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Collection: European Art

HIGHLIGHTS

FULL COLLECTION

The Parents (Die Eltern) The Ray Bust of a Working Woman in a Blue Shawl (Brustbild einer Arbeiterfrau mit blauem Tuch) Small Head of Jean de Fiennes with Left Hand (Petite tête de Jean de Fiennes avec main gauche) Pierre de Wiessant, Monumental (Pierre de Wissant, monumental) Eustache de Saint-Pierre, Final Head, With Rope Around the Neck (Eustache de Saint-Pierre, tête définitive, avec corde autour de cou) The Mothers (Die Mütter) Bacchantes Embracing (Bacchantes senlaçant) Young Girl with Flowers in her Hair (Jeune fille aux fleurs dans les cheveux) Doña Mariana Belsunse y Salasar Head of a Woman with a Chignon (Tête de Femme au chignon) Balzac, Smiling Head, known as Head I (Balzac, tête souriante dite Tête I) Omer Dewavrin Dancer at Rest, Hands Behind Her Back, Right Leg Forward (Danseuse au repos, les mains sur les hanches, jambe droite en avant, première étude) Study for France or Saint George (Étude pour la France, ou Saint Georges) Andrieu dAndres, Monumental (Andrieu dAndres, monumental) Iris Waking a Nymph (Iris éveillant une nymphe) Pierre de Wiessant, Monumental Nude (Pierre de Wissant, nu monumental) Damned Women (Femmes damnées) Andrieu dAndres, Second Maquette (Andrieu dAndres, deuxième maquette) Bust of the Zoubaloff Bather (Tête de baigneuse Zoubaloff) Andromeda (Andromède) The Age of Bronze, medium-sized model, first reduction (LAge dairain, première réduction) Bacchantes Embracing, Small Model (Bacchantes senlaçant, petit modèle) Andrieu dAndres, Head of the Reduction, with Fragments of the Hand (Andrieu dAndres, tête de la réduction avec fragments de main) Balzac in a Monks Habit (Balzac en robe de moine) Ugolino, Torso of a Child (Ugolin, Torse dun enfant) Balzac, Monumental Head (Balzac, tête monumentale) Monument to the Burghers of Calais, First Maquette (Monument des Bourgeois de Calais, première maquette) Idyll of Ixelles (Idyll dIxelles) The Fallen Angel, or Illusions Received by the Earth (La Chute dun ange, ou Les Illusions reçues par la Terre) Pierre de Wiessant, Second Maquette (Pierre de Wissant, deuxième maquette)

COLLECTION HISTORY

Our collection of European art comprises approximately 6,600 objects. In addition to over 600 paintings and almost 5,600 works on paper, the collection also includes more than 100 Spanish colonial pictures and approximately 300 sculptures. Within those total numbers, important sub-collections include over 400 works on paper by James Tissot, devoted to The Life of Jesus Christ and acquired by public subscription in 1900; a comprehensive group of German Expressionist prints; an excellent example of Pablo Picasso's Minotauromachia; a lifetime printing of Francisco de Goya y Lucientes' Caprichos in its original binding; over 100 sculptures by Antoine-Louis Barye; and more than sixty sculptures by Auguste Rodin, most of them gifts of Iris and B. Gerald Cantor.

The two core areas of the painting collection are the Italian and Northern Schools before 1800; and French painting, together with other Continental schools, of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The collection of early Renaissance Italian paintings, largely formed at the turn of the twentieth century and bequeathed to the Museum by Frank L. Babbott and his heirs, is a significant concentration of panels, most of them small and of excellent quality, known internationally to scholars in the field. To this already notable collection the Museum added Nardo di Cione's majestic Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints in 1995 and its long-lost pinnacle of Christ Blessing in 2000—an altarpiece universally regarded as among the most important fourteenth-century paintings in America.

French paintings constitute the great strength of the nineteenth-century collections. Important movements in the second half of the century are represented by impressive holdings of Barbizon pictures, and by a number of works by the most notable Impressionists—including Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, Paul Cézanne, and Berthe Morisot—many of which were among the first works of their kind in American public collections. In addition, we have an interesting selection of Salon paintings, put on view periodically to demonstrate various trends in late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century academic taste. Inspired by the exhibition In the Light of Italy: Corot and Early Open-Air Painting, organized by the Brooklyn Museum (with the National Gallery of Art) in 1996–97, an impressive collection of landscape sketches that covers the chronological span of the subject, from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries, has been assembled.