19 August 2023

Art History at Kimbell Art Museum Tx

The Cardsharps, 
by Caravaggio, c1595
Kimbell Art Museum

Portrait of May Sartoris, 
by Frederic Leighton, c1860
Kimbell Art Museum

Kay Kimbell (1886-1964), who made his vast wealth from grain and milling businesses, married Velma Fuller (1887-1982) in 1910. They created the Kimbell Art Foundation in 1936, along with Velma’s sister and her husband, Dr and Mrs Coleman Carter.

In 1965 the first director Richard Brown and the Found­ation began pl­anning for the future Kimbell museum, a small museum of sup­reme quality. So the Directors outlined the mus­eum’s programme. The founders' collection was based on European and English 18th and C19th paintings. They asked that later curators expand the museum’s ran­ge, focusing on high quality, rather than limiting art to any one genre, era or region. They wanted to acquire individual works of the highest possible power. The 1966 policy discussed encompassing World History.

Why did the directors choose Louis Kahn? His buildings had massive struct­ures which s their weight, materials and construction meth­ods. His raw materials eg concrete and brick combined with his focus on the play of light and shadow, giving his works a powerful presence. The Kimbell Art Museum's Louis Kahn Building was a special arch­it­ect­ural achieve­ment. Opened in 1972, Kahn did modern ar­ch­­­itecture with light as the theme. 142’ over­head the oculus was atop the dome, a circ­ular op­ening with a 27’ diameter. Natural light en­t­ers through narrow pl­exi­glass skylights that runs the len­gth of the gallery ceilings over the barrel vaul­ts, the light diff­used by silvery al­uminium reflectors.

While there is a street ent­r­ance on the first floor, the proper ent­r­ance is the Kimbell Art Museum’s stun­ning facade, which leads dir­ectly into the 2nd-floor gall­er­ies. This main west facade has 3 100’ bays, each fronted by an open, barrel-vaulted entrance bay; portico, with the glazed central these light-filled spaces are the key feature of the int­erior, behind each of the side porticos. And 3 courtyards intersperse the interior space. Though mod­ern in having no ornamentation, Kahn want­ed to suggest Roman vaults. Two courtyards are accessible, inviting the visitor into the open air and nature.

Kimbell’s first building, by architect Louis Kahn, opened 1972
Kimbell Architecture Tour

Natural light and elegant spaces
Yelp

At first the Foundation collected mostly C18th and C19th British and French portraits. By the time Mr Kimbell died in 1964, the col­lect­ion had grown to 260 paint­ings and 86 other art works, includ­ing Hals, Gainsborough, Vigée Le Brun and Leighton. Wishing to en­courage art in Fort Worth, Kimbell left his estate to the Found­ation, asking to create a first class museum. After his death, Velma contrib­uted her share of the community property to the Foundation.

Early acquisitions (1965–75) included: Monet’s Point de la Hève at Low Tide; Bellini’s Christ Blessing; and Picasso’s classic Cubist Man with a Pipe 1911. In 1975, Kay Kimbell’s niece Ms B Fortson became Pres­id­ent of the Directors Board, serving until 2017 when Kay's grandniece Ms M Wynne took over. The Dir­ectors raised vital funding for the Found­ation for regular new purchases of important works eg El Greco’s Portrait of Dr Francisco de Pisa, Rubens’s Equestrian Portrait of Duke of Buck­ingham and Cézan­ne’s Man in a Blue Smock.

Edmund Pillsbury was the next director (1980–98). He added c150 works to the coll­ect­ion incl­uding La Tour’s Cheat with the Ace of Clubs; Caravaggio’s Card­sharps; a Veláz­quez portrait, Don Pedro de Barberana; Pic­asso’s Nude Combing Her Hair; Cézanne’s land­scape Mai­s­on Maria with View of Château Noir; Caillebotte’s urban land­scape On the Pont de l’Europe; Fried­rich’s Mountain Peak with Drifting Clouds; Mur­illo’s Four Figures on Step; Fra Angelico’s St James Free­­ing Hermog­enes; Matisse’s L’Asie; Mond­rian’s Abstraction and Mon­et’s expressive Weeping Willow. Treasures!

