PITTSBURGH, PA.- Carnegie Museum of Arts permanent collection has been bolstered by the acquisition of several significant works of art in line with its collecting strategies. Included in these plans are the purchase of art from and related to the Carnegie International; adding to areas of strength, such as contemporary art, photography, regional art, and art after 1985; and acquiring works of art that contribute to the museums exhibition program. A selection of recent acquisitions includes:
Department of Contemporary Art
Aaronel deRoy Gruber
American (b. 1918)
Spherical Plateaus, c. 1968
Acrylic with 1 or 1 1/2 rpm bogey motor and 3 vertical fluorescent tubes
73 1/2 x 15 x 21 in.
Gift of the Gruber Family
A kinetic sculpture, Spherical Plateaus consists of five layered orbs that are vertically hung within an acrylic exterior. These colorful orbs rotate slowly, blending their colors with each other and with the interior light. Gruber is a distinguished Pittsburgh-based artist, and has been active with Associated Artists of Pittsburgh since 1957.
Thomas Schütte
German (b. 1954)
Zombie VIII, 2008
Bronze
29 1/2 x 33 1/2 x 41 5/16 in.
The Henry L. Hillman Fund
Zombie VIII reflects Schüttes ongoing exploration of the grotesqueries of figuration, here manifested in the dismembered and subsequently reanimated parts of his earlier Grosse Geister, or big spirit sculptures. The work is currently installed, along with two other Zombie sculptures and a series of watercolor drawings by the artist, in Life on Mars, the 2008 Carnegie International.
Christopher Wool
American (b. 1955)
Untitled, 2007
Enamel on linen
126 x 96 in.
The Henry L. Hillman Fund
In the large-scale painting Untitled, the artists technique creates a complex illusion of depth in which the black lines disappear and reappear as if behind many layers. As with all of Wools works, the turbulent appearance belies an underlying harmony within the composition. Christopher Wools work was included in the 1991 Carnegie International. This piece complements six other works by Wool already in the collection.
Richard Wright
British (b. 1960)
Untitled, 2008
Gouache on paper
24 1/8 x 33 in.
The Henry L. Hillman Fund
Richard Wrights work is usually laboriously applied directly to the wallor ceilings, cornices, windowpanes, or other unconventional spaces in a roomwith paint and brush, and is meant to be painted over. In addition to these ephemeral wall drawings, such as the one included in the 2008 Carnegie International, Wright also creates lasting works on paper using the same elaborate practice, typically making only three or four per year as each one takes several months.
Department of Decorative Arts
William De Morgan, designer
English (18391917)
Fred Passenger, decorator
English (active 18901905)
Vase, c. 1890
Earthenware
16 1/4 in. high
Decorative Arts Purchase Fund and
Purchase: Gift of Charlotte and Stanley Bernstein, by exchange
Inspired by the form of ancient vessels, as was popular in the 19th century, and decorated with leaves, vines, and flowers in Persian-inspired motifs and hues, this is a rare example of a large-scale vase designed by William De Morgan. The artist is best known for his hand-crafted, lustrous red ceramic chargers and tiles, making this uncommon vase all the more important for the museums collection.
Michelle Erickson
American (b. 1960)
Made in China, 2008
Porcelain
15 x 8 x 8 in.
Gift of Charlotte and Stanley Bernstein, by exchange
Made in China is a visually striking figure that creates a link between the museums contemporary and historic ceramic collections. Erickson takes inspiration from 18th-century Chinese Guanyin figures and English sweetmeat dishes, both of which exist in the museums collection for comparison. By imbuing historic forms with immediately recognizable modern symbols, such as the Shell Oil logo or Olympic rings, Erickson presents a commentary on contemporary wealth, luxury, vanity, corruption, and international relations through a porcelain medium that embodied the same themes more than 300 years ago.
Harvey K. Littleton
American (b. 1922)
Blue/Lemon Sliced Descending Form, 1989
Glass
13 1/4 x 12 1/2 x 5 in.
5 x 5 x 3 1/2 in.
Bequest of Maxine H. Block
Harvey K. Littleton is considered the father of the American Studio Glass movement. This is the first work in the museums collection by Littleton. Since 1996, William and Maxine Block have given or bequeathed 93 contemporary glass objects to Carnegie Museum of Art, including this work; their gifts comprise nearly half of the contemporary glass collection for which the museum is nationally recognized.
Horn Gift
In line with Carnegie Museum of Arts goals to acquire important works of contemporary decorative arts in glass, ceramic, and wood, the recent gift from John and Robyn Horn introduced six superb examples of craft and technique to the collection. Work by notable wood artists Rude Osolnik, Binh Pho, and Mark Sfirri illustrate innovative turning techniques in functional and sculptural objects that push the boundaries of the wood medium. Additional work in glass by Dick Huss and ceramic by Karl Yost and James Lovera are also part of the gift.
Raymond Lowey, designer
French (18931986)
Compagnie de lEsthétique Industrielle, designer
French (1952c. 1980)
Doubinski Frères, manufacturer
French (active c. 19601970)
DF-2000 series sideboard, c. 1969
Injection-molded plastic, painted aluminum, and fiberboard
78 1/2 x 22 in.
Gift of Dr. Richard Simmons
Richard Lowey is one of Americas best-known and prolific designers of the 20th century. This sideboard, with its rectangular, white lacquered cabinet, is the first piece of Lowey-designed furniture in the collection, and was given by the original owner. It will be an anchor in the 20th-century design section to the Ailsa Mellon Bruce Galleries of decorative arts,opening in November 2009.
Department of Fine Art
Wassily Kandinsky
Russian (18661944)
Radierung / No. 4, 1916
Drypoint on wove paper
Image # IV, impression 7 of 10
Image: 3 9/16 x 3 1/4 in.
Edward N. Haskell Family Acquisition Fund
Wassily Kandinsky made this aesthetically powerful drypoint in the chaotic period of World War I, when he concentrated on printmaking, drawing, and watercolor while moving from Germany to Switzerland to Russia to Stockholm and then back again to Russia. This is the third Kandinsky in the museums collection, and the earliest; it will also augment the museums holdings in 20th-century abstraction. Kandinsky participated in the 1939 Carnegie International.
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
Italian (17201778)
The Triumphal Arch, plate: c. 17471749, impression: c. 17501759
From the series Grotesques (Grotteschi)
Engraving, etching, drypoint, and burnishing on paper
State 1 of 5
Second edition, first issue
Sheet: 20 1/8 x 27 1/2 in.
Image: 15 1/8 x 21 1/4 in.
Charles J. Rosenbloom Fund
This is a strong, first-state impression of a rare print by Piranesi from Grotesques (Grotteschi), an intriguing, small series of imaginary, fantastical, and conceptual works. The unifying themes in the series are human and architectural decay, decline, and ruin, as well as the intermixing of the past with the present. Though there are 23 prints by Piranesi in the museums collection, this is the first from the Grotteschi series.
Raymond Simboli
American (18941964)
Pinkerton Riot, Pittsburgh, 1948
Oil on canvas
29 1/2 x 34 1/4 in.
Gift of Daniel McFadden and Beverlee Tito Simboli McFadden
Raymond Simboli
American (18941964)
Pinkerton Riot, Pittsburgh, c. 19351940
Oil on canvas
36 x 39 1/2 in.
Gift of Daniel McFadden and Beverlee Tito Simboli McFadden
Seven works by noted western Pennsylvania artist Raymond Simboli were added to the museums collection, including two versions of Pinkerton Riot, Pittsburgh, which represent the artists interest in regional subject matter and his stylistic development from social realism of the 1930s to abstract expressionism in the late 1950s. Pinkerton Riot, Pittsburgh, 1948, is decidedly more abstract than the first version, c. 19351940, which is a more figurative rendering. The seven newly acquired works will join Self-Portrait, c.1929, in the collection, and function as a mini-survey of this Pittsburgh-focused artist.
The Heinz Architectural Center
Jonathan Sergison
British (b. 1964)
Sergison Bates architects (est. London, 1996)
Studio House, Hackney, London, 20002004
Graphite on translucent paper, 2003
16 3/4 x 11 11/16 in.
Purchase: Heinz Architectural Center
Stephen Bates
British (b. 1964)
Sergison Bates architects (est. London, 1996)
Studio House, Hackney, London, 20002004
Graphite on translucent paper, 2003
11 1/2 x 16 1/2 in.
Purchase: Heinz Architectural Center
These two measured drawings reveal the careful composition and detailing of a house by Sergison Bates architects on Coate Street in Hackney, a borough in the East End of London. This house was included in the Heinz Architectural Centers exhibition Gritty Brits: New London Architecture in spring 2007. The drawings complement models already accessioned from the five other practices included in the exhibition, thus representing more fully this generation of London-based architects.
Hughson Hawley, delineator
American (b. England, 18501936)
Peabody High School, Pittsburgh, PA (exterior perspective), 1924
Watercolor, pencil, and wash on paper mounted on pressboard
16 x 35 1/2 in.
Gift of Harley Trice
Pittsburghs Peabody High School, originally called the Margaretta School, was built in 1902 to the design of Charles M. Bartberger and enlarged in 1911 by Bartberger, Cooley & Bartberger. In the mid-1920s, another expansion, which included the addition of a gymnasium, was designed by Edward B. Lee. This newly acquired drawing documents the buildings appearance at the time of that second enlargement. In 1978, N. John Cunzolo Associates, Inc., wrapped the building in brick. Today, the only visible remnant of the original building is one of the schools entrances.