churches, factories, housing, university buildings, stadia, a winery, a bridge—and even a Swatch watch.

Born into a family of builders in the Italian port city of Genoa in 1937, Piano brings extraordinary credentials and experience to the Kimbell. As a young man, he worked briefly in the office of Louis I. Kahn before establishing the firm Piano & Rogers with the dynamic young Anglo-Italian architect Richard Rogers. Soon afterward, a brilliant young engineer, Peter Rice, invited the partners to join him in entering an open competition to design the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. The Beaubourg, as it came to be known, was a new kind of cultural institution, conceived for a dawning era of freewheeling multimedia aesthetics. Piano and Rogers saw an opportunity to explore bold new architectural ideas, which Piano described as “a rebellion against the mystification of culture.” There were 700 other entries in the competition, but they did win it—and built it.

In 1980, Piano, now a principal of Atelier Piano & Rice, was approached by the Schlumberger oil-equipment heiress Dominique de Menil to design a museum in Houston to house her impressive collection of art. She and her husband John had previously commissioned Louis I. Kahn, but after Mr. de Menil died in 1973, Dominique de Menil abandoned the project. When she was ready to begin again, Kahn was no longer alive: she turned to Piano for the assignment. The result is an exposed steel and wood pavilion, minimalist in form, which was immediately hailed as a new milestone in museum architecture.

Since then, the Renzo Piano Building Workshop, established in 1981, has received a steady stream of museum commissions, including two other much-loved spaces in Texas: the Cy Twombly Gallery, also commissioned by the Menil Collection and located on its campus, and the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas. Piano also designed what is often credited as being one of the most perfect small museums in the world, the Fondation Beyeler outside Basel, Switzerland.

The California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco (2008), the Modern Wing of the Art Institute of Chicago (2009), and a new entrance to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston (2012), are among other major American museum projects realized by Renzo Piano and RPBW.

https://www.kimbellart.org/content/renzo-piano-biography




RENZO PIANO BIOGRAPHY ….

Renzo Piano 1998 Laureate Biography Renzo Piano is a man whose work is reinventing architecture in projects scattered around the world—from a Mixed Use Tower in Sydney, Australia to the mile-long Kansai Air Terminal on a man-made island in Osaka Bay, Japan to the master plan for the reconstruction of Potsdamer Platz in Berlin or the Beyeler Foundation Museum in Basel, Switzerland. Even this skip around the globe does not indicate the full range or enormous output of this prodigious architect. Renzo Piano’s projects include not only buildings that range from homes to apartments, offices to shopping centers, museums, factories, workshops and studios, airline and railway terminals, expositions, theatres and churches; but also bridges, ships, boats, and cars, as well as city planning projects, major renovations and reconstructions, and even television star of a program on architecture.

 He was born into a family of builders in Genoa, Italy in 1937. His grandfather, his father, four uncles and a brother were all contractors, and he admits, he should have been one too, but instead chose architecture. Piano declares his architecture has an important legacy—a passion for construction, or more pointedly, a culture of doing, resulting from growing up in a family of builders.

 He was seventeen when he approached his father with the idea of going to architecture school. “Why do you want to be just an architect? You can be a builder,” was his father’s response that has never been forgotten. Perhaps that is the reason for the name Renzo Piano Building Workshop, rather than Piano Architects & Associates. Explains Piano, “We not only design things there, but we also make things, and test them. Keeping some of the action together with the conception makes me feel a little less like a traitor to my family. The name is also a deliberate expression of the sense of collaboration and teamwork that permeates our work.” It was in 1980 that the Building Workshop was formed, and now has offices in Paris, Genoa and Berlin employing approximately a hundred people in the three locations.

 Following his graduation from Milan Polytechnic Architecture School in 1964, he worked in his father’s construction company, designing under the guidance of Franco Albini. In addition to his 15th century idol, Brunelleschi, Piano pays homage to Jean Prouvé‚ of France with whom he formed a friendship during the time (1965-70) that he worked in the offices of Louis Kahn in Philadelphia and Z. S. Makowsky in London. Two other important influences he acknowledges were Buckminster Fuller and Pier Luigi Nervi, albeit from afar.

 While still studying in Milan, he married a girl he had known from school days in Genoa, Magda Arduino. Their first child, Carlo, was born in 1965. He is now a journalist. Another son followed three years later, Matteo, who is an independent industrial designer; and a third child, daughter Lia, now 25, is pursuing a career in architecture.

 His first important commission was in 1969 to design the Italian Industry Pavilion at Expo ‘70 in Osaka. His late brother, Ermanno, built and installed the pavilion and a number of other projects before his premature death in 1993.

 The Expo project attracted much favorable attention, including that of another young architect named Richard Rogers, who although born in Florence was English. The two architects found that they had a great deal in common and when an engineering firm suggested that they work together and enter the international competition for the Georges Pompidou Center (also known as Beaubourg) in Paris; they did and won.

 The result was a hundred thousand square meters (over a million square feet) in the heart of Paris, devoted to the figurative arts, music, industrial design, and literature. In the two decades since it opened, over a 150,000,000 people have visited it, averaging more than 25,000 people per day—an overwhelming success—both with the people of Paris and the international media. Both Rogers and Piano became recognizable names throughout the world.

