Pinkney L. Near

Pinkney Near
Born 1927
New York City
Died August 29, 1990
Hartford, Connecticut
Nationality United States
Education Johns Hopkins University, Harvard
Occupation Museum curator, art historian, author
Employer

Cincinnati Art Museum,

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Spouse(s) Henrietta Lloyd Near

Pinkney Near (1927 - 1990) was curator of the Cincinnati Museum of Art and afterward curator of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts for thirty years. He was responsible for the VMFA's acquisition of many treasured works of art, including arranging for the museum to purchase from John Lee Pratt the Francisco Goya portrait of General Nicolas Guye[1][2] and from the collection of Count Karol Lanckoroński of Vienna, Austria, a rare marble sarcophagus dating to the 2nd century B.C.[3] The Guye portrait was long believed to be the most valuable single work of art in the VMFA's collection. The Goya portrait of General Guye is on view prominently in the posthumously created Pinkney Near Gallery at the VMFA.

Biography

Pinkney Near was born in New York City and was raised in Baltimore, Maryland.[4] In 1944 he graduated from St. Paul's School, and in 1950 he became the first art history graduate of Johns Hopkins University. He earned his Master's degree from Harvard in 1951, and he studied French Romanesque sculpture in Paris for three years on a Fulbright scholarship. He remained in Europe an additional year for research on a Sachs fellowship.[5] He married the former Henrietta Lloyd.[6] Every summer Near, a specialist in European art,[7] and his artist wife Henrietta Lloyd Near, a former colleague at the VMFA, traveled to Europe to acquire art for the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Among the cities they visited were Barcelona, London, Rome, and Venice.[8] They were sometimes accompanied by philanthropists Sydney and Frances Lewis, donors of major collections to the museum.

Near began his work at the VMFA in 1958, and, except for three years (1962-1965) when he did graduate work at Harvard and was a curator at the Cincinnati Art Museum, he served at the VMFA in Richmond the remainder of his life.[9] In the early years, when the museum was run by a director and a curator with a small staff, Near became the first full-time curator of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, one of the first state-supported art museums in the United States.

Pinkney Near died August 29, 1990 of pneumonia at a hospital in Hartford, Connecticut, where he and his wife were visiting relatives. He was 63. His memorial service was held at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond,Virginia, where he lived.[4]

Curator of the Cincinnati Museum of Art

In 1964 Pinkney Near, curator of paintings, selected American paintings for the Cincinnati Museum's survey exhibition, ranging from early painters such as John Trumbull, Gilbert Stuart, and Washington Allston to later painters John Marin, Max Weber, George Bellows, Childe Hassam, Robert Vickrey, Marsden Hartley, Stuart Davis, Mark Tobey, Jane Freilicher, Milton Avery, and Tom Wesselmann.[10]

Curator of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Pinkney Near first came to the VMFA in 1954 for a brief visit, when he had just returned from Paris where he studied Romanesque sculpture with his Fulbright Scholarship. A year later, in 1955 he left the museum for a Sachs fellowship which sponsored further study in Europe. However, it was during this brief stay that he began the evolution of the Collections Division, and, when he returned in 1956 at the age of 29, he became curatorial assistant at the museum. Two years later he was promoted to curator but decided to pursue his graduate work at Harvard. When he returned, he became Chief Curator.[11] Pinkney Near served as VMFA curator for 30 years, much of that time as chief administrative curator. In 1988 [12] Near was named to the newly created post of Paul Mellon Curator and senior research curator, a post in which he worked closely with the Mellon Collection and with Paul Mellon, who provided important gifts of art, both paintings and sculpture portraying animals, to the museum[13][14]

Through the years Near acquired for the museum some of its greatest treasures, including paintings by Théodore Géricault, Claude Lorraine's "Battle on a Bridge," Aristide Maillol's "The River," Claude Monet's "Irises by the Pond," Charles Willson Peale's "William Smith and His Grandson," Angelica Kauffmann's "Cornelia Pointing to Her Children as Her Treasures," and Jean-Bapiste Blin de Fontenay's monumental "Buffet Under a Trellis."

In 1976 Near announced the VMFA's purchase of American sculptor Isamu Noguchi's polished stainless steel sculpture "Open Lock," completed in 1964.[15]

Among the exhibits curated by Near was one called Three Masters of Landscape: Fragonard, Robert and Boucher which, although small, presented interesting issues due to the variability of the works. The exhibit made use of a recently acquired Fragonard entitled Landscape With Three Washerwomen".[16]

Research and publications

Pinkney Near wrote The Whistlers:A Family Reunion, published in 1965 by the Cincinnati Museum of Art, followed in 1981 by Three Masters of Landscape: Fragonard, Robert, and Boucher, which was published by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. While at the VMFA, the museum also published his book Apollo. In 1985, his book French Paintings was published by the University of Virginia Press.

Near, along with two other art experts, Julien Binford (professor emeritus at Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia) and William Campbell (Curator of American Paintings at the National Gallery of Art in Washington) selected the paintings by the deceased artist Gari Melchers for permanent display in the Gari Melchers Memorial Gallery at Belmont, the Falmouth, Virginia home of the artist.[17]

He was an author of many of the VMFA exhibition catalogs and illustrated books including French Paintings: The Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon.

List of major works

Pinkney Near memorial lectures in art history

Following the death of Pinkney Near in 1990 a series of memorial lectures in art history featuring notable art historians was begun at Art6 Gallery in Richmond in his honor. All but the last of the series was presented in the main gallery at Art6. Speakers in the series included Mia Genoni, Suzanne Foley, Robert Hobbs, Matthew Affron, Richard Woodward, Joseph Dye III, Mitchell Merling, Belle Pendleton, and Susanne Kilgore Arnold. The final lecture in the series was given by then VMFA curator of contemporary art John B. Ravenal at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,[18] now director at the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park.[19]

References

  1. Merritt, Robert (September 30, 1990). "Pinkney Near Left a Mark on the Museum". Richmond, Virginia: Richmond Time-Dispatch. p. 1.
  2. Barriault, Anne B. (May 1, 2010). "Enrich collections: the extraordinary collections of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts". Apollo on High Beam. ...colleagues from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Dumbarton Oaks, and the American Museum of Natural History . . . consulted with [visionary director Leslie Cheek, Jr.] and curator Pinkney Near to establish the Asian, Ancient Egyptian, Greek Roman, Byzantine, and Pre-Columbian collections.
  3. "Rare Marble Funeral Monument Given to Museum". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  4. 1 2 "Obituary: Pinkney L. Near". Baltimore Sun. September 20, 1990. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  5. Merritt, Robert (September 30, 1990). "Pinkney Near left mark on museum". Richmond Times-Dispatch. p. 1.
  6. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1990-09-20/news/1990263193_1_pinkney-paul-episcopal-church-rebecca-n
  7. Library, VMFA. "Special Collections in European Art: The Pinkney Near Collection". Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Richmond, Virginia. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  8. "People in the Fan: Henrietta Near". Richmond, Virginia: Fan District Newsletter. Summer 2015. pp. 8, 9.
  9. Merritt, Robert. "Curator left lasting mark". art critic (March 30, 1990). Richmond Times-Dispatch. p. 13.
  10. Darack, Arthur (April 5, 1964). "American Painting Surveyed in Great Style at Museum Show". Newspapers.com. Cincinnati Enquirer, Kentucky edition: Cincinnati Enquirer. p. 80. He [Pinkney Near] has done a superb job of selection and I cannot recall a more interesting panorama of American painting.
  11. "Hiring of chief curator marked start of Collections Division". Richmond, Virginia: Richmond Times-Dispatch. January 12, 1986. p. 5.
  12. "Va. Museum chooses curator for Mellon Collection". Richmond, Virginia: The Richmond Afro-American. December 24, 1988. p. A6. "In selecting Mr. Near to be the first holder of this prestigious title, Mr. Mellon has recognized Mr. Near's lifelong commitment to scholarship and connoisseurship," says Paul N. Perrot, director of the museum.
  13. Richmond Times-Dispatch, September 30, 1990.
  14. <http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1990-09-20/news/1990263193_1_pinkney-paul-episcopal-church-rebecca-n
  15. "Virginia Museum Acquires Sculpture by Isamu Noguchi". Danville, Virginia: The Danville Register. August 9, 1976. p. 6.
  16. Russell, John (November 29, 1981). "Gallery View; THREE FRENCH LANDSCAPISTS WITH A COMMON VISION; RICHMOND, Va.". New York Times.
  17. Culbertson, Drena (July 26, 1976). "Final Melchers Collection selection is due this week". Fredericksburg, Virginia: The Free Lance Star.
  18. "Art6 Presents". Richmond Public Library. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  19. Ravenal, John. "Curating Jasper Johns+Edvard Munch". Vimeo. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.