E.G. Bührle Collection of French Impressionism Plans to Move To Kunsthaus Zürich
Written by Edward Danzig Monday, 29 August 2011 21:28
ZURICH.- Today, 60 years after it first saw the light of day, Emil Bührle’s is still one of the leading collections of 20th-century art. It focuses on French Impressionist painting, which has always enjoyed vivid interest in Switzerland and is also represented in the Kunsthaus Zürich’s own collection. At the Bührle Collection’s current home, however, in Zurich’s Zollikerstrasse, the private collection had been seen annually by no more than 10,000 visitors before even those numbers dwindled to just a few hundred following the notorious robbery in February of 2008. The Kunsthaus, on the other hand, welcomes between 200,000 and 300,000 guests each year, eager to view its examples of French painting and of the schools that preceded and followed it.
For this reason, the
Foundation E.G. Bührle Collection has accepted the Zürcher Kunstgesellschaft’s
invitation to move into the Kunsthaus extension on Heimplatz, which is due to be
completed by 2015. David Chipperfield’s design offers the Collection over 1000
m2 of display area, or more than a quarter of the space reserved in the
extension building for the museum’s permanent collection; the skylights planned
for the extension's second upper level will afford ideal lighting conditions for
the exhibition of just such Impressionist open-air paintings as the Bührle
Collection boasts. The combination of the Kunsthaus Zürich’s own collection with
the Bührle Collection will make the museum Europe’s leading centre for French
Impressionism outside of Paris. The artistic concept for the New Kunsthaus
provides for the museum’s examples of classical modernism to be juxtaposed with
the Collection’s holdings, and thus to offer the viewing public a seamless
experience of the epoch.
More than 170 works are to be entrusted to the Kunsthaus for an unlimited period. In turn, the Kunsthaus undertakes to maintain the Collection, and to present it as a unified collection into perpetuity. The Foundation will be unable to remove the Collection, whether in its entirety or in part, so long as the Kunstgesellschaft cleaves to its undertaking to exhibit the Collection as an integral whole in the rooms provided for it within the complex.
The Foundation may not sell any of the works comprised by the Collection. The Foundation E.G. Bührle Collection will continue to enjoy juridical autonomy when the works of art move to their new location. Since the Foundation has no financial means at its disposal, the collector’s family are studying the feasibility of a private donation to the Kunsthaus extension. The permanent loan of the paintings is itself of incalculable value.
Zurich and the
Kunstgesellschaft alike routinely profited during Emil Bührle’s lifetime from
his active championing of the Kunsthaus Zürich; indeed, works like Claude
Monet’s large-format "Water Lilies" and Auguste Rodin’s ‘Gates of Hell’, which
are among the industrialist’s gifts to the museum, have become an integral part
of Switzerland’s oldest combined collection and exhibition space. Furthermore,
by financing an exhibition wing for the museum in the 1950s Emil Georg Bührle
created a venue used to this day for unique events at which art and its public
are brought face to face. Provided Zurich’s electorate approves the necessary
credit facility, to be put to a popular vote in 2011, the extension project from
the drawing board of the renowned British architect will be built in all its
pristine elegance, and the traditional collaboration of public museum and
private collection will continue. If, however, the credit facility is not
approved, Zurich will have missed its chance, and the Collection will remain in
its present private museum, where security risks and restricted infrastructure
render it inaccessible to the greater part of the public.
Zurich is thus faced with a unique opportunity: to consolidate in the form of a permanent partnership the affinity first recognized two generations ago. Together, the Zürcher Kunstgesellschaft, the Board of the Foundation E.G. Bührle Collection and the collector’s family have set their sights on success at the polls – among other things by staging a show of the Bührle Collection at the Kunsthaus Zürich, to run from February 12 to May 16, 2010. The exhibition includes comprehensive documentation of the history of the E.G. Bührle Collection, as well as a discussion of the Collection’s future at the side of the Zürcher Kunstgesellschaft.
The art collection of Emil Georg Bührle (1890-1956), a Zurich industrialist, is among the most important 20th-century private collections of European art. French Impressionism and Post-Impressionism constitute the core of the collection. Around these works is an ensemble of 19th-century French art that paved the way for Impressionism or developed alongside it. In the other direction, the core collection opens out onto the Nabis, Fauves, Cubists and other representatives of the French avant-garde after 1900. Visit : The Foundation E.G. Bührle Collection at : www.buehrle.ch/?lang=en
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