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Lowell's Whistler Museum scores coup with Gorky works

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  • Lowell's Whistler Museum scores coup with Gorky works

    The Sun (Lowell, Massachusetts)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    July 18, 2009 Saturday



    Lowell's Whistler Museum scores coup with Gorky works

    by Nancye Tuttle, The Sun, Lowell, Mass.



    Jul. 18--LOWELL -- The Whistler House Museum of Art has joined the big
    leagues with its latest art acquisition.

    A collection of 28 rarely or never-before-seen paintings, drawings and
    one rare stone sculpture by artist Arshile Gorky are now on permanent
    loan to the museum and will be unveiled in a gala exhibition this
    September, it was announced this week.

    The Armenian-born Gorky, who survived the genocide of his people by
    the Ottoman Turks in the early 1900s, was a key figure in the American
    modern-art movement, which flourished in New York in the mid-20th
    century.

    Known as the father of American abstract expressionism, he influenced
    and befriended such modern masters as Jackson Pollock and Willem De
    Kooning. His work hangs in

    major museums around the world, including the Tate Modern in London
    and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art and the
    Guggenheim Museum, all in New York City.

    And now this significant work -- the Mina Boehm Metzger collection --
    is at the Whistler House, after nearly five years of negotiations with
    the anonymous, out-of-state donors, who had the collection in their
    home.

    Metzger, Gorky's student, friend and patron, collected the works in
    the 1930s in New York, when she studied with him and recognized his
    genius.

    Acquiring the works started simply with an e-mail, said Michael Lally,
    Whistler House's executive director.

    "They contacted us, saying they understood we had a Gorky in our
    permanent

    collection and would we be interested in some other Gorkys," Lally
    said.

    (The Whistler House owns Gorky's "Park Street Boston (1924)," which
    the artist painted while living in Massachusetts in the 1920s. One of
    few remaining Gorky works from that period in his life, it has been
    exhibited by many museums and is part of a Gorky retrospective that
    the Philadelphia Museum of Art will mount this fall.)

    More e-mails and visits between Whistler staff and board and the
    donors followed.

    "They had contacted other museums, but we were the only museum they
    contacted which said we'd exhibit the works, too. They wanted the
    collection to be seen," said Lally.

    Appraisals were made, contracts drawn up, and $35,000 Parker
    Foundation grant procured to have the works cleaned and restored to
    museum quality.

    "The appraiser Linda Poras loved the collection and said it was a coup
    for us and the city of Lowell to have it here," said Lally, referring
    to the former director of the Brush Art Gallery.

    Whistler House board member Sara Bogosian, who is of Armenian descent,
    championed the project from the start and became especially
    enthusiastic when she read a story about Gorky's art in the Armenian
    Mirror Spectator, a national publication.

    "I've always loved art, promoted it and was interested in Armenian
    artists. My father Marcos Mezian always talked about Gorky. Then I saw
    a story in the Armenian Mirror Spectator about how some of his later
    works were being sold in Paris for millions. I urged the board to
    pursue this, since he is such an important figure and having the works
    here would add to our reputation," she said.

    Jim Dyment, exhibits and gallery manager, said it's the most important
    thing to happen to the Whistler House since Theodore Edson Parker
    bequeathed his art collection to the museum over 100 years ago.

    Refurbished, restored and under lock and key with an upgraded security
    system, the collection is now appraised "well into the millions," said
    Lally.

    It will be unveiled in September in the exhibit Drawings and Paintings
    by Arshile Gorky -- Mina Boehm Metzger Collection in the Whistler's
    Parker Gallery. After the exhibit, it will be moved to a second-floor
    gallery for permanent display.

    Acquiring these works is a major coup for a museum like the Whistler
    House, which has more traditional 19th- and early 20th-century works
    in its permanent collection.

    "It's a little different for us adding more abstract work to the
    collection," Lally said. "But we'll be known now for having these
    important Gorky works. It's tremendous."

    The acquisition couldn't come at a better time for the Whistler House
    either, with the retrospective opening in Philadelphia in October,
    then traveling in 2010 to the Tate Modern in London and Museum of
    Contemporary Art in Los Angeles.

    But area art lovers needn't travel that far this fall to see an
    impressive array of Gorkys. They only need go to the Whistler House
    Museum of Art on Worthen Street.

    "It's fabulous for us and the city of Lowell," said Lally. "We are
    proud to care for and preserve these Gorkys for future generations and
    we hope people will line up out the door and down the street to see
    them."
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