Chaim Soutine and Albert Barnes: a meeting of genius and prophet, changing destiny
Introduction: a turning point in the artist's destiny
The meeting and subsequent patronage by the American collector and patron Albert Barnes (1872–1951) became a life-changing event for Chaim Soutine (1893–1943), literally saving him from poverty and obscurity. This alliance, concluded in 1922–1923, is a classic example of how the will, taste, and financial power of one person can not only support but also bring a genius who has long been in the shadows into the public eye. The history of their relationship goes beyond a simple buying and selling deal, becoming a story of recognition, support, and strategic shaping of an artistic reputation.
Albert Barnes: the innovative collector
To understand the scale of his intervention, it is necessary to know the figure of Barnes. Having become rich through the invention of the antiseptic "Argyrol," he was not just a collector of paintings but also an ardent, independent, and often controversial theorist of art. His approach was radical:
Focus on modernity: Against the conservative tastes of American nouveau riche, he bought works by contemporary French artists — Renoir, Cézanne, Matisse, Picasso.
Educational mission: He founded the Barnes Foundation in Merion (a suburb of Philadelphia) in 1922 not as a museum for the elite but as an educational institution for workers and students, where paintings hung according to his own, intuitive principles of ensemble, not chronology.
Independence and conflict: Barnes despised the art establishment, museums, and critics. His decisions were based on personal, almost prophetic intuition.
The "discovery" of Soutine: 1923
In 1922–1923, Barnes, who was already collecting works by Modigliani, came to Paris again in search of new names. According to the most widespread version, his attention was drawn to Soutine either by his agent, the Parisian dealer Paul Guillaume, or, more romantically, by Modigliani himself ...
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