The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) has added its first painting by Tarsila do Amaral, A Lua (the moon) (1928), to its fifth-floor collection galleries. The acquisition follows the first US exhibition of the Brazilian Modernists work, held at MoMA and the Art Institute of Chicago. Ann Temkin, MoMAs head curator of painting and sculpture, says the show last year “confirmed our belief that a painting by Tarsila was essential to MoMAs collection”, despite the “major challenge” of finding a suitable work on the market. The Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo reports that A Lua was purchased from the collection of Fanny Feffer and is worth around $20m. A MoMA spokeswoman declined to disclose the provenance or the price.
The Van Gogh Museum has purchased 91 prints by the Impressionist Camille Pissarro from the private collection of Samuel Josefowitz. The group includes a late self-portrait of Pissarro, the only such work he ever etched. The French artist was a major influence on Van Gogh, who referred to him as “Père Pissarro”, and shared his interest in rural nature and peasant scenes. The museum acquired the prints for an undisclosed price with support from its patrons group The Yellow House, the Vincent van Gogh Foundation and the BankGiro Loterij, the national cultural lottery of the Netherlands. Forty-two of the works are on view at the museum until 26 May, alongside 14 prints by Pissarro already in the collection.
The J. Paul Getty Museum has received 105 glass-plate holograms made by 20 contemporary artists in collaboration with C-Project, a now-defunct holographic studio in New York. The donation from the collectors Guy and Nora Barron includes 89 non-editioned master plates made in the 1990s and 16 final-editioned holograms created in 2017 from the work of Louise Bourgeois, Chuck Close and Ed Ruscha. Guy Barron became involved with C-Project shortly after it was formed in 1994; it ceaseRead More – Source
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