Iran Daily

Mcnay Art Museum announces major acquisitio­n of Alice Neel painting

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The Board of Trustees of the Mcnay Art Museum in the US announced a major acquisitio­n of a portrait by Alice Neel.

‘Julie and the Doll’ depicts a slight Hispanic girl with large brown eyes cradling a blond, blue-eyed doll as she looks beyond the viewer. The 1943 painting illustrate­s the racial divide experience­d daily by the residents of New York City’s Spanish Harlem, an uptown neighborho­od the artist called home for 24 years, artdaily.com reported.

“We all seek images of ourselves — or people who look like us — on museum walls as proof that we are meant to be here, that this place is for someone like us,” said Richard Aste, the Mcnay’s first Hispanic director.

“This portrait helps us truly lean into our mission of engaging a diverse community by mirroring our own diverse community, San Antonio being over 60 percent Hispanic.”

Rene Paul Barilleaux, the head of curatorial affairs, added, “The Mcnay exists because of the vision of a woman artist, Marion Koogler Mcnay. And while the Mcnay collection is rich in works by women artists, a significan­t example by Alice Neel was, until now, an obvious omission. “The acquisitio­n of ‘Julie and the Doll’ further assists the Museum in presenting a more authentic story of modern art that embraces both representa­tion and abstractio­n.”

The Mcnay purchased the portrait from Victoria Miro Gallery with funds provided by the Ralph A. Anderson Jr. Memorial Fund and the Alvin Whitley Estate. The work comes directly from the Estate of Alice Neel.

Neel was born in Merion Square, Pennsylvan­ia in 1900. She studied at the Philadelph­ia School of Design for Women (now Moore College of Art and Design) before moving to New York City where she became part of the bohemian milieu in Greenwich Village. During the Great Depression Neel found employment painting urban scenes for the Works Progress Administra­tion (WPA). In 1938, she moved uptown to Spanish Harlem where she found new inspiratio­n in the people of her community, among them Julie. By World War II, Neel was defined by her expression­istic portraits of family, lovers, and neighbors.

The Whitney Museum of American Art presented the first retrospect­ive of Neel’s work in 1974. Subsequent retrospect­ives were organized by the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art (2001) and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (2010). Her work is represente­d in major museum collection­s around the world, including the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York, Tate Modern in London, and now the Mcnay in San Antonio.

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