Friday, September 12, 2014

Bean (1997): Mr. Bean Destroys the Portrait of "Whistler's Mother"


     Directed by Mel Smith, and co-written by Rowan Atkinson, Bean (1997) also known as Bean: The Ultimate Disaster Movie was the attempt to Americanize the hit British comedy of the Mr. Bean TV show. The story has Mr. Bean, as a faux-representive of the London Royal National Gallery, traveling to a Los Angeles museum to unveil the recently purchased "Whistler's Mother" by James McNeill Whistler. Hijinks, mayhem and an art-related nightmare ensue as Bean destroys the painting and disrupts the life of the museum's curator. Rowan Atkinson is great as Mr. Bean. The supporting cast is good as well, including Burt Reynolds and Peter MacNicol.



Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean


Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Burt Reynolds and Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean

"Bean"- movie trailer

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Pablo Picasso's "Mother and Child by a Fountain": Stolen, Recovered and Lost Again.

Pablo Picasso "Mother and Child by a Fountain, 1901. The Met. by Travis Simpkins

Pablo Picasso's "Mother and Child by a Fountain": Stolen, Recovered and Lost Again.
A Visual Footnote to the 1972 Worcester Art Museum Heist
by Travis Simpkins

      Painted in 1901, “Mother and Child by a Fountain” summarizes Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period in cool monochrome, loose brushwork and small scale. Although works from this early period are highly prized now, the artist had some trouble selling them at the time. This small painting, however, greatly enchanted Schofield Thayer, the eccentric publisher of The Dialliterary magazine, and he became the third owner of the piece in 1923. Between 1919 and 1924, Thayer amassed a formidable collection of Modern Art, consisting of 450 masterworks by Picasso, Braque, Matisse, Lachaise, Munch, Chagall and others. Eager to share the works with the public, he entrusted his collection to the Worcester Art Museum on a long-term loan, with the implied expectation that WAM would be gifted the collection upon his death. “Mother and Child by a Fountain” arrived at the Worcester Art Museum in 1931, and hung there undisturbed for four decades.
     On May 17, 1972, under the direction of Florian “Al” Monday, two armed thieves entered the Worcester Art Museum during open hours and removed four valuable works from the walls of the European Galleries. Rembrandt’s “Saint Bartholomew” was the primary goal of the heist, but two works by Gauguin, “Brooding Woman” and “Mademoiselle Manthey”, and Picasso’s “Mother and Child by a Fountain” were targeted as well. As the thieves made their haphazard escape, they shot a security guard near the front door when he hindered their exit. The four stolen works made a few unglamorous stops over the course of the next few weeks, including Al Monday’s drop-ceiling, the trunk of a car and a hayloft at a contaminated pig farm in Rhode Island. The tireless efforts of the FBI and Worcester Police, spurred by tips from informants, led to all four of the stolen works being returned to the Worcester Art Museum (read Anthony Amore’s book, “Stealing Rembrandts,” for further details), and “Mother and Child by a Fountain” was placed on view once again.
     A decade later in 1982, in an ironic twist, “Mother and Child by a Fountain” was removed from the Worcester Art Museum yet again. This time, however, the loss was both permanent and legal. Unbeknownst to museum administration, Schofield Thayer had written WAM out of his will. When he died in 1982, it was dictated that his collection was to go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Apparently, several decades earlier, Thayer had taken extreme offense to a disparaging comment made about his collection (it had been called “an intellectual sewer”). He simply amended his will, keeping his discontentment to himself. A subsequent legal battle was decided in the Met’s favor, and the Worcester Art Museum had to relinquish the Dial Collection. Sadly, because WAM had planned on inheriting all of those Modern works, they had built the rest of their collection around it. As a result, the loss of the Dial Collection left a large gap in their holdings of 20th Century Art.

     Today, Picasso’s “Mother and Child by a Fountain” resides in a storage area at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, currently off view.


 
FBI and Worcester Police. Worcester Art Museum Heist, 1972.


Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #5

     As the Worcester Art Museum collection grew during the first decades of the 1900's, the abundance of artworks necessitated the construction of new gallery spaces. The first two additions to the original building, in 1920 and 1933, reflected a common trend towards smaller, more intimate rooms to showcase the diverse holdings.
      -The first photo, from 1920, was taken the year the first addition was built and shows the entrance to the Lower Third Floor galleries (then considered to be the Upper 2nd floor) from the staircase landing. Neat and tight rows of paintings fill the wall spaces with a steady, balanced pattern. Subsequent photos in future updates will show the diverse variety of eras from which the paintings originate... interesting groups ranging from late 14th Century Renaissance works to early 20th Century plein-air paintings. I tried to ascertain what the original wall color was, but could only find a reference calling it a "light color". Oh well... The same view today, now seen through glass doors, maintains much of the original architectural integrity after 94 years. The openings to the sides of the center doorway had been walled-up until fairly recently, though, creating a semi-claustrophobic entryway. Their re-opening restored some visual flow between the rooms.
     -The second photo, shows European Gallery 207 looking into Gallery 209, before and after the east section's most recent renovation. In the 2008 photo, overhead fluorescent lighting almost gives the appearance of daylight. Today, the rooms have increased scale with larger paintings and the nice addition of door caps (which had been included in the original architectural drawings from the 1930's, but for some reason, had never been put in place). It's amazing how slight changes and simple elements can transform a space.


     -The sketch depicts one of my favorite parts of the annual "Flora in Winter" event. Each year, for several quick days, the beautiful and dramatic 18th Century Venetian marble bust of "Flora" is brought out of storage and put on display, set to preside over the Renaissance Court.

Third Floor Galleries. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

European Galleries. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Flora, 18th Century. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins