An American Place: The Barney A. Ebsworth Collection comes to Christie’s
The story of the greatest privately owned collection of American Modernist art ever to come to market, and Barney A. Ebsworth’s single-minded determination to buy only the very best — including masterpieces by Hopper, Sheeler, O’Keeffe, de Kooning, Pollock and more
The Barney A. Ebsworth Collection represents an extraordinary
achievement in the history of collecting, one that illuminates
the rise of American art across the 20th century. The origins
of this singular assemblage, however, lie across the Atlantic
in France.
‘My real interest in art didn’t start until 1957,’ revealed
Ebsworth (1934-2018) in his autobiography. ‘I was not an art
connoisseur. I visited [the Louvre] because it was such an
integral part of Paris, and what I found there changed me.’
Ebsworth was serving in the US Army at the time, having ‘willed
himself to France’ after completing his basic training. Reading
Proust at college had ignited his love of the country, and
when he stepped off a train from Germany he described feeling that he was in ‘a glamorous place covered in history’.
His first trip to Paris lasted three days and proved to be
a pivotal moment in his life. He talked of walking from exhibit
to exhibit in the Louvre ‘in awe of how it felt to be surrounded
by such great works of art’. It made such a deep impression
on him, that he left wanting ‘to understand the pictures,
the time periods they were from, the artists who had created
them’.
Equipped with an enquiring mind and a thirst for knowledge,
Ebsworth spent his spare time in the local library studying
the art he’d seen the previous weekend, and preparing for
his next trip to the museum. ‘With no mentor and no formal
classes, I trained myself in art history just by reading
and looking,’ he said. ‘My eyes were my mentors.’
‘In real estate, they say three things matter: location, location, location. For me, collecting art was about quality, quality, quality’ — Barney Ebsworth
He had Paris to thank for more than just his new-found love
of art. On New Year’s Eve 1956, Ebsworth met Martine deVisme,
a 19-year-old French girl, at a USO party, and began dancing
with her on the stroke of midnight. ‘Little did I know that
she was going to become my wife,’ he wrote years later.
They married in March 1958, and Ebsworth brought his new bride
home to St. Louis where they had a daughter, Christiane.
He embarked on the first steps of what would become a hugely
successful career in the travel industry, buying a small
travel firm that would eventually grow into INTRAV, an international
company providing luxury group travel around the globe. And
as his career progressed, so too did his love of art.
‘Nobody starts as a collector,’ Ebsworth mused. ‘You buy a
few things you like, and then eight or ten items in, someone
says, “Boy, you have a great collection,” and then you realise
you have a collection.’ His own journey began with 17th-century Dutch pictures and Japanese scroll paintings, until a 1971 business trip to Rotterdam led to a conversation
over dinner, which set him on a different, more defining
course.
Barney Ebsworth in his Seattle home, known as ‘An American Place’, with (behind him) Gaston Lachaise (1882-1935), Standing Woman, 1932. Bronze. 88½ in high. Estimate: $1,500,00-2,500,000. Sold for: $3,732,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York. Photograph: Brian Smale
Ebsworth was invited to visit a private collection containing
multiple Old Master paintings by
Rembrandt and
Frans Hals. Realising he could not compete, he returned
home and arranged a meeting with Charles Buckley, then director
of the St. Louis Art Museum.
‘[Buckley] suggested French Impressionism,’ Ebsworth recalled.
‘I told him I couldn’t afford that. He then suggested School
of Paris and I told him I couldn’t afford that either. So
he suggested American Impressionism, and I said, “What is
it?” Somehow we got into American modernism, and that’s how
it started for me.’
It was agreed Ebsworth should start with the Ashcan School
— early 20th-century painters of ordinary New York scenes such
as
Robert Henri,
William Glackens,
Everett Shinn,
George Luks and
John Sloan.
‘In real estate, they say three things matter: location, location,
location. For me,’ said Ebsworth, ‘collecting art was about
quality, quality, quality. I would rather have a smaller
collection of the finest pictures than dozens of so-so ones.’
