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Museum Collections: The Weil Collection of Old Master Prints
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Detail from: Antonio Canal, called Canaletto (Italian,
1697-1768), An Imaginary View of Venice, ca.1735-1743, Etching on
paper. Gift of Jean K. Weil in memory of Adolph 'Bucks' Weil, Jr. |
The Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts has one of the finest collections and
facilities for the study of works on paper of any municipal museum in the
country. Thanks to the generosity of Mr. Adolph Bucks Weil, Jr.,
a connoisseur of European prints made before 1900, the Museum holds works
by artists from the fifteenth to the nineteenth century as part of its European
print collection.
Many of the outstanding printmakers of art history are represented in the
Museums collection from fifteenth-century engravers such as
Martin Schongauer and Albrecht Dürer to one of the worlds most
beloved practitioners, Rembrandt van Rijn. Etchings by Canaletto, aquatints
by Goya and lithographs by Whistler the array of printmaking techniques
and artists presents the rich heritage of this art form in Western culture. |
The Weil Graphic Arts Study Center
The Weil Graphic Arts Study Center is named in honor of Adolph
Bucks Weil, Jr., a prominent collector of Old Master prints.
Mr. Weil was the person most responsible for the creation of the Museum's
collection of Old Master prints, donating both works of art and funds to
support the collection.
The study center serves as a rotating gallery for the installation of works
on paper as well as a state-of-the-art classroom and meeting space. Groups
of students are able to utilize the facility to further explore topics in
art history related to graphic arts, aided by a special slantboard case which
allows more flexible installation of matted paper works. A special feature
of the room is a CD-ROM presentation on the Weil print collection. The
interactive display allows visitors to learn more about selected pieces in
the collection as they visit the room.
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Prints by Rembrandt van Rijn
One of the great masters of printmaking, Rembrandt van Rijn, is
particularly well represented in the Museum's collection. These fine impressions
were largely the gift of Mr. Adolph Bucks Weil, Jr., an ardent
collector of that artists work. Landscapes, such as The Omval, as well
as lyrical and beautiful portraits such as The Great Jewish Bride, are
periodically exhibited in the Museum's print galleries.
Pastoral themes were a major element in Rembrandts printmaking oeuvre.
He frequently depicted the intersection of nature and mans world-the
built environment of towns or cities. In this work, the composition is divided
between nature on the left (represented by the aged, knarled tree trunk)
and the encroaching town across the river. Rembrandt discovered these vistas
on walks that he took near Amsterdam, along the dikes that held back the
water to preserve the life of the Dutch countryside.
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Like many of Rembrandts prints, this work was not titled by the artist.
The Great Jewish Bride is a popular title, based upon the womans flowing
hair (a nuptial tradition of the time) and the scroll she holds in her hand.
(It was once thought to be a wedding contract.) Subsequent scholarship has
suggested many other possibilities for the identity of this sitter, including
the biblical heroine, Esther. |
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This image of a beggar is believed to be a self-portrait. Rembrandt was known
to carry sketchbooks with him as he went about his daily routine, and he
often made spontaneous drawings of people he saw on the street. Other sources
for figures in his prints were works of art he saw or he collected. This
depiction of a beggar is particularly poignant-the facial expression is
ambiguous, simultaneously suggesting both sadness and belligerence. |
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The Goldsmith is a tiny print, but its composition suggests the great love
of the artist for his creations. Craftspersons were respected for their skill
in his day, but Rembrandt suggests in this print that they were more than
mere artisans. He captures the tenderness and protective emotions of man
who has invested his own life-force into the product of his mind, as well
as his hands.
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