PHOENIX, ARIZ.- Phoenix Art Museum has recently added more than 170 works to its collection of more than 20,000 objects of Asian, American, Latin American, European, modern, and contemporary art and fashion design. Notable acquisitions include A River Landscape with a Waterfall (c. 1660) by renowned Dutch painter Jacob van Ruisdael and The Flight of Sor Juana (1982) by Eduardo Carrillo. In addition, the Museum acquired Dress (1996) by James Sterling Paper Fashions and Daisy Mae Shift (1960s) by Mist Modes, both of which strengthen the Museums holdings of fashion designs made from paper and disposable materials.
Acquisition Highlights
A River Landscape with a Waterfall (c. 1660) by Jacob van Ruisdael, gifted by Dr. Meryl H. and Mrs. Jeanne Haber, depicts a turbulent waterfall cascading into a pond surrounded by magnificent trees, with churning water and large broken tree limbs in the foreground that suggest the ever-changing nature of life. The works most recent provenance is of great interest. In the 1930s, the painting was housed in the home- gallery of Jewish Dutch art dealer Jacques Goudstikker. The saga of his family is a tragedy of the Second World War. As the Nazis invaded the Netherlands, the Goudstikker family fled. Hermann Göring, Nazi Reichsmarschall, looted this painting (pictured on the previous page), along with many others, from the Goudstikker Gallery in Amsterdam. During World War II, the paintings were hidden by the Nazis. In 1945, as the war ended, this work, and others by Old Masters, were recovered by the Allies and the Dutch government. It took nearly 60 years for the Goudstikker family to obtain possession of the paintings once again. This painting was bought at auction in London in 2007. Affixed to the back of the painting are Goudstikker Gallery labels indicating this works possession by the Nazis during World War II. On view now in Art of the Americas + Europe galleries.
Dress (1966) by James Sterling Paper Fashions and Daisy Mae Shift (1960s) by Misty Modes were gifted by longtime Museum supporter Kelly Ellman. These colorful and whimsical garments highlight a special moment in fashion history, when garments made of paper and disposable materials took the world by storm. Now part of the Museums fashion-design collection, these works spark important conversations about creativity and sustainability.
Zero Weave (2019) by Julianne Swartz, purchased with funds provided by Jane and Mal Jozoff, is crafted from enameled copper filament that is approximately the diameter of a strand of hair. Repetitive winding builds the frail strands into a soft vessel. This work was previously on view in Stories of Abstraction: Contemporary Latin American Art in the Global Context, which presented rarely seen artworks by some of Latin Americas most innovative contemporary artists. On view now in the Katz Wing for Modern Art.
Gifted by Ruben and Juliette Carrillo, The Flight of Sor Juana (1982) by Eduardo Carrillo depicts Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, the 17th-century Mexican nun, poet, and self-taught scholar. Thought by historians to be one of the first published feminist writers of her time, Sor Juana is portrayed with pen and rosary in hand and her body bent to Gods will. The painting showcases Carillos ability to move from realism to realms of fantasy in his work. On view now in the Art of the Americas + Europe galleries.
Old House at Cienega (20th century) by Fremont F. Ellis, gifted by JPMorgan Chase, is one of Ellis outstanding landscape works. Settling in Santa Fe in 1919, the primarily self-taught painter captured his environment and founded one of Santa Fes earliest art groups, Los Cinco Pintores. This work was formerly in the collection of Walter Reed Bimson (1892-1980), a pioneering Arizona art collector who headed Valley National Bank. On view now in Orme Lewis Gallery.
Japanese Landscape with Figures and Boats (c. 1869-1908) by Charles Dater Weldon, gifted by Janet and Peter Mattingly, was created during the Ohio painters time spent in Japan. An illustrator, Weldon established a reputation for accurately depicting the real life of the people. Portraying a Japanese landscape, this work is an unusual addition to the Museums American art collection. On view now in Orme Lewis Gallery.
For its collection of Asian art, the Museum acquired approximately 50 Indonesian textiles. Made entirely by hand for both ceremonial and daily wear, the textiles were previously on view in the Museums 2010 exhibition Sumatra: Textiles from the Collection of Dr. Thomas J. Hudak. The gift represents the first acquisition of works from Indonesia, expanding the total nations represented in the Art of Asia collection to 14.