 Described often as “high tech,” Piano prefers other modifiers. In his own words, “Beaubourg was intended to be a joyful urban machine, a creature that might have come from a Jules Verne book, or an unlikely Renzo Piano, 1998 Laureate (continued) 2 looking ship in dry dock. Beaubourg is a provocation, an apt description of my feelings, but has no negative connotations as far as the quality of the design and the reasons behind it are concerned. Beaubourg is a double provocation: a challenge to academicism, but also a parody of the technological imagery of our time. To see it as high-tech is a misunderstanding.”

 In the introduction to the book, Renzo Piano, Buildings and Projects 1971-1989, Pulitzer Prize winning architecture critic Paul Goldberger wrote, “Like any artist who produces a celebrated work early in his career, Renzo Piano has in many ways been more confined than liberated by the Centre Beaubourg, known primarily as the architect who installed this high-tech spoof at monumental scale into the heart of Paris.” And then referring to more recent projects such as the Menil Collection museum in Houston, Texas; the 60,000 seat football stadium in Bari, Italy; and the multi-functional complex of the giant Fiat factory at Lingotto near Turin, Italy, Goldberger continues: “(there is) the presence in all of these projects of a light, tensile quality and an obvious love of technology. But where the expression of technology at Beaubourg was broad and more than a little satirical, in the buildings since Beaubourg, it has been straighter, quieter, and vastly more inventive.”

 One of the casualties of the Beaubourg project, which required years of living in Paris, however, was Piano’s marriage. His wife preferred to live in Genoa, and so they separated. In 1989, he met Emilia (Milly) Rossato when she came to work for his Renzo Piano Building Workshop. They were married in 1992 by Jacques Chirac, then the Mayor of Paris who supported the construction of Beaubourg through many crises. They live in Paris next door to their office there, just a few blocks from Pompidou in the Marais district. In actual fact, they divide their time between Paris and Genoa, with frequent trips to his many projects around the world.

 In 1995, Piano was called upon to renovate the Centre Georges Pompidou. The popularity of the place has taken its toll. The library and exhibition spaces are being expanded, and the public spaces reorganized. Plans call for a reopening on the eve of the new millennium, December 31, 1999, as Grand Beaubourg.

 Two other projects closely related to the Beaubourg are the IRCAM Extension and the Reconstruction of the Atelier Brancusi, both on the same Centre Pompidou square. The former’s initials in French stand for Pierre Boulez’s Institute of Musical Research which is actually attached to the Pompidou. The need for the greatest possible soundproofing originally led IRCAM to excavate a space underneath the square for its various sound labs and studios. The only visible evidence that it was there was a glass ceiling and a few elements of the ventilation system. The need for more space, a desire to emphasize the institute’s role and image, prompted the extension which consists of a tower six stories above ground and three below. It fills an angle left between two existing buildings at the edge of the square.

 When Constantin Brancusi died, his will left all his work - sculptures, drawing, paintings, photographs—to the French state on the condition that they remain in his studio. In the 1950’s the area occupied by his studio was demolished to make way for other things. Piano was given the task of rebuilding Atelier Brancusi on the square of Centre Pompidou. “What we did,” says Piano, “was reproduce the sensation of being surrounded by an explosion of art made up of many pieces in different stages of development.”

 It was in 1982, that the now late Dominique Schlumberger de Menil, widow of John, contacted Piano to design a museum in Houston to house the 10,000 works of primitive and modern art in the Menil Collection. Completed in1986, it has achieved universal high praise, and is often cited as Piano’s finest work. Embodying the idea of a “museum village,” i.e. it is made up of several buildings, the construction is large, but not monumental, and rises no higher than its neighboring small houses. The walls are built of planks of wood attached to a metal framework.

 Perhaps the most distinguishing aspect of the Menil Collection is the roof of the exhibition spaces, made up of repeating modular elements described as “leaves.” Each leaf is a very thin section of reinforced concrete integrated with a steel lattice girder. They function as roof, ventilation and light Renzo Piano, 1998 Laureate (continued) 3 control efficiently. In his book titled Logbook, Piano states, “Paradoxically, the Menil Collection with its great serenity, its calm, and its understatement, is far more ‘modern,’ scientifically speaking, than Beaubourg. The technological appearance of Beaubourg is parody. The technology used for the Menil Collection is even more advanced (in its structures, materials, systems of climate control), but it is not flaunted.”

 Some five years later, Piano was called upon to make an addition to this museum village—a small (approximately 11,000 square feet) gallery to house a permanent exhibition of the pictures and sculptures of Cy Twombly. Built of modest materials, the Cy Twombly Gallery has an outer facing of ochre-toned concrete, the building is devoted entirely to exhibition space with floors of natural American oak. All the galleries in the building are illuminated by natural light (except the one in the center). The roof takes the form of a series of superimposed layers that filter the light. The top layer is a metal grating, then comes a layer of solar deflectors and a layer of fixed skylights. Immediately above the exhibition space is a fabric layer. All the systems for controlling the deflectors are electronic.

 The year before he began work on the Houston de Menil Collection, he was hired to transform the Schlumberger industrial plant on the outskirts of Paris. The company made measurement systems for fluids, and including a device to detect the presence of oil underground. What were mechanical devices were being replaced by electronic ones. Piano’s plan called for the demolition of part of the old workshop, where a park was laid out over a parking facility with space for a thousand cars. Some of the original buildings were retained but restructured as offices and laboratories. Although the electronic plant in Paris and the Houston museum were totally unrelated, it is interesting to note that Mrs. Dominique de Menil was a member of the Schlumberger family of France before marrying and moving to Texas.

