Monday, May 11, 2026

Seeing the Essential: The Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection of American Art

 

The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) presents Seeing the Essential: The Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection of American Art, an expansive exhibition showcasing more than 100 works from the collection of Baltimore philanthropists Sigmund M. Hyman (1921–2002) and Mary B. Hyman (1927–2024). Over more than 60 years, they built an art collection guided by an interest in modern American culture and history, visual beauty, their own personal tastes, and an appreciation for artists who depicted everyday life with honesty and imagination. On view from May 10 through September 13, 2026, the exhibition celebrates the Hymans’ gift to the BMA as well as their six‑decade commitment to American art, civic engagement, and public access to culture.

The title Seeing the Essential draws inspiration from Ashcan artist and educator Robert Henri, who wrote in 1923 that the ability “to see and to remember the essential” was fundamental to artistic purpose. Living with these works in their home, the Hymans embraced this philosophy, finding beauty, humor, and meaning in art that reflected lived experience. 


Built from the 1960s through the early 2020s, the Hyman Collection centers on American modernist artists, with particular strength in works associated with the Ashcan School. United by a shared interest in representing everyday life, these artists turned their attention to city streets, domestic interiors, working people, performers, and the changing urban landscape. Their works offer vivid, often empathetic views of American life during a period of rapid social and industrial transformation. 


The exhibition is organized around similar themes that illuminate how modern artists sought meaning in ordinary moments and familiar spaces.

Among the exhibition’s highlights are more than 20 works by John Sloan, a leading Ashcan School artist and former newspaper illustrator whose masterful compositions reveal both the spectacle and social complexity of urban life. 


Other standout works include Guy Wiggins’s large‑scale Impressionist streetscape of New York City, Midtown Looking Down Fifth Avenue (mid‑20th century); John Singer Sargent’s striking charcoal portrait Miss Enid Morse (1911); and Provincetown (1916), Marguerite Zorach’s bold Cubist interpretation of the Massachusetts harbor rendered in prismatic color and dynamic form. 


The exhibition also reflects the transnational and multi-cultural dimensions of American modernism, featuring works by Native American, immigrant, and European artists whose perspectives shaped—and challenged—dominant narratives of American art.


“Sig and Mary Hyman collected with an astute curiosity, an abiding belief in the power of history, and a sense of conviction,” said Asma Naeem, the BMA’s Dorothy Wagner Wallis Director. “The BMA is fortunate to have a significant portion of their collection, ensuring that these works and the stories they tell are accessible to the public. We are very grateful for their generosity as it reflects a deep belief in the power of artists to illuminate everyday life.”


Seeing the Essential: The Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection of American Art is co‑curated by Virginia M.G. Anderson, BMA Senior Curator of American Art and Department Head, American Painting & Sculpture and Decorative Arts, and Robin Owen Joyce, BMA Assistant Curator of Academic Engagement.


IMAGES



Arthur B. Davies. Lonely Lady. c. 1915.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.86

Stuart Davis. Harbor, Gloucester, Massachusetts. 1924.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.87


Dorothy Dehner. Landmarks. 1947.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, 2025.88


William J. Glackens. Sketch for Breakfast Porch, No. 2. c. 1925.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.165


George Grosz. The Bowery. 1935.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.101


John Heliker. In Louis' Studio. 1964.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.102


Allan Houser. Plains Couple. c. 1991.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.105


Leon Kroll. Brooklyn Bