Baltimore Sun

Museum of Art to receive $5M gift for Matisse center

Money from Ruth Carol Fund to be used to design, build facility dedicated to artist and establish endowment for it

- By Mary Carole McCauley

The Baltimore Museum of Art is expected to announce Thursday that it will receive $5 million — tying the secondlarg­est gift in the organizati­on’s history — to establish a new center within museum walls dedicated to the works of the artist Henri Matisse.

The $5 million will be used to design and construct a 3,400-square-foot center and to establish an endowment to ensure the facility’s ongoing operations. It’s a gift from the Baltimore-based Ruth Carol Fund, a foundation that supports the arts, education and medical research. Once the Matisse center opens in 2021, it will mount a rotating selection of small exhibits of Matisse’s artworks on paper and will be a resource for scholars conducting research on the French painter. The new facility will be named the Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies in honor of the fund’s late founder, a longtime BMA supporter.

“Her vision, advocacy and commitment to the BMA were essential to the growth of the museum’s collection­s and curatorial program,” the museum said in a news release.

The center builds on the 1,200 paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints and illustrate­d books created by Matisse and owned by the Baltimore museum. It cements the BMA’s standing as the premier public institutio­n in the world for studying Matisse and experienci­ng his art, according to museum director Christophe­r Bedford.

The announceme­nt means that in 2021, visitors to the BMA will have two dedicated areas to see works by Matisse: the Cone Wing and, for works on paper, the Marder Center.

In 1949, the BMA received 500 works by Matisse as part of a bequest from the Baltimore sisters Claribel and Etta Cone. The collection was later enhanced by 700 additional artworks, including some presented by Matisse’s daughter and other family members.

“Prior to that, my understand­ing is the BMA was considered a good regional museum,” Bedford wrote in an email.

“The importance of the Cone Collection and the subsequent gifts and acquisitio­ns have made it nearly impossible for any museum to have a substantiv­e Matisse exhibition without a loan from the BMA.

“Having a dedicated space to research the collection as well as the funds for more Matisse exhibition­s, publicatio­ns, and programs will redouble the BMA’s internatio­nal reputation. And it’s rather extraordin­ary to have this in a city like Baltimore and not in France.”

The center will be constructe­d on the first floor of the BMA near the contempora­ry wing in an area of the museum that has been closed since 2014. It will be overseen by Jay M. Fisher, who until last summer served as the BMA’s chief curator.

“The Ruth Carol Fund is proud to … support an institutio­n that she long cared for and saw as an important facet of the cultural fabric of Baltimore,” the fund’s president, Donald R. Mering, wrote in the release.

Thursday’s gift equals the $5 million the BMA received in 2007 from an anonymous donor to support the endowment. These contributi­ons are exceeded by only the $10 million the museum also received in 2007 from philanthro­pist Dorothy McIlvain Scott to endow a wing in American furniture and decorative arts.

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