by Brittany Good
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Situated next to Morgan’s Madison Avenue home, the library was turned into a public institution in 1924 by Morgan’s son, banker, and philanthropist, J. P. Morgan (1867–1943). Over the years the Morgan has continually expanded both its holdings and its physical space. Significant purchases and generous gifts have given way to an admirably varied collection of rare materials, Americana, and twentieth-century works. In 1928 the Annex building was erected, replacing Morgan’s residence and connecting to the McKim library by means of a gallery. Sixty years later, J. P. Morgan’s mid-nineteenth-century brownstone was added to the complex and, in 1991, a garden court was constructed to tie the Morgan campus together. 2006 brought the largest expansion in the Morgan’s history, adding 75,000-square feet and increasing the exhibition space by more than fifty percent. Built by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Renzo Piano, a performance hall, a Madison Avenue entrance, a reading room, collection storage, and various other amenities were included in the project. |
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The Morgan’s museum collection is divided into eight main categories. In 1909 Morgan established the core of the drawings and prints collection when he purchased approximately 1,500 Old Master drawings from English artist-collector Charles Fairfax Murray. With nearly 12,000 pieces spanning from the fourteenth to the twenty-first century, the drawings and prints holdings include works by Michelangelo, Paul Cézanne, Sir Anthony Van Dyck, and John James Audubon (Fig. 1), as well as the largest collection of Rembrandt etchings in the United States. |
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The paintings and art objects collection consists of works mostly acquired by Pierpont Morgan. However, the selection on view represents a fraction of Morgan’s original holdings as thousands of works were given away upon his death, mainly to The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Wadsworth Atheneum. What remains is a well-honed group of many of Morgan’s favorite acquisitions, spanning from the early Mesopotamian and Egyptian periods through Greco-Roman culture, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance. With the Medieval pieces at the core, there are also Renaissance and Baroque masterpieces, miniatures on ivory, and Qing porcelain. |
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The literary and historical manuscripts include working drafts of poetry and prose, complete works, and letters of correspondence. Morgan began avidly collecting such works during the 1890s and was able to purchase documents either handwritten or signed by such historical luminaries as Elizabeth I, Napoleon, Voltaire, and Charlotte Brontë, as well as the sole surviving manuscript of John Milton’s Paradise Lost. In 1997 the Morgan was gifted over 1,500 letters from the Pierre Matisse Foundation as well as records of the gallery installations of Balthus, Marc Chagall, Jean Dubuffet, Alberto Giacometti, and Joan Miró. |
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Fig. 4: Diaries of Henry David Thoreau (American, 1817–1862), 1837–61, with pencils made by J. Thoreau & Co., the Thoreau family pencil factory. Purchased by Pierpont Morgan, 1909. |
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The Morgan’s collection of printed books and bindings is noted for its quality and diversity. Highlights include three Gutenberg bibles, the first major book printed with a movable type printing press, and works by Lord Byron, Edgar Allan Poe, and Mark Twain among many others. A major gift in 1998 from The Carter Burden Collection of American Literature bolstered the twentieth-century holdings with works by Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, Gertrude Stein, and Tennessee Williams. |
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Hosting multiple exhibitions at a time, The Morgan will be showing diary entries from John Steinbeck, Albert Einstein, and Stuart Davis, among others, in The Diary: Three Centuries of Private Lives (January 21–May 22, 2011) (Fig. 4). The diaries allow the viewer a glimpse into the personal reflections, struggles, and daily activities of well-know cultural figures. Mannerism and Modernism: The Kasper Collection of Drawings and Photographs (January 21-May 1, 2011) exhibits photographs from the renowned twentieth-century fashion designer’s private collection for the first time. Focusing on sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Old Master drawings from the Mannerist period, modern and contemporary drawings, and photography (Fig. 5), Modernism and Mannerism features the works of Polidoro da Caravaggio, Henri Matisse, and Robert Mapplethorpe. |
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