Under Timothy Potts’ directorship (1998-2007), the collection was diversified with works including Rae­burn’s Allen Broth­ers; an inlaid fig­urine from Peru; Bernini’s striking Modello for the Fountain of the Moor; and Lucas Cranach I’s master­work, Judgment of Paris.

Under Eric Lee, director since 2009, the Kimbell fur­th­er enriched the collection with the acquisition of Michel­ang­elo’s Torment of St Anth­ony; Guer­c­ino’s maj­es­tic Christ and the Woman of Samaria; Pous­s­in’s state­ly Christ Pres­ent­ing the Keys to St Peter; Ruisdael’s Edge of a Forest with a Grainfield; an im­por­t­ant Modigliani sculpture; and Bonnard’s light-filled Landscape at Le Cannet.

Kimbell is a major nat­ion­al museum for internat­ion­al loan exhibitions, accompanied by their publications and sympos­ia. The first was dev­oted to Vigée Le Brun (1982), and later included retrospectives devoted to Poussin, Ribera, Tiepolo, Carracci and Matisse. Then they did sur­veys of C17th Spanish still-lifes and C18th French myth­ol­ogical works.

Other exhibitions organised by The Kimbell: The Blood of Kings in Maya Art (1986), Georges de La Tour and His World (1996), Monet and the Mediterranean (1997), Renoir Por­t­raits (1998), Matisse and Pic­asso: A Gentle Rivalry (1999), Stubbs and the Horse (2004), Picturing the Bib­le: Earliest Christian Art (2007), Caravaggio and His Foll­ow­ers in Rome (2011), Bernini: Sculpting in Clay (2013), Faces of Impress­ion­ism: Portraits from Musée d'Orsay (2014) and Monet: Early Years (2016). The Museum also hosted major travelling exhibitions, starting with Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Paintings from USSR (1973); and Age of Pic­asso-Matisse: Modern Masters from Chicago Art Institute.

Portraits of Velma and Kay Kimbell,
by Dario Rappaport,1935
Kimbell Art Museum

The Kimbell Art Foundation still owns and runs the Mus­eum, hol­d­­­ing c350 works from different eras and movements. Art history students: read the excell­ent Kimb­ell Art Museum: Masterworks from the Collection Eric Lee et al., 2022!! 





24 comments:

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

Very interesting, I do like art, well some art not all as well as interesting buildings

roentare said...

I am learning about this museum through your narrative. The museum does have a great collection of wonderful portraits especially the ones showcase in your piece.

Train Man said...

Have any Kimbell art works every travelled to Australia or New Zealand?

jabblog said...

It's an interesting building, allowing so much light in. Are the paintings protected against sunlight?

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Hels - yes a friend often visits this museum ... and if I was in the States I'd definitely visit - it looks to be amazing from various points of views. Cheers Hilary

Hels said...

Jo-Anne

I thought architect Louis Kahn's design was a bit too solid and plain for an art gallery. So the exterior is not necessary to my taste.

But once you see the natural light flowing into the galleries through the pl­exi­glass skylights you see straight away what the light theme has added. And then the light is diff­used by silvery al­uminium reflectors, adding a soft silvery impact. Gorgeous.

Hels said...

roentare

Have a look at Kimbell's collection
https://kimbellart.org/collection?keys=paintings

It isn't the largest collection in the world, but it is very impressive.

Hels said...

Train Man

TWO of Australia's most celebrated paintings were exhibited in Dallas and Fort Worth in 1993. One was Camille Pissarro's Boulevard Montmartre: Morning, Grey Weather of 1897. The exhibition was Impressionist and the City, Pissarro's Series Paintings". And the Kimbell's 2001 exhibition was "European Masterpieces: Six Centuries of Paintings from the National Gallery of Victoria".