 “While working on the Menil Collection in Texas,” Piano recalls, “we made a little machine—which we called a bit pompously, ‘the solar machine’—that would allow us in Genoa to find out the position of the sun in Houston. We also built one-to-ten scale models, which we put in the garden to study the diffusion of light. All the projects that come out of the Building Workshop have stories of similar experiments.”

 Piano went on to relate that Brunelleschi, who is Piano’s favorite architect from history, studied the mechanism of the clock so that he could apply it to a system of great counterweights which in turn was used to raise the beams for the dome of the Florence Cathedral.

“Knowing how to do things not just with the head,” says Piano, “but with the hands as well: this might seem a programmatic and ideological goal. It is not. It is a way of safeguarding creative freedom. If you intend to use a material, a construction technique, or an architectural element in an unusual way, there is always a time when you hear yourself saying, ‘It can’t be done,’ simply because no one has ever tried before. But if you have actually tried, then you can keep going - and so you gain a degree of independence in design that you would not have otherwise.”

 Reflecting on the building of the Centre Pompidou, Piano elaborated the point, “We had to make a structure out of pieces of cast metal. The entire French steel industry rose up in arms: it refused point-blank, saying that a structure like that wouldn’t stay up. But we were sure of our facts, and passed the order on to the German company Krupp. And so it was that the main structure of the Centre Pompidou was made in Germany, even if the girders had to be delivered at night, almost in secret. This was one case in which technique protected art. Our understanding of structures set free our capacity for expression.”

 In 1979, Habitat, an educational television program was produced by RAI, the Italian government television network, starring Piano, who says, “We set out to explain to the non-specialist audience the principles of construction, a few simple experiments on structures and materials. I tried to get Renzo Piano, 1998 Laureate (continued) 4 the message across not to be overawed by architecture, explaining that this century has produced impressive structures because it has developed fantastic machinery for building. But innovation in process does not necessarily entail high technology in construction. There is very little today that can bear comparison to the structural and formal research that went into a 15th century church.”

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You may read whole biography from to click below link to reach pdf version of file …….

https://www.pritzkerprize.com/laureates/1998

http://www.rpbw.com/story/philosophy-of-rpbw






































MALE FIGURE, C. 195 B.C.–A.D. 205

PERIOD: C. 500 B.C.–A.D. 500

Terracotta

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 49.5 x 22.2 x 16.8 cm

 

Nok terracottas are the earliest known sculptures from ancient Nigeria. Sculptures of this kind were first discovered in 1943 by Bernard Fagg near the northern Nigerian village of Nok, after which the culture that produced them was named.

The highly skilled Nok artisans created images of great power, beauty, and sophistication. This commanding male figure represents the fully developed Nok style, characterized here by the expressively modeled head with finely detailed features—especially the lips, mouth, beard, and coiffure—and carefully defined costume. The complex hairstyle, characteristic of Nok pieces, is composed of three rows of seven conical buns, with larger hemispherical caps over the ears. The importance of jewelry in Nok culture is illustrated by the elaborate costume, here meticulously detailed and lavishly adorned with necklaces, jewelry, and beaded chains. The appearance of a horn, slung around the back of the shoulders, may identify the figure as a spiritual specialist (shaman). The figure is broken at the waistline, but may have originally been kneeling. Animated and compelling, this is one of the masterpieces of Nok sculptural art.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199603









CENSER STAND WITH HEAD OF A SUPERNATURAL

BEING WITH A KAN CROSS, C. A.D. 690-720

PERIOD: LATE CLASSIC (A.D. 600-900)

Ceramic With Traces of Pigments

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 114 × 54.6 × 29.2 cm

 

Monumental ceramic censer stands are some of the finest and largest freestanding sculptures created by Maya artists. The sophistication and craftsmanship demonstrated in this stand are indicative of Palenque, an important Maya city-state located in current-day Chiapas, Mexico, that flourished in the seventh century. Ceramic censers (incensarios) were an important component of ritual paraphernalia and ceremonial life at Palenque. They were used to represent and venerate divine beings, primarily the deities of the Palenque triad (called GI, GII, and GIII). Censers were composed of a stand and a brazier-bowl (now missing), which was placed on top and used for burning copal incense. The stands were elaborately embellished with a variety of iconographic elements, most often featuring the Jaguar God of the Underworld (GIII). For the Maya, the center of the universe was the Axis Mundi, or World Tree, which had roots growing deep in the sea under the earth and branches that rose to support the heavens. Symbolically, the tubular bodies of the censers formed cosmic trees that made the movement of deities through the cosmos possible during ritual acts.

This censer stand is sculpted with a vertical tier of five heads. The lowest head is an unidentified reptilian, surmounted by a head that may be a human in the guise of a deity, probably the Jaguar God of the Underworld. This head has an open mouth with a cut-off jaw. The inside of the mouth is marked with a Kan Cross (X) and resembles the entrance of a temple. This principal head is topped by Itzamye, the serpent-bird, indicating a symbolic shift to the branches of the World Tree (Axis Mundi) in the celestial realm. The two upper reptilian heads are versions of the Jester God, who resided in the upper heavens. The side flanges of this censer stand are decorated with a variety of motifs that include (from top to bottom) jewels with bird-shaped heads and ribbons, stylized crocodile ears, crossed and knotted bands, and ornamented ear spools. Traces of the original blue, red, and white pigments are still present on the surface.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-201302







KNEELING MOTHER AND CHILD, LATE 19 TH CENTURY

Wood

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 36.8 x 13.6 x 12 cm

 

Among the few East African peoples who make sculptures in any quantity, the Makonde produce unusually naturalistic figures. A strong sensuality in the representation of the body is complemented by the attention given to intricate detailing, which often centers on an elaborate coiffure or tribal markings. These designs are viewed by the Makonde people as indications of rank, status, and identity, as well as decoration—Makonde females are scarified as they pass to adulthood.

Most African mother-and-child sculptures are intended to ensure fertility, but this piece is concerned with the high status of the female in that matriarchal society. It is thought to represent the primeval matriarch who founded the Makonde tribe. Details of the vigorously carved sculpture are sensitively articulated, including the mother’s hooded eyes and her fingers holding the sling in which the baby straddles her back, its tiny feet and hands extended. The ears and upper lip are pierced and hold ornaments, which are symbols of leadership in this region of East Africa. Great care is given to the representation of facial scarification, which is typical of Makonde figural sculptures and certain kinds of masks. Also characteristic is the imaginatively cut hair: the design would have been achieved by shaving away part of the hair and sculpting the rest into a raised design.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197937





HEAD, POSSIBLY A KING, 12th–14th CENTURY

Terracotta With Residue of Red Pigment and Traces of Mica

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 26.7 x 14.5 x 18.7 cm

 

The art of Ife, which flourished from the twelfth to the fifteenth century in southwestern Nigeria, in the area occupied by the Yoruba people, is unique in Africa in representing human beings with extraordinary naturalism. The subject matter of most Ife art is centered around royal figures and their attendants, reflecting the political structure of a city-state ruled over by a divine king, the Oni of Ife. Sculpted heads were buried in the ground at the foot of giant trees and resurrected when they were used ritually as offerings or sacrifices, sometimes on an annual basis. Ife bronzes and terra-cottas have been recovered from groves containing sacred shrines, from crossroads, and from older sections of the Ife palace compound.

The physiognomy of this head has been modeled with extraordinary subtlety, and the striations, which may represent scarification patterns, are incised with great delicacy. The square crown, formed of four rectangular aprons overlying a conical form and embellished with a network of intersecting beads, is unparalleled in any other known examples of Ife art. Like the vast majority of Ife heads in terra-cotta, the Kimbell example seems to have been broken from a full-length figure. The serene and dignified countenance, as well as the elaborate crown, suggests that this head represents an Ife king (Oni).

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199404







DIVINER’S MASK, EARLY 20th CENTURY

Wood, organic materials

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 22.8 x 16.8 x 10.7 cm

 

Among the Yombe people, masks were used in divination ceremonies, through which past or future events were revealed. This example was worn by a nganga diphomba, a divination specialist devoted primarily to the detection of members of the community responsible for various crimes, accidents, and other disasters. The diphomba prosecuted anti-social acts, and during a ritual trial functioned as the vehicle for the verdict of the ancestral spirit. Yombe masks are generally regarded as idealized representations of the diviners who wore them, but the closed eyes, parted lips, and overall expression of intense concentration on the Kimbell mask lend it a sense of heightened realism.

The mask’s crusted, black surface is the result of its having been stored in the rafters of a building where it was exposed to the oils and smokes of cooking. The black color of the mask is also associated with judgment and divination. Had it been reused, it would almost certainly have been cleaned and repainted as a part of its preparation for receiving the spirit. Some masks have relatively blank countenances and depend upon costume and context—dance, chant, and even speech—to create personality. Others, such as this Yombe mask, seem aglow with character.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197942





MALE FACE, C. A.D. 700–900

PERIOD: LATE CLASSIC PERIOD  (A.D. 600–900)

Stucco With Traces of Paint

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 26 x 22.7 x 16.5 cm

 

Modeled in high relief, this stucco head was originally an architectural ornament for a state ceremonial building. Probably the portrait of an important official, the face has the high-bridged nose characteristic of the Maya, as well as shallow eye sockets and irregular features. Traces of brown and red pigment indicate that the rough stone was covered originally with a smooth plaster finish before being painted.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197105





HACHIMAN IN THE GUISE OF A BUDDHIST PRIEST, 11th CENTURY

PERIOD: HEIAN PERIOD  (794–1185)

Polychromed Wood

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 48.9 x 41 x 32 cm

 

The Shinto god Hachiman has enjoyed special prominence throughout Japanese history. He was originally a local military guardian, protecting an agricultural and mining community in Usa. Since his legendary birthplace in Japan was near south China, a possible source of military threats, Japanese rulers came to rely upon him for protection against that danger. In this role, Hachiman became known as the Shinto god of war.

