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French Paintings Catalogue
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Nelson-Atkins Begins Serial Release of French Paintings Catalogue

Move Marks Museum’s First Foray into Digital Publishing

Kansas City, MO. Feb. 26, 2021–A 12-year scholarly project involving curators, conservators, scientists, and independent scholars at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City culminates with the launch of a digital catalogue of the museum’s French paintings and pastels. Built on the Quire digital platform developed by the Getty Foundation and refined for museum use through close collaboration, this catalogue marks the Nelson-Atkins’ first foray into the field of digital publishing, offering free and open access to all. With support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Kress Foundation, and the Bloch Family Foundation, it encompasses the most up-to-date scholarship and conservation examination of the museum’s collection of 106 French paintings and drawings from the 1600s to the 1900s. The catalogue includes the recent gift of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masterworks given to the museum by the Henry and Marion Bloch family.

“Claude Monet wrote that he hoped his Water Lilies triptych (c.1915-1926), of which the Nelson-Atkins owns the right panel, would offer a refuge of peaceful meditation from the war,” said project director Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, Louis L. and Adelaide C. Ward Senior Curator of European Arts. “I have the same hope for the first digital release of our French paintings catalogue during these uncertain and unprecedented times: that it facilitates a space of contemplation amidst the turmoil of present-day life.”

The digital catalogue launches with four paintings and related curatorial and technical essays: Edgar Degas’s Rehearsal of the Ballet, Edouard Manet’s The Croquet Party, Paul Cezanne’s Quarry at Bibémus, and Vincent van Gogh’s Olive Trees. Each of the essays provides a fresh glimpse into new information that deepens knowledge and understanding of these beloved paintings.

Each month, essays about two more paintings will be added to the site, which will be highlighted through the museum’s social media platforms, creating a focus on French paintings for the next three to four years.

“I am thrilled that this will be available in the digital sphere,” said Julián Zugazagoitia, Menefee D. and Mary Louise Blackwell CEO & Director of the Nelson-Atkins. “It is an open and accessible way of publishing our scholarship, and it supports not only the values of the museum today, but it also models the way the museum will proceed into the future. It is a living document, so it will serve the casual art enthusiast, the scholar, and even the scientist.”

The catalogue begins with a provocative essay on the history of collecting French paintings at the Nelson-Atkins, authored by Marcereau DeGalan, chronicling important acquisitions through the years. This essay highlights the exhaustive research undertaken by many individuals on each object’s provenance and history. For example, Degas’s Rehearsal of the Ballet pastel was the first purchase for collector Louisine Havemeyer around 1877 on the advice of her friend, American artist Mary Cassatt. The pastel launched both the Impressionist collection of Havemeyer and the advising career of Cassatt. And in 1932, Van Gogh’s Olive Trees was the second painting by that artist to be acquired by a civic museum in the United States, and required a petition to bolster support for this artist who was relatively unknown in Kansas City.

The four essays that focus on particular paintings will shed new light on familiar works of art. For example, Manet’s The Croquet Party, 1871, highlights the artist’s interest in fashion, and how the game of croquet offered a space for flirtation between the sexes. The technical and curatorial essays on Degas’s Rehearsal of the Ballet readdresses and settles the question of the order of the monotypes in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, and the Nelson-Atkins collection, and documents the compositional changes between the monotype and the pastel over monotype. And in the essay on Quarry at Bibémus, readers learn that the location held special meaning for Paul Cezanne, who went to great lengths to access it so he could paint in solitude.

But perhaps the most significant discovery in this first group of pictures to be released is the research regarding Vincent van Gogh’s Olive Trees, which was painted in the summer and fall of 1889 while the artist was recuperating under the care of his doctor in the south of France. In addition to refining the dating of the picture, the team made many discoveries about the artist’s palette, technique, and working methods. Scientific study over the course of the past eight years by the museum’s Mellon scientist, John Twilley, in collaboration with paintings conservator Mary Schafer, included elemental mapping by the technique of X-ray Fluorescence Spectrometry. This technique illustrates the distribution of pigments across the canvas based on their elemental information, both alone and in mixtures. The resulting maps provided information on specific roles that Van Gogh gave to individual pigments as he developed the composition, and on pairings and juxtapositions that are key to the viewer’s appreciation of the scene.