And another connection. In 1998 Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth made Dr Timothy Potts of National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne their new director!

But what about art flowing in the other direction? I can find only occasional references. Can any reader help us out, here?

Hels said...

jabblog

Good question, especially since the Gallery is in Texas. The light doesn't flow directly down on the floor or walls below, but I would still be examining the paintings each year to make sure the colours have not faded.

Hels said...

Hilary

I used to regularly travel to the west coast of the US and the entire North England region down as far as New York and New Jersey. There may not be one major art gallery that I am not familiar with in those two regions. And I knew the Prof of Art History at Melbourne Uni warmly recommending Kimbell, but I didn't even know where Fort Worth was *blush*

You at least have a friend to accompany you :)

DUTA said...

The Kimbell Art Musem with its architecture and elegance, sounds the very proper place to house famous painting collections.
As for natural light and artificial light - that's not a simple issue. I've just discovered that certain house plants benefit of artificial light only.

Hels said...

DUTA

Kay and Velma Kimbell not only had a lot of money, they also had very fine taste in the visual arts. So when they created the Kimbell Art Foundation in 1936, they laid down clear principles for buying, collecting, displaying and touring their beautiful treasures. Although Kay sadly died years before the Louis Kahn Building was opened, he knew his heritage would be protected and loved by the city and state.

If I didn't have any children, I wonder if we would have been so generous to our city.

My name is Erika. said...

I haven't heard of this museum. And here you are across the ocean and I'm in the US. Shame on me I think. What a lovely collection, and I'm glad I know about it now.

Hels said...

Erika

no shame whatsoever! I was writing a thesis about Huguenot art, so I spent a lot of time in France and the UK.

But when we were looking at art collectors and patrons, one of the galleries recommended by Prof of Art History at Melbourne University was definitely Kimbell Art Museum.

William said...

Have visited the Kimbell for a long time, from Oklahoma City, a 3 1/2 hour drive. A lovely collection in some beautiful architecture. The new addition was done well. Highly recommended!

hels said...

William
Thank you. I am very pleased to read the response of a fan. It was good for me being able to read Masterworks From The Collection, but not as good as you being there.

Fun60 said...

Although not large that is an impressive collection of masterpieces housed in a beautiful building.

Hels said...

Fun60

I think that makes a big difference, yes. If I was going to fly from Melbourne to visit galleries or museums, I would normally have selected majorly huge sites in London, Paris, Madrid, Berlin, St Petersburg or Vienna. Now I will choose a smaller but just as exciting a choice :)

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, The collection is magnificent. The building, from the outside at least, looks like some kind of agricultural or perhaps military building in the countryside. However, I wouldn't go to Texas just to look at a few masterworks, especially when there are many great museums even in the U.S. that I haven't visited yet, including Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Frick, Huntington, National Gallery (U.S.), New York Historical Society, Peabody Essex, and so many other important galleries located in more enlightened areas.
--Jim

hels said...

Parnassus,
I have been to the Frick, Huntington etc and loved the experiences. But I
knew nothing about the Kimbell until it was mentioned in a lecture, and never in blogs. The whole idea of collector-patrons appeals to me still.

Liam Ryan said...

oH Wow!
What an interesting read.
Those buildings look amazing and quite radical. And the way they flood the sunlight into the space looks wonderful.

Hels said...

Liam

I started studying art history at uni last century and paid very close attention to the paintings and decorative arts. But the question of gallery architecture didn't arise until examining the goals of Bauhaus gallery architecture much later. Have you been to Kimbell?

Liam Ryan said...

Hello Hels,

Where did you study? Was it in Australia?

And, no. I've never been to the Kimbell. I'm starting an intense legal course in 2 weeks time and hopefully this time next year, I will developing a legal practice; and can then travel more widely.

Hels said...

Liam

Melbourne Uni then later at Monash.