Vowing that he would only buy the very best, or ‘only what
could hang on the museum wall right now, and not sometime
in the future’, Ebsworth’s other ground rules were to buy works only by dead artists — so that he could make choices
from their whole range of work — and to focus on objects
rather than artists. ‘All that mattered was what I could
see in the piece, and how well I understood it in comparison
to the artist’s range of work,’ he explained.
In 1972, the year he founded the Royal Cruise Line, Ebsworth
and Buckley identified William Glackens’ 1914 work Café Lafayette (Portrait of Kay Laurell), above, which was being offered at auction in New York. He described
his initial impression as ‘love at first sight’.
In the same sale was an intriguing watercolour by
Charles E. Burchfield, which prompted Ebsworth to embark
on a further bout of research. ‘In my hour-long crash course,
I decided that it was painted during his best period and
that if the painting was in my range, I would buy it.’ He
left New York as the proud new owner of both works.
Edward Hopper (1882-1967), Chop Suey, painted in 1929. Oil on canvas. 32 x 38 in (81.3 x 96.5 cm). Sold for: $91,875,000 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
At his next auction, Ebsworth bought three pictures by
Charles Sheeler. He then added small paintings by Stuart Davis and Albert Bierstadt before finding himself at another
fork in the road. Was it to be early 20th-century or 19th-century art? He opted for the former.
Stuart Davis (1892-1964), Still Life in the Street, painted in 1941. Oil on canvas. 10⅛ x 12⅛ in (25.7 x 30.8 cm). Sold for: $780,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
Acting as a trusted guide, Buckley encouraged Ebsworth to focus
on the achievements of American Modernists such as
Edward Hopper,
Georgia O’Keeffe,
Charles Demuth,
Joseph Stella, and Charles Sheeler. He also introduced
the collector to reputable dealers such as Joan Washburn,
Antoinette Kraushaar and Virginia Zabriskie.
Buckley suggested to Ebsworth that he should build
a collection of the best 12 American Modernist paintings
he could buy. If he found a 13th painting that was better
than one he already owned, he should sell that painting to
buy the new one. Within a year, though, Ebsworth had moved to buy a 13th, 14th and 15th picture.
Charles Sheeler (1883-1965), Cat-walk, painted in 1947. Oil on canvas. 24 x 20 in (61 x 50.8 cm). Sold for: $1,332,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
The next significant milestone was the 1973 auction of The
Estate of Edith Gregor Halpert, owner of the Downtown Gallery
and the primary American Modernist dealer after the death
of
Alfred Stieglitz. Ebsworth later admitted he should have
bought all 20 paintings on offer, confessing that he subsquently
paid $1.5 million for a work that had been hammered down
for $35,000.
In that auction, he lost out to John D. Rockefeller on a
John Marin watercolour, but was the successful bidder
for Black, White and Blue by Georgia O’Keeffe,
paying $47,000 for the work. When he was subsequently introduced
to Lloyd Goodrich, the director of the Whitney Museum of
Art — and curator of the 1970 O’Keeffe retrospective — told
him that he considered the 1930 abstract canvas to be ‘O’Keeffe’s
greatest picture’.
Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986), Horn and Feather, painted in 1937. Oil on canvas. 9 x 14 in (22.9 x 35.6 cm). Sold for: $612,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
‘The reason I understood Georgia’s work was that I came to
American artists with European eyes,’ Ebsworth wrote. ‘Europeans
understood this type of art long before Americans did. We
still had a cultural inferiority complex that told us all
great works of art came from Europe.
Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986), Beauford Delaney, executed in 1943. Charcoal on paper. 24¾ x 18½ in (62.9 x 47 cm). Sold for: $372,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
‘American art didn’t blossom until after World War II with
artists such as
Jackson Pollock,
Willem de Kooning and
Mark Rothko. Georgia’s work showed no influence; it didn’t
feel derivative of anything. It was purely American.’ Ebsworth would strike up a lasting friendship with
O’Keeffe and was married to his second wife, Patricia, with
the artist as their witness at her Abiquiu home in New Mexico.