This work uncovered early steps that were nearly obscured during refinement of the scene, such as Van Gogh’s use of sweeping strokes of cobalt blue to delineate the outer edge of the path. The same technique of elemental mapping allowed the parts of the scene incorporating red lake, now faded nearly to the point of invisibility, to be visualized once again, thereby providing insight to its appearance at the time that Van Gogh judged it to be complete.

“Scientific discoveries such as these, made in tandem with a close reading of the artist’s letters, provide subtle nuance and insight into the palette choices and working methods of one of the most enigmatic artists of the 19th century,” said Marcereau DeGalan.

In an earlier discovery, shared with the public in 2017, a conservator found that Van Gogh’s Olive Trees contained the remnants of a small grasshopper embedded in the thick paint. The insect was found in the lower foreground of the landscape, but cannot be seen by visitors through casual observation.

The French paintings catalogue is the next in a series of scholarly catalogues that highlight a specific collection at the Nelson-Atkins. It follows the February 2020 publication of Continuum: North American Native Art at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, and the 2007 publications of German and Netherlandish Paintings, 1450-1600: The Collections of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the two-volume American Paintings: The Collections of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; and The Origins of American Photography: From Daguerreotype to Dry-Plate, 1839-1885: The Hallmark Photographic Collection.

The new French catalogue can be accessed by visiting the Nelson-Atkins website and clicking on French Paintings Catalogue.

“The launch of this catalogue underscores our commitment to scholarship and scientific research,” said William Keyse Rudolph, who joined the museum in 2020 as Deputy Director, Curatorial Affairs. “The French paintings are beloved at the Nelson-Atkins, and we will continue to study them and add to the living document that is the French Paintings Catalogue.”

Image captions:
Edouard Manet, French (1832–1883). The Croquet Party, 1871, oil on canvas, 18 x 28 3/4 inches (45.7 x 73 cm), The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Gift of Henry W. and Marion H. Bloch, 2015.13.11.
Edgar Degas (French, 1834–1917). Rehearsal of the Ballet, ca. 1876, gouache and pastel over monotype on paper, plate: 22 1/4 x 27 1/2 in. (56.5 x 70 cm); sheet (irregular): 23 13/16 x 29 3/16 in. (60.5 x 74.2 cm),, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Purchase: the Kenneth A. and Helen F. Spencer Foundation Acquisition Fund, F73-30.
Paul Cezanne (French, 1839–1906), Quarry at Bibémus, 1895–1900, oil on canvas, 25 3/4 x 21 1/2 inches (65.4 x 54.6 cm), The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Gift of Henry W. and Marion H. Bloch, 2015.13.7.
Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853–1890). Olive Trees, June/September 1889, oil on canvas, 28 3/4 x 36 1/4 inches (73 x 92.1 cm), The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Purchase: William Rockhill Nelson Trust, 32-2.
Element map for cobalt superimposed on that of zinc (lower left), showing the cobalt blue stroke that marks the lower left path.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
The Nelson-Atkins in Kansas City is recognized nationally and internationally as one of America’s finest art museums. The museum, which strives to be the place where the power of art engages the spirit of community, opens its doors free of charge to people of all backgrounds. The museum is an institution that both challenges and comforts, that both inspires and soothes, and it is a destination for inspiration, reflection and connecting with others.

The Nelson-Atkins serves the community by providing access to its renowned collection of more than 42,000 art objects and is best known for its Asian art, European and American paintings, photography, modern sculpture, and Native American and Egyptian galleries. Housing a major art research library and the Ford Learning Center, the Museum is a key educational resource for the region. In 2017, the Nelson-Atkins celebrated the 10-year anniversary of the Bloch Building, a critically acclaimed addition to the original 1933 Nelson-Atkins Building.

The Nelson-Atkins is located at 45th and Oak Streets, Kansas City, MO. Hours are 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Friday through Monday; 10 a.m.–9 p.m. Thursday; closed Tuesday and Wednesday. Admission to the museum is free to everyone; timed tickets must be secured on the website. For museum information, phone 816.751.1ART (1278) or visit nelson-atkins.org.

For media interested in receiving further information, please contact:

Kathleen Leighton, Manager, Media Relations and Video Production
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
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kleighton@nelson-atkins.org