On a recent trip to Philadelphia I had occasion to visit the Barnes Foundation with my friend Winter. This is a wonderful collection of art from around the world and from different time periods. It is housed in a magnificent building that is an architectural wonder. The photographs in this post are my impression of my visit and in no way exhaustive of what I saw.
The following information from the brochure will give you some more facts about the collection and the philosophy behind it. I must say I was not prepared for what I saw and my jaw was agape from the time I walked into first gallery until the last.
The Barnes is home to a world-class collection of impressionist, and early modernist paintings, with especially deep holdings in Renoir, Cezanne, Matisse, and Picasso. Assembled by Dr. Albert C. Barnes between 1912-1951, the collection also includes important examples of African Art, Native American pottery and jewelry, Pennsylvania German furniture, and wrought iron metalwork.
The minute you walk into the galleries you’re in an experience like no other. Here you will find paintings by Vincent van Gogh, Henri Matisse, And Pablo Picasso, hanging next to ordinary household objects: a door hinge, a spatula, a yarn spinner. On one wall you might see a French medieval sculpture displayed with a Navajo textile. Dr. Barnes chose to combine objects from different cultures, genres, and times to create diverse displays he called “ensembles.”
These ensembles, each one carefully put together by Dr. Barnes himself, are meant to show the surprising similarities between objects we don’t normally thing of as belonging together. He arranged the works according to light, color, and space-principles that he called the “universal language of art.”
Dr. Barnes believed that art had the power to improve minds and transform lives. In 1922 he established the Barnes foundation as a school for learning how to see and appreciate art. He had a gallery built on Merion, a Philadelphia suburb, to house his growing collection. He held classes in the gallery so that students could learn directly from the art.
In 2012, after much controversy, his collection was moved to Philadelphia.
That place is chock-full of exquisite impressionistic art. Truly impressive. Thank you so much for sharing the photos and the info about the place. I’m imagining there is a very euphoric vibe in that building as I agree that art is good for the soul, both the creation of it and the regarding/experiencing it.
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You’re welcome! Glad you liked.
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So many of my favorite artists, lucky you.
Thank you for sharing the experience, Benn!
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You’re welcome! Glad you liked!
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https://healthfoodfonts.wordpress.com/2019/09/30/giving-yourself-a-me-time-a-best-mind-therapy/
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Thanks for posting those remarkable images; the whole gallery seems a lot more inviting than the usual sterile white-walled collections.
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Thanks for your comments!
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