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Collection List: Art & Artifacts |
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The Robert and Miriam Kinsey Collection
| The Warschaw Collection
Max Thalmann Prints and Drawings | Anton Grauel Collection Early California Mission Vestments | Other paintings of interest
The Kinsey Collection consists of contemporary Japanese prints, paintings and sculpture. Although most pieces in the collection date from the twentieth century, a few earlier works are included. Some non-Japanese artists are also represented. The collection includes woodblock prints by Ohara Shoson, Junichiro Sekino, Clifton Karhu, Toshi Yoshida, Tadashi Nakayama, Kiyoshi Saito and others. There is also a collection of netsuke by modern Japanese carvers.
The Warschaw Collection. (6 paintings) Louis Warschaw, a Los Angeles resident, donated this collection of sixteenth and seventeenth-century European paintings to the University in 1975. The paintings and artists represented are The Virgin Enthroned with the Child and Saints by Giovanni Battista Bertucci the Younger (c. 1540-1614); The Suffering Virgin and Mary Magdalene by Giovanni Battista Crespi (1576-1632); The Dead Christ with the Virgin, Mary Magdalene and Saint Francis of Assisi by Gaspare Diziani (1689-1767); Ecce Homo (Christ with the Crown of Thorns) by David de Haen (1585 ?-1622); The Penitent Magdalene by Anthonie Santvoort (?-1600); and The Christ Child with the Virgin Adored by the Secular and Ecclesiastical Powers of the World by Paulus Bor (1600-1669). Max Thalmann Prints and Drawings. (316 items) Max Thalmann (1890-1945) was a German Expressionist artist known for his drawings and woodcut prints. From 1912-1933 he achieved recognition as a master of the woodcut and produced three main portfolios--Cathedral, Passion, and America. A visit to New York City in 1923 inspired the America set of woodcuts. During the 1930s his interests moved from woodcuts to drawings, watercolors and pastels. He also designed books for the Eugen Dieterich publishing house in Jena, Germany. He died in that city shortly before the end of World War II. This collection is probably the largest of Thalmann's works in the United States.
Early California Mission Vestments. (Approximately 17 items) These vestments are fine examples of the liturgical clothing in use in California Catholic churches and missions during the early nineteenth century. Most of them are from the Ygnacio del Valle Family Collection and come from the del Valle chapel in Ventura County. Josefa del Valle de Forster donated them to Loyola University in the 1940s. The del Valles are an old California family dating back to 1839 when the Mexican government bestowed on Antonio del Valle a 48,000 acre grant known as Rancho San Francisco. The family chapel was located at Camulos which achieved fame as the "home" of the fictional heroine of Helen Hunt Jackson's novel Ramona.
Other paintings of interest: The Money Changers attributed to Paolo Veronese (1528-1588). Judgment of Jesus by the Rabbis by Leonard Bramer (1596-1674). Portrait of Mrs. Kearney by Hovsep Pushman (1877-1966). |
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Last updated: 6/99 by JME © Copyright 1999, 2000 Loyola Marymount University. Department of Archives and Special Collections Loyola Marymount University 7900 Loyola Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90045-8200, USA Phone: 310-338-3048 Fax: 310-338-5895 Web: lib.lmu.edu/special/ |