WASHINGTON, DC.- The Phillips Collections Director Dorothy Kosinski announced today the acquisition of 46 gifts of German and Danish art to the museums permanent collection, generously given by art collector and dealer Michael Werner. On view beginning September 12, this extraordinary gift of painting, sculpture, and works on paper showcases the museums commitment to building a carefully crafted collection that reflects museum founder Duncan Phillipss vision and distinctive eye and advances the understanding of 20th-century European art.
Michaels collection is intensely personal, and his collecting style complements that of Duncan Phillips. Both were keen to develop close relationships with the artists they supported, and they both possessed fondness for in-depth collecting of those artists works, says Dr. Kosinski. These gifts reinforce the Phillipss commitment to acquire important works by modern and contemporary artists who are masters of personal expression, a standard set by our founder nearly 100 years ago.
In 1963, Michael Werner opened his first gallery in Berlin, with an exhibition of works by Georg Baselitz. Since then, Michael Werner Gallerynow based in Berlin, New York, and Londonhas worked with a number of the most important artists of the 20th century, including Marcel Broodthaers, James Lee Byars, Peter Doig, Jörg Immendorff, Per Kirkeby, Markus Lüpertz, A.R. Penck, and Sigmar Polke.
Michael has set a remarkable example for collectors and dealers in the way he has consistently championed these artists over more than fifty years, says Gordon VeneKlasen, Partner at Michael Werner Gallery. Our hope is that the presentation of these works, the public programs surrounding it, and the upcoming survey of the work of Markus Lüpertz will help to increase the understanding of these major figures of European art in the United States.
Michael Werner and Michael Werner Gallery have a long-standing relationship with the Phillips, including the loan of several major pieces to Per Kirkeby: Painting and Sculpture, a 2012 survey of the Danish artists work jointly curated by Dr. Kosinski and Deputy Director of Curatorial and Academic Affairs Klaus Ottmann. As part of a campaign to place works by German artists in international museum collections, Werner invited Dr. Kosinski to explore the possibility of a significant gift of works from both his personal collection and that of the gallery. Their collaboration resulted in this generous gift of 46 works by Georg Baselitz, Jörg Immendorff, Per Kirkeby, Markus Lüpertz, and A.R. Penck. All five were part of a generation of postwar artists who breathed new life into figuration, their work characterized by enormous versatility and a constant search to strike balance between abstraction and figuration, form and color.
This giftone of the most important since the museum opened to the public in 1921represents a transformative enrichment of the Phillipss collection, says Dr. Ottmann. It significantly adds to our growing holdings of Europeanspecifically Germanpostwar and contemporary art and broadens this institutions collection narrative.