Having satisfied himself that he had bought the very best available
works of American Modernism, Ebsworth turned to museum-quality
works by the great names of Abstract Expressionism, extending
his quest to trace the unique creative experiment that saw
traditions of the European canon being cast aside in favour
of a bold, new interpretation of burgeoning national identity.
Willem de Kooning (1904-1997), Woman as Landscape, painted in 1954-1955. Oil and charcoal on canvas. 65½ x 49⅜ in (166.3 x 125.4 cm). Sold for: $68,937,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
‘What I wanted to do by that time was to turn my American Modernist
collection into the full American 20th century,’ Ebsworth told Christie’s in 2010. ‘And
that was when I became interested in buying a
Klein, a de Kooning, a Pollock, a
Jasper Johns, a
Warhol and a
Hockney.’
Historian Bruce Robertson has argued that ‘the greatest performance
in America — as well as its most original creation — is surely
the United States itself.’ The Ebsworth Collection is a unique
and powerful representation of that national experience,
realised through the visionary talents of Hopper, O’Keeffe,
Pollock,
Joan Mitchell, Franz Kline, de Kooning and others. ‘Here,’
Robertson declares, ‘is where the value of a single great
collection returns.’
Jackson Pollock (1912-1956), Composition with Red Strokes, painted in 1950. Oil, enamel and aluminium paint on canvas. 36⅝ x 25⅝ in (93 x 65.1 cm). Sold for: $55,437,500 on 13 November 2018 at Christie’s in New York
‘Due to luck, timing and research, I managed to put together
the best privately owned collection of American Modernist
paintings in existence,’ Ebsworth reflected. In 1987-88, the
collection toured to The St. Louis Art Museum, the Honolulu
Academy of Arts, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, as
well as a second tour in 2000 where it was shown at the National
Gallery of Art and the Seattle Art Museum.
In many ways, the collection mirrors Barney Ebsworth’s own
journey in connoisseurship. ‘Buying American art of this
period,’ Charles Buckley wrote, ‘has been for Barney an act
of strong personal commitment and discovery. Although the
pleasure that he experiences from collecting is apparent
to all who know him, it is what he learns from living with
these paintings and sculpture that perhaps brings him the
greatest satisfaction.’
In the tradition of such esteemed American collectors as Henry
Clay Frick, Isabella Stewart Gardner and Albert C. Barnes,
Ebsworth, with his third wife Pamela, conceived of his residence, designed by the renowned architect Jim Olson outside Seattle, Washington, as a dialogue between
art and architecture. ‘History is replete with houses that
have contained great art,’ wrote curator Franklin Kelly of
the National Gallery of Art, ‘but not with houses where great
art has been a central factor from their very inception.’
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Throughout his art-collecting life, Barney Ebsworth felt it
was very important to open his home to many museum groups,
academic and art educational programmes in order to allow people
to see the art and experience it for themselves first-hand.
He felt strongly that he was merely a steward for these masterpieces
during his lifetime, and that they should be accessible
to everyone who was interested in learning from and truly
experiencing the art as he did.
Barney Ebsworth was named as one of the ‘World's 200 Greatest
Collectors’ as well as among ‘America's Top 100 Collectors’, and served
as a board member or trustee for the Seattle Art Museum,
the Honolulu Museum of Art, the St. Louis Art Museum, the
National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Smithsonian American
Art Museum, The Frank Lloyd Wright House in Ebsworth Park,
St. Louis, and the Laumeier Sculpture Park. He gave generously over the years to the Seattle Art Museum as well as to many other museums and charitable institutions, including gifts of major early American works.
‘It’s not owning the individual pieces,’ he said, looking back
on the incredible artworks he had lived with. ‘It is the
emotional and intellectual experience of collecting that
has been the most glorious and rewarding aspect of my life.’
Barney A. Ebsworth passed away in April 2018 with Rebecca, his fourth wife, and his daughter by his side.