Minneapolis museum to show Matisse art from Baltimore

The Minneapolis Institute of Arts will exhibit Matisse works from Baltimore Museum of Art's legendary Cone collection in 2014

April 30, 2013 at 8:12PM
(Photography BMA/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Henri Matisse's 1940 oil painting "Striped Robe, Fruit, and Anemones" is part of the show coming to the MIA in February. (Tim Campbell/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Celebrating leisure and sensuality, Henri Matisse used bold colors to depict voluptuous models in lush settings. At his aerie overlooking the sea in Nice, France, he turned out images of nudes and exotically garbed models that have long been prized by discerning collectors of early 20th century art.

"Matisse: Masterworks From the Baltimore Museum of Art," will bring about 80 of the master's works to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts from February 23 through May 18, 2014. The show is expected to have 32 paintings, 16 sculptures and more than 30 works on paper including drawings, original prints and books.

All of the work comes from the legendary collection of Dr. Claribel Cone and her sister Etta Cone of Baltimore who, in the early decades of the 20th century, spent much of their inherited textile fortune gathering some 3000 artworks including key pieces by Matisse (1869-1954), Picasso, Paul Cezanne, Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, and others.

Their 500 Matisses, now in the collection of the Baltimore Museum of Art, are among the largest single collections of the artist's work anywhere. In quantity and quality, their hoard rivals those of the eccentric writer Gertrude Stein and her brother Leo, and the pharmacist Alfred C. Barnes who left his to a namesake museum in Philadelphia.

In Minneapolis, a complimentary exhibit will feature selections from 40 Matisses owned by the Minneapolis museum. Among them will be the famous 1907 "Boy with a Butterfly Net" which depicts Leo Stein's nephew; "White Plumes," a 1919 portrait of a favorite model; and "Les Pensees de Pascal," a lovely 1924 still life.

The show replaces a previously announced exhibition of portraits on loan from the Centre Pompidou in Paris. Plans for that exhibition were scratched when the French institution withdrew key paintings that Minneapolis had counted on getting. The Matisse show offered a promising alternative with pictures whose provenance and quality set a high mark among American collections of early 20th century French art.

Ticket prices are expected to be $20 on weekends and $18 weekdays.

about the writer

about the writer

Mary Abbe

More from No Section

See More
FILE -- A rent deposit slot at an apartment complex in Tucker, Ga., on July 21, 2020. As an eviction crisis has seemed increasingly likely this summer, everyone in the housing market has made the same plea to Washington: Send money — lots of it — that would keep renters in their homes and landlords afloat. (Melissa Golden/The New York Times) ORG XMIT: XNYT58
Melissa Golden/The New York Times

It’s too soon to tell how much the immigration crackdown is to blame.