The Frick
Collection became a public institution when Henry Clay Frick bequeathed his art
collection, as well as his Upper East Side residence at 1 East 70th Street, to
the public for the enjoyment of future generations.
Frick
started his substantial collection as soon as he began amassing his fortune. A
considerable portion of his art collection is located in his former residence
“Clayton” in Pittsburgh, which is today a part of the Frick Art &
Historical Center. Another part was given by his daughter and heiress Helen to
the Frick Fine Arts Building, which is on the campus of the University of
Pittsburgh.
The family
did not permanently move from Pittsburgh to New York until 1905. Henry Frick
initially leased the William H. Vanderbilt House at 640 Fifth Avenue, to which
he moved a substantial portion of his collection. He had his permanent
residence built between 1912 and 1914 by Thomas Hastings of Carrère and
Hastings. He stayed in the house until his death in 1919. He willed the house
and all of its contents, including the works of art, furniture, and decorative
objects, as a public museum. His widow Adelaide Howard Childs Frick, however,
retained the right of residence and continued living in the mansion with her
daughter Helen. After Adelaide Frick died in 1931, the conversion of the house
into a public museum started.
John
Russell Pope altered and enlarged the building in the early 1930s to adapt it
to use as a public institution. It opened to the public on December 16, 1935.
Various additions to the architecture and landscape architecture of the museum
site have been considered over the years including the placement of a prominent
magnolia garden from the 1930s. As stated by the museum announcements: "As
a result of a decision of the Board of Trustees in 1939, three magnolias were
selected for the Fifth Avenue garden. The two trees on the lower tier are
Saucer Magnolias (Magnolia soulangeana) and the species on the upper tier by
the flagpole is a Star Magnolia (Magnolia stellata)."
Expansion
and controversy
Additional
expansions of the museum took place in 1977 and in 2011. In 2014, the museum
announced further expansion plans, but came up against community opposition
because it would result in the loss of a garden designed by noted British
landscape architect Russell Page. Landscape preservation advocate Charles A.
Birnbaum of The Cultural Landscape Foundation garnered widespread attention
when he and others disproved statements that the garden had been intended as only
a temporary installation. The garden was saved when Birnbaum produced a
contradictory original document issued by the Frick clearly identifying the
space as a permanent garden. The Frick ultimately dropped those plans and is
said to be considering other options.
In March
2021, the Collection temporarily relocated to Frick Madison, at the Marcel
Breuer-designed building at 945 Madison Avenue, during the renovation of the
Henry Clay Frick House.
Collection
The Frick
is one of the preeminent small art museums in the United States, with a
high-quality collection of old master paintings and fine furniture housed in
nineteen galleries of varying size within the former residence. Frick had
intended the mansion to become a museum eventually, and a few of the paintings
are still arranged according to Frick's design. Besides its permanent
collection, the Frick has always organized small, focused temporary
exhibitions.
The
collection features some of the best-known paintings by major European artists
as well as numerous works of sculpture and porcelain. It also has 18th-century
French furniture, Limoges enamel, and Oriental rugs. After Frick's death, his
daughter, Helen Clay Frick, and the Board of Trustees expanded the collection:
nearly half of the collection's artworks have been acquired since 1919.
Although the museum cannot lend the works of art that belonged to Frick, as
stipulated in his will, The Frick Collection does lend artworks and objects
acquired since his death.
Included in
the collection are Jean-Honoré Fragonard's masterpiece The Progress of Love,
three paintings by Johannes Vermeer including Mistress and Maid, two paintings
by Jacob van Ruisdael including Quay at Amsterdam, and Piero della Francesca's
St. John the Evangelist.
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