The Kimbell’s figure of Hachiman reflects a complex theological transformation that occurred when the Japanese sought to reconcile Buddhism, a foreign religion, with native Shinto beliefs. Shinto gods could symbolically enter the Buddhist priesthood, thereby acquiring a dual identity. In this image, Hachiman is dressed as a Buddhist priest. Seated in a meditative position, wearing a monk’s robe, his head shaven, and carrying a jewel in his left hand, he resembles representations of the bodhisattva Kshitigarbha (in Japanese, Jizo), reflecting the fact that Shinto images shared the same stylistic features as Buddhist sculpture of the period. Carved from a solid block of wood, the figure’s generously proportioned chest, shoulders, and legs impart a monumentality that belies the sculpture’s relatively small size, while the slight tilt of the head imparts a touch of naturalism.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198119





HEAD OF JINA, 11th CENTURY

PERIOD: MEDIEVAL PERIOD (C. 600–1200)

Gray Pink Sandstone

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 77.1 x 66.7 x 53.3 cm

Credit: Gift of Ben Heller, New York 

Jainism,the most passionately nonviolent of all religions,has been continuously practiced in India for more than 2,500 years. Its name comes from the word jina, which means “liberator” or “victor.” The twenty-four jinas of the Jain pantheon provide spiritual role models for devout Jains, who aspire to achieve nirvana, or moksha—a state of liberation from the karmic cycle of rebirth—through a combination of meditation, devotional ritual, and religious austerities.The historical founder of Jainism is Mahavira, the most recent of the twenty-four jinas and a contemporary of the Buddha Shakyamuni.

This massive head, originally part of a colossal sculpture, represents one of the twenty-four jinas. It was produced during the medieval period, when followers of the Jain faith had grown into a large and f lourishing community, especially in Rajasthan and Gujarat, where they built numerous mountaintop shrines and temples.The petal- shaped eyes, curving brows, and full lips are typical of the medieval sculptural tradition of northern India, which adhered to proportions prescribed in iconographic texts.The snail-shell curls and elongated, pierced earlobes are conventions shared by images of the Buddha, but the absence of a cranial protuberance (ushnisha) and dot between the eyes (urna) confirms that this is an image of a jina.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ag-196801




SEATED NYOIRIN KANNON, C. 1230 - 1250

PERIOD: KAMAKURA PERIOD (1185–1333)

Wood With Traces of Gilt and Pigment

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 48.3 x 45.7 x 25.4 cm

 

Kannon is the Japanese name for the Indian Buddhist deity Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva of compassion. Because of the boundless love he offered to all beings, this was the most popular of all the Buddhist deities throughout Asia. The Nyoirin Kannon, a prominent deity in the Japanese Esoteric Buddhist pantheon, is one of the six “changed forms” of the bodhisattva Kannon especially associated with the granting of desires. The word nyo-i refers to the cintamani, the wish-granting jewel; the term rin, which means “wheel,” refers to the turning of the wheel of the law. The Nyoirin Kannon was widely worshiped by those who hoped to gain riches and see their requests fulfilled.

This gracious image shows the deity seated in a pose of royal ease. Although drawings frequently depict this god as a bodhisattva with two arms, the six-armed form was also popular in Japan. As in this sculpture, one hand is often shown touching the cheek, with a left arm braced against the lotus pedestal (now missing). Of the other four arms, one of the right hands holds the jewel, and one of the left hands holds a lotus. The raised left arm would originally have had a wheel balanced on the upright finger, and the lowered right arm would have held a rosary.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198515





FOUR ARMED GANESHA, 5th–6th CENTURY A.D.

PERIOD: GUPTA  (320–600)

Terracotta Relief

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 49.1 x 67.9 x 20.6 cm

 

Ganesha is the elephant-headed son of Shiva, one of the three most important deities of the Hindu pantheon, and his consort, the goddess Parvati. He is widely worshiped as the remover of obstacles and the bestower of good fortune, prosperity, and health. The origin of his hybrid body—consisting of an elephant’s head with one tusk and an infant’s torso with distended belly—is related in Hindu legends. Parvati is said to have created Ganesha in human form to act as her door guardian. When he refused to admit Shiva to Parvati’s chamber, the god cut off the child’s head. In order to placate the distressed Parvati, Shiva replaced the head with that of the first living thing he could find—an elephant. Hindu deities are often depicted with multiple heads and arms, a physical expression of the multiplicity of their superhuman powers. Due to the damaged condition of this superb terra-cotta relief, it is no longer possible to identify the deity’s usual attributes—an axe, a rosary, and a bowl of sweetmeats—which would have been held in his hands. The serpent hanging across his torso signifies his relationship to Shiva, who also bears this attribute.

Many Hindu brick temples were decorated with terracotta plaques such as this one. The plaques are distinguished by their naturalistic modeling, well illustrated in the sensuous and powerful sculpting of this image, which is unusually expressive, and notable also for its large size and early date.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198111





EDO PERIOD (1615–1868)

COURTESAN PLAYING THE SAMISEN, C.1785

Hanging Scroll; Ink and Gold on Silk

Classification: Hanging scroll

Dimensions: 39.4 x 49.5 cm

 

This painting is a late masterwork by Isoda Koryusai, who was an important and prolific ukiyo-e painter and printmaker in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, a time when Koryusai and other artists showed a keen fascination with the natural world. In the Kimbell’s painting, the intimate scene of a courtesan and her attendant in a teahouse overlooking a river subtly suggests the elegance and entertainment of the pleasure quarters. The bamboo shade that is being rolled up by the young attendant indicates that the weather is warm, while the chrysanthemums decorating the kimono of the courtesan signal the end of summer and the approach of autumn. The wind gently blows ripples across the water. Reflecting the most current modes, the two women wear a popular hairstyle of the period, in which the side locks billowed out, taking on the abstract form of a lantern top or open fan. The richly patterned textiles and the strong diagonal formed by the railing of the verandah make this monochromatic painting a work of unusual sophistication and visual appeal.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198423









URN IN THE FORM OF COCIYO, GOD OF LIGHTNING AND RAIN, C. A.D. 400–500

PERIOD: EARLY CLASSIC  (A.D. 250–600)

Ceramic

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 72.4 x 53.3 x 45.7 cm

 

The primary capital of Zapotec culture was the ceremonial site of Monte Albán (in the modern state of Oaxaca), where the Zapotecs worshipped a complex pantheon of nature gods. Zapotec culture is divided into four stages, each associated with the style of gray-ware effigy urns they placed with their honored dead.

This urn represents Cociyo, the Zapotec god of lightning and rain, identified by an amalgam of facial elements forming a powerfully sculptural mask. The stepped, two-part forms enclosing the eyes represent clouds and, by extension, the precious water needed to grow crops. The doubly plugged nasal extension is a development from earlier snouted deity elements that combine jaguar and snake allusions—the roar of the jaguar with the reverberation of thunder. The three fangs that protrude from this snout cover a bifurcated tongue, like the almost invisibly flashing tongue of a snake; the snake’s tongue symbolizes the lightning bolt. The broad mouth with drawn-back lips is derived from Olmec prototypes, among which would have been images of the baby rain god. The rest of the dress is as much that of a priest as of a deity, with the large disk-shaped earplugs and the knotted collar of high rank. The striations of the cape may be intended to represent feathers. The kilt is decorated with a wavelike pattern, with three attached tassels at the bottom. The ensemble thus echoes the various natural phenomena of a tropical mountain thunderstorm.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198509





STELA A RULER, A.D. 692

PERIOD: LATE CLASSIC (A.D. 600–900)

Limestone

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 272.7 x 173.7 cm

 

The Maya were prolific makers of carved stone-slab monuments, or stelae, which were normally set up within architectural complexes and most often portray specific, named individuals who were members of the hereditary dynasties that ruled Maya city-states. This imposing figure is identified by the accompanying inscriptions as K’inich B’alam (Sun-Faced Jaguar), ruler of El Perú. The Kimbell stela was once part of a sculptural ensemble of three stelae displayed in a plaza at El Perú. The central monument, now in the Cleveland Museum of Art, represents on the same scale an equally intimidating woman, who may represent K’inich B’alam’s wife. The third stela still in situ portrays an unidentified male figure. The principal event commemorated by the Kimbell and Cleveland stelae is the ending in A.D. 692 of a k’atun, or twenty-year period, a date of special importance in the structure of Maya rulership.

The primary elements of K’inich B’alam’s costume were intended to situate the Maya ruler not just locally and in his historic role but, more importantly, in his relation to the gods and the cosmos. The main headdress element, repeated in the ruler’s anklets, is the head of the Water-lily Snake, a deity symbolizing standing bodies of water and the earth’s abundance, and patron god of the number thirteen. The several representations of fish leaping toward water-lily blossoms—at the top of the headdress and, less recognizably, at the back of the headdress and at either knee––reinforce this symbolism. Through these devices the ruler is shown as guarantor of agricultural success. The mosaic mask represents a jeweled serpent, and the round shield he grasps in his left hand emphasizes the war role of Maya rulers. Partly hidden by his left thigh is a deified perforator, used by the ruler at important period endings, like this one, to shed blood from his penis as an offering to the gods.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197002







SEATED ARHAT, C. 1300–1450

PERIOD: LATE YUAN TO EARLY MING DTNASTY (1279–1368/1368–1644)

Cast Iron, Traces of Pigment

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 78 x 50.5 x 40.7 cm

 

This engaging portrait of a monk represents an arhat (in Chinese, lohan), one of a group of “perfected beings” who, in the Buddhist faith, were the original disciples of Shakyamuni Buddha. Like bodhisattvas, arhats have attained perfection but have delayed entering nirvana and becoming buddhas so that they may aid others in seeking enlightenment. Arhats were regarded as having achieved extraordinary spiritual levels that endowed them with superhuman capabilities. Usually appearing in groups of four, sixteen, eighteen, or even as many as five hundred or a thousand, the arhats were depicted as monks and ascetics, sometimes with exaggerated features such as long eyebrows or domed heads, and some were associated with particular attributes. Although lists identifying each arhat exist, the descriptions are generally vague, and precise identifications of individual figures are difficult.

The realism and humanity in the Kimbell arhat’s face contrast with the simplified but rhythmical form of the body to produce a portrait of great character and presence. An inscription on the back of the statue names a large group of donors who commissioned and paid for the work, and gives the name of the temple, Yuhua, in Shanxi province, to which it was donated, and where it may have been installed as part of a larger group of arhat portraits.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198414





BODHISATTVA KHASARPANA LOKSHVARA, C. 11th–12th CENTURY

PERIOD: PALA PERIOD (750–1174)

Gray schist

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 124.9 x 80.3 x 35.9 cm

 

The increasing complexity of imagery and iconographic detail in late Pala art paralleled the growing popularity of Esoteric Buddhism in eastern India. Khasarpana Lokeshvara, the Esoteric form of the immensely popular bodhisattva of compassion, Avalokiteshvara, was created by the absorption of Hindu elements into Buddhism and appears frequently in Pala art. In this stela, the youthful, bejeweled figure is seated on a double-lotus throne, surrounded by lotus blossoms and the deity’s four standard attendants: the goddesses Tara and Bhrikuti to the left and right of the bodhisattva’s knees; and, on the base, the needle-nosed Sucimukha, who imbibes the nectar of grace, at the left rear, and the plump, fearsome Hayagriva at the right front. In addition, the princely Sudhanakumara, who carries a book under his left arm, is shown at the front left of the base, while two tiny figures of the donor couple are shown kneeling behind Hayagriva. Due to damage to the upper part of the stela, only one remains from the figures of the five jina Buddhas, the rulers of the Buddhist universe. The elegant proportions, attenuated waistline, richly carved surface decoration, complex iconography, and almost feminine poise of the bodhisattva are hallmarks of the mature Pala style.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197013





XIPE TOTEC, C. 900–1200

PERIOD: POSTCLASSIC PERIOD  (900–1521)

Ceramic

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 40 x 16.8 x 9.8 cm

 

Xipe Totec, the Aztec god of spring and regeneration, appears in many Mesoamerican cults. A fertility deity, Xipe Totec vividly conveys the concept of death and rebirth by wearing the flayed skin of a sacrificial victim. Meaning literally “our lord, the flayed one,” Xipe Totec is also associated with the arrival of spring, when the earth covers itself with a new coat of vegetation and exchanges its dead skin for a new one. During the corn-planting festival, Xipe Totec was worshipped by a priest who, dressed in the skin of a flayed victim, ritually enacted the death-and-renewal cycle of the earth. Xipe Totec was the divine embodiment of life emerging from the dead land and of the new plant sprouting from the seed.

In this sculpture, the face of a living being is seen behind the mouth and eye openings of the sacrificial victim, whose skin is laced together by cords at the back of the wearer’s skull. Similar lacing is also seen on the chest, amid the vigorously articulated body covering. This clay sculpture of Xipe closely resembles Aztec stone figures in the smooth modeling, sturdy body, and rounded lips and eyes.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197939





WREATHED MALE HEAD, C. 500–475 B.C.

PERIOD: ARCHAIC  (700–475 B.C.)

Sandstone

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 16 x 12.5 cm

 

Crowned with a laurel wreath symbolic of victory, this small head was carved during the most creative period of Cypriot art, when the island of Cyprus was a mercantile crossroads between East and West. The sculpture reflects this confluence: the idealized facial structure and enigmatic smile resemble contemporary Greek sculpture, while the wide, almond-shaped eyes and tightly knotted curls bespeak a Near Eastern influence.





STANDING BUDDHA SHAKYAMUNI, 7th CENTURY

PERIOD: LICCHAVI (400-750)

Gilded Copper

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 50.2 x 20.3 x 8.6 cm

 

This slim, richly gilded figure represents the historical Buddha, Shakyamuni, Sage of the Shakya clan. He displays a number of the physical signs that had come to represent the Buddha’s divinity—the cranial protuberance (ushnisha), elongated earlobes, three parallel folds in the neck, webbed fingers and toes, and palms marked by a wheel. He stands in a graceful pose with the weight on the right leg and the hip thrust gently out. The smooth, fleshy contours of the body are revealed by a thin, clinging garment with cascading pleats delineated into a threadlike surface design. The upper end of the robe is gathered in the left hand, the right bestowing the gesture of charity (varadamudra).

Lichchhavi Buddha images were directly inspired by Indian Gupta-period (A.D. 320–600) images. This sculpture reveals the mannered elegance, introspective expression, and taut but smooth modeling characteristic of Gupta Buddhas. The “snail-shell” pattern of curled hair, the half-closed eyes, and the lack of an urna between the eyebrows are also typical Gupta features. The Nepalese origin of the sculpture is most evident in the expression of the face. The important inscription on the base is in a script derived from Gupta India that was in use in Nepal during the Lichchhavi period.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197901





PRESENTATION OF CAPTIVES TO A MAYA RULER, C. A.D. 785

PERIOD: LATE CLASSIC PERIOD  (A.D. 600–900)

Limestone With Traces of Paint

Classification: Sculpture

Dimensions: 115.3 x 88.9 cm

 

This carved relief probably served as a wall panel inside a Maya building or as a lintel over an entrance. It depicts the presentation of captives in a palace throne room, indicated by swag curtains at the top of the panel. The five figures are the Yaxchilan king, seated at top left, his sahal (a military chief) on the right, and three bound captives in the lower left. The glyphic text, which gives a date of 23 August 783, records the capture of a lord and a sacrificial bloodletting three days later under the auspices of the king. The three prisoners may be scribes; the one in front holds a “stick-bundle” associated with Maya scribes, and all three wear headdresses with hun (book) knots. All figures but the leftmost captive are identified by name. The inscription on the throne front, of special interest, is carved with the king’s name and titles; the glyphs are inscribed in reverse order, from right to left.

The name of the artist responsible for sculpting the relief appears on the vertical panel of four glyphs under the sahal’s outstretched arm. Signed works of Maya art are rare, and the signature on this relief suggests that it was considered of great value in its time.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197107







MINIATURE CASKET, C. 1250–1300

PERIOD: 13th CENTURY

Champlevé Enamel on Copper

Classification: Metalwork

Dimensions: 9 x 7.7 x 4.2 cm

 

The enameled decoration of this fine casket, produced in Limoges, features scrolling vines with fleurons on all four sides and lozenge patterns on the pitched roof. The enameled copper plaques of reliquaries are normally nailed to a wooden core; the absence of such a wooden carcass, along with the miniature scale of this casket, makes it difficult to ascertain its original function.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197927





RELIQUARY CASKET, C. 1200–1220

PERIOD: 13th CENTURY

Champlevé Enamel on Copper, Wood Core

Classification: Metalwork

Dimensions: 22.6 x 24.2 x 10.5 cm

 

A major center of the manufacture and export of exquisitely crafted reliquaries in the Middle Ages was Limoges, located in southwestern France along several ecclesiastical and pilgrimage routes. Limoges workshops producing liturgical objects employed the technique of champlevé enamel, whereby brilliantly colored, powdered glass was placed in cavities gouged into a copper plaque that was then fired at high temperatures.

This Reliquary Casket (châsse), which probably contained the relics of several saints, features eight half-length, raised, and gilded figures of saints against a richly enameled ground decorated with halos, scrolling floral motifs, and wavy cloudbanks. These figures are portrayed with various liturgical gestures, such as upraised palms. The full-length saints holding books on the gabled end panels are engraved in reserve on the enamel ground. The casket, with its gabled roof and cresting, recalls not only a tomb enshrining the relics, but also a cathedral representing the church and hence the Heavenly Jerusalem, where the saints eternally abide.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197926





SINGING PRIEST OR GOD, C. A.D. 400–600

PERIOD: EARLY CLASSIC (A.D. 250–600)

Fresco

Classification: Painting

Dimensions: 60.2 x 110.5 cm

 

The city of Teotihuacán, located about thirty miles northeast of Mexico City,was the capital of the first classical civilization of Mesoamerica, dating from around the first to the seventh century A.D. Teotihuacán was an urban and ritual complex eight miles long with a number of buildings on the main avenue, including the second largest pyramid in Mesoamerica. Both the residential and ceremonial structures were characterized by “slope-and-panel” profiles on their platforms and terraces, and were decorated with elaborate polychrome wall frescoes. The frescoes were arranged in orderly sequences depicting ritual images that appear to represent ceremonies in which specific favors were sought from the gods.

In this richly symbolic mural fragment from Teotihuacán, a priest or god costumed in an elaborately plumed headdress performs a ceremony involving the scattering of incense while singing. The object of the ceremony seems to center on the glyphlike symbol to the left, depicting five maguey spines thrust into a stack of reeds. In all likelihood this is a place name. The officiating figure holds an incense bag in his left hand, while flower-decorated water streams from his right. Proceeding from his mouth is a large speech scroll edged with vegetation (probably meaning “flowery song”); the hearts, jade, and other symbols in the scroll may stand for the song’s content.

https://www.kimbellart.org/collection/ap-197216










THE VISION OF THE FOUNDERS

The Kimbell Art Museum officially opened on October 4, 1972. The Kimbell Art Foundation, which owns and operates the Museum, had been established in 1936 by Kay and Velma Kimbell, together with Kay’s sister and her husband, Dr. and Mrs. Coleman Carter. Early on, the Foundation collected mostly British and French portraits of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. By the time Mr. Kimbell died in April 1964, the collection had grown to 260 paintings and 86 other works of art, including such singular paintings as Hals’s Rommel-Pot Player, Gainsborough’s Portrait of a Woman, Vigée Le Brun’s Self-Portrait, and Leighton’s Portrait of May Sartoris. Motivated by his wish “to encourage art in Fort Worth and Texas,” Mr. Kimbell left his estate to the Foundation, charging it with the creation of a museum. Mr. Kimbell had made clear his desire that the future museum be “of the first class,” and to further that aim, within a week of his death, his widow, Velma, contributed her share of the community property to the Foundation.

 With the appointment in 1965 of Richard F. Brown, then director of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, as the Museum’s first director, the Foundation began planning for the future museum and development of the collection, both of which would fulfill the aspirations of Mr. Kimbell. To that end, under the leadership of its President, Mr. A. L. Scott, and in consultation with Ric Brown, the nine-member Board of Directors of the Foundation—consisting of Mrs. Kimbell; Dr. Carter; his daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Fortson; Mr. C. Binkley Smith; Mr. P. A. Norris, Jr.; Mr. J. C. Pace, Jr.; and attorney Mr. Benjamin L. Bird—adopted a policy statement for the future museum in June 1966, outlining its purpose, scope, and program, among other things. That statement remains to this day the operative guide for the Museum. In accordance with that policy, the Foundation acquires and retains works of so-called “definitive excellence”—works that may be said to define an artist or type regardless of medium, period, or school of origin. The aim of the Kimbell is not historical completeness but the acquisition of individual objects of “the highest possible aesthetic quality” as determined by condition, rarity, importance, suitability, and communicative powers. The rationale is that a single work of outstanding merit and significance is more effective as an educational tool than a larger number of representative example

Two aspects of the 1966 policy in particular would have the greatest impact on changing the Kimbell collection: an expansion of vision to encompass world history and a new focus on building through acquisition and refinement a small collection of key objects of surpassing quality. The Kimbell collection today consists of about 350 works that not only epitomize their periods and movements but also touch individual high points of aesthetic beauty and historical importance.

https://www.kimbellart.org/about/history