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- <text id=93TT1646>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: Opening the Barnes Door
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 61
- Opening the Barnes Door
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Amid lawsuits and controversy, one of the world's great
- semi-unknown collections begins a tour at last
- </p>
- <p>By ROBERT HUGHES--With reporting by Daniel S. Levy/New York
- </p>
- <p> Where, until last month, was the world's finest
- semi-unknown collection of early modern art?
- </p>
- <p> At the Barnes Foundation in Merion, Pennsylvania.
- </p>
- <p> Where is the pick of it now?
- </p>
- <p> At the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> How much of it has gone there?
- </p>
- <p> Eighty-two paintings by Renoir, Cezanne, Seurat, Van Gogh,
- Soutine and Matisse, among others.
- </p>
- <p> And why are they all there?
- </p>
- <p> Because either a) a new administration at the foundation
- has decided to bring the Barnes into an era of public
- accessibility, thus promoting knowledge and beauty, or b) the
- same administration has condemned these valuable and fragile
- paintings, against the explicit will of their dead owner, to a
- vulgar road show that will expose them to intolerable risk.
- </p>
- <p> What should one do?
- </p>
- <p> Go and see them, at least. Whatever one thinks of their
- impending travels over the next 15 months--to the Musee
- d'Orsay in Paris, to Tokyo, to the Philadelphia Museum of Art--let opportunism prevail. With all the hoopla and
- reproduction, this will be the last chance to experience these
- paintings freshly before they join the huge canon of
- overreproduced masterpieces of early modern art. Then by all
- means reflect on Albert Barnes, and why nobody like him and
- nothing like his collection could exist today.
- </p>
- <p> Barnes was the classic American self-made man. The son of
- a black-Irish Philadelphia butcher, he went through medical
- school and made his fortune in the early 1900s on an antiseptic,
- which he developed in partnership with a German chemist and
- registered under the trade name Argyrol. Even before World War
- I, Barnes was a millionaire--a word with meaning then. And he
- was developing a curiosity about modern art.
- </p>
- <p> In 1912 he began to buy in earnest, first through his
- friend the American painter William Glackens, and then during
- his own trips to Paris. His main aesthetic guide in collecting
- was art critic Leo Stein, Gertrude's brother. His intellectual
- mentor was the educator John Dewey, whose book Democracy and
- Education formed his ideas about education for "the masses"
- through art. After 1918, Barnes' acquisitions became obsessive.
- His biggest spree was in the early '20s, when he went charging
- through Paris waving his checkbook (earning the disapproval of
- Gertrude Stein, who thought him vulgar) and haggling like a mule
- trader. The postwar market for modern art was low, and Barnes
- got nearly everything he wanted, including, as he later boasted,
- the entire contents of the "drunk, sick and broken" Chaim
- Soutine's studio "for a pittance"--about $3,000.
- </p>
- <p> He also purchased 900 tons of French limestone, with which
- he would build his foundation in Merion, outside Philadelphia, a
- sort of Trianon with Art Deco overtones by the French architect
- Paul Cret, who had designed the Rodin Museum in Philadelphia.
- The Barnes Foundation was chartered in 1922, with a core of 713
- paintings and a $6 million endowment. Its purpose was
- education. Barnes was fascinated by formal analysis, which, like
- a true chemist, he thought could be put on a "scientific" basis.
- He was indifferent, even hostile, to discussing iconography
- (the subject and images of the work), or the artist's life, or
- the social or historical contexts of his work. No modern art
- historian would go with his theories, but then he didn't like
- art historians much either. He was an autodidact. He had a whole
- system, and those who disagreed could go jump in the Schuylkill.
- Few people could like Barnes, but there was something admirable
- about his independence, even at its most flintily messianic.
- </p>
- <p> Through the '20s and '30s he amassed a gigantic
- collection. Its focus lay on modern French art. Barnes disliked
- Impressionism as superficial, but he adored Renoir and bought
- 180 of his works--certainly the largest group of Renoirs,
- good, bad and indifferent, owned by anyone in the world. He
- ended up with 69 Cezannes, 60 Matisses, 44 Picassos, 18
- Rousseaus, and so on down the list of modernist greats (and
- mediocrities, like Jules Pascin, whose oo-la-la nudes stirred
- Barnes' libido to the point that the doctor bought 57 works).
- His collection contains many duds, but it also boasts some of
- the greatest masterpieces of French art in the late 19th and
- early 20th centuries, and most of these are on view in the
- National Gallery show.
- </p>
- <p> There is Seurat's huge Models, for instance, which ranks
- with La Grande Jatte (a corner of which appears in this view of
- Seurat's studio, behind the slender nudes and their enchanting
- litter of clothes and parasols) as one of the artist's key
- paintings. From Barnes' many first-rate Cezannes come Nudes in
- a Landscape and The Card Players, two paintings in which the
- inherent monumentality of his late style is brought to a pitch
- of astonishing grandeur. There are some good Picassos, though
- they're sentimental and juvenile after the stern intensities of
- Cezanne. There is a great Van Gogh portrait of the Arles
- postman, from whose beard all of Expressionism might have
- subsequently unrolled.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the painting that parallels Picasso's Les
- Demoiselles d'Avignon as one of the charters of modern art,
- Matisse's The Joy of Life, with its peculiar sluglike nudes
- disporting themselves in a brilliantly colored arcadian
- landscape based on the coast of St. Tropez. In the middle
- distance is a ring of naked dancers, the prototype of the
- figures in the big Dance murals Matisse would do for the Moscow
- palace of the great Russian collector Sergei Shchukin, and the
- ancestors of yet another Dance, the three-panel, 45-ft.-long
- mural that Barnes was to commission for his foundation's main
- gallery in 1931.
- </p>
- <p> Today the possession of a mere half a dozen of Barnes'
- better paintings would make their owner a social lion, courted
- by hopeful museums, wooed by trustees and hostesses. Not in
- Philadelphia 70 years ago. There, modern art was generally
- regarded as the effusion of five-thumbed lunatics, and when some
- of Barnes' Soutines and Modiglianis were shown, along with
- Matisse's Joy of Life, at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
- Arts in 1923, they were mocked by Good Society and press alike.
- Barnes never forgave Philadelphia. To say he lacked the Main
- Line social graces, notably that of kissing the superior
- posterior, would be like rebuking a rhino for awkwardness with
- the tea set. In particular, Barnes loathed Fiske Kimball, the
- director of the Philadelphia Museum; his snobbery got Barnes'
- working-class Irish goat, and their enmity lasted a quarter of
- a century, during which Barnes refused to lend anything to
- Kimball's or any other museum.
- </p>
- <p> One doesn't have to sympathize with Kimball to recognize
- that Barnes was the most difficult patron in the history of
- American collecting--a living disproof of the naive idea that
- great art refines its owner. He was coarse, vindictive, paranoid
- and given to scatological insult. He ran his foundation like a
- cult. Its students, admitted on the basis of an interview
- conducted by the formidable Barnes, were meant to be
- working-class, "plain" people, but few real Philadelphia workers
- could get time off to meet the mandatory requirement of
- attending class in Merion one afternoon a week for two years--and those who missed class could be expelled. No degrees were
- given. The teachers were for the most part uninspired, and no
- divergence from the doctor's art theories was tolerated.
- </p>
- <p> Above all, he hated "experts," wrote them rude letters
- (sometimes signed with the name of his dog, Fidele), and made
- it next to impossible for them to visit the collection. Even
- Kenneth Clark was excluded, presumably for being insufficiently
- working-class. Nothing could be lent or even moved, since
- Barnes' hanging of the collection was sacrosanct.
- </p>
- <p> After the irascible doctor's death in 1951, his will left
- control in his wife's hands until her death, after which it
- passed to Lincoln University, a small black institution in
- Lincoln University, Pennsylvania. Its board of trustees was to
- nominate the trustees of the Barnes Foundation. Effectively,
- however, the place was run by a dim, snappish woman named
- Violette deMazia, Barnes' longtime Girl Friday and educational
- hatchetperson, who reigned there with ever mounting eccentricity
- until her death in 1988.
- </p>
- <p> By then the collection had next to no public or
- professional base at all. It had been forced, by court order and
- the threat of revocation of its tax-exempt status, to open its
- galleries for the first time to the public (though in a limited
- way) in 1961. But it was essentially a tomb. It had no loyal
- audience, no generous trustees, no circle of scholars and museum
- professionals to give it support. Its wiring, services and
- security system were antiquated (a boiler-room explosion in 1985
- drenched some of its walls and nearly ruined nine paintings).
- </p>
- <p> As the foundation came into the '90s, inflation had eaten
- away at its endowment, and not one of its Lincoln-appointed
- board members had any background in the visual arts. Never had
- a collection of such quality been controlled by such a quintet
- of aesthetic ignoramuses. To help in its deliberations, the
- board appointed an advisory committee. Its honorary chairman was
- the publishing mogul and collector Walter Annenberg. It included
- several museum professionals and one art dealer, Richard Feigen.
- </p>
- <p> The first plan to raise money came from the foundation's
- new president, a lawyer named Richard Glanton. Early in 1991,
- Glanton proposed selling "redundant" works to pay for the
- repairs he considered necessary, the cost of which was estimated
- at $15 million. He proposed selling a minimum of 15 paintings,
- and he discussed sales of up to $100 million (some sources say
- $200 million) with Sotheby's.
- </p>
- <p> When Glanton and the board petitioned the court for
- permission to sell, there was an explosion of protest from
- museum professionals and critics--among them, Thomas
- Freudenheim, the Smithsonian Institution's under secretary for
- museums, who condemned the plan as "in direct conflict with the
- museum's archival and research function." The consensus outside
- the foundation was that the Barnes collection was a national
- treasure, which ought to be preserved in every detail. Besides,
- the sale would have flagrantly contradicted Barnes' stated
- wishes--"No picture belonging to the collection," runs the
- foundation's charter, "shall ever be loaned, sold or otherwise
- disposed of."
- </p>
- <p> One of the advisory committee's strongest critics of the
- sales plan was Feigen. He was summarily dismissed for his
- protests. Still, after further outcry from art authorities,
- critics and the Barnes' own students, the sales idea was
- dropped, only to be replaced with another that Barnes would also
- have loathed but that at least wasn't as radical. Encouraged by
- J. Carter Brown, the soon-to-retire director of the National
- Gallery in Washington, Glanton proposed a worldwide tour of
- paintings from the collection, accompanied by all the usual
- backup--reproductions, books, posters, souvenirs. In July 1992
- the Barnes board won court permission to mount such a tour, just
- once, after which the paintings were never to leave Merion
- again. This, says Brown, was "a very closely reasoned argument
- by a judge who felt it was necessary in order to make possible
- the other provisions of the will. This tour is going to go a
- long way to make it fiscally possible for Barnes' collection to
- be preserved in perpetuity."
- </p>
- <p> The Barnes Foundation closed a $700,000 book-and-catalog
- publishing deal with Knopf; it was signed soon after the
- foundation controlled by Knopf's owner, Samuel Newhouse Jr.,
- gave a $2 million donation to Lincoln University--sheer
- coincidence, no doubt, but nevertheless the timing prompted a
- lawsuit brought by the DeMazia Trust. Meanwhile, several
- objectors within the Barnes Foundation--both teachers and
- students--have been expelled or dismissed, allegedly on
- Glanton's orders.
- </p>
- <p> Glanton's critics object to the fact that the Barnes board
- never tried other ways of raising money--through charitable
- foundations or private donors. Selling out (as they see it) to
- the big museums is an admission of impotence, of the Barnes
- Foundation's lack of a constituency, which should be fixed
- first. The other side's answer is that the Barnes will never get
- a constituency until the public can get into it; this can't
- happen until the place is fixed up.
- </p>
- <p> The wrangle is bitter and shows no sign of resolution. The
- antis say the whole project has been needlessly rushed, leaving
- insufficient time for proper inspection of the condition of the
- works, for restoration and for prepping them to endure the
- stress of travel. "I believe that the whole schedule was worked
- around the National Gallery having an open date," says James
- Beck, an art-history professor at Columbia University who runs
- a group called ArtWatch International, formed in 1992 to monitor
- unwise treatment and abusive restoration of works of art of
- world significance. "It was really a kind of tragic rush. Eighty
- works treated in a period of nine months is outrageously fast."
- Nathan Stolow, a conservation consultant, also worries about the
- short lead time: "It is a Henry Ford-style mass-production
- technique. It is just unbelievable."
- </p>
- <p> The National Gallery's director, Earl ("Rusty") Powell
- III, who took over from Carter Brown in 1992, categorically
- denies that the show was rushed: "The pictures that have been
- chosen were very carefully reviewed by a conservation committee.
- Some were rejected because their condition was fragile. There
- has been no major conservation." In an interview published in
- last month's issue of Art & Auction, Glanton (who is black)
- tried to nuke his critics with the claim that they were impelled
- by racism. Walter Annenberg entered the fray with the ponderous
- declamation that the hundred or so students who, headed by an
- engineer named Nick Tinari, are now seeking a court injunction
- to prevent the paintings leaving the U.S. are "just a bunch of
- complainers who act as if they're important figures in the art
- world. They're nothing."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps so, but they were something to Barnes, even though
- he wasn't at all the gentleman that Annenberg is. In the
- meantime, the voice you hear muttering as you revel in your
- first sight of the Barnes paintings may not be an acoustiguide.
- It could be the livid shade of the antiseptic millionaire,
- undeterred by the artgoing public's exclamations of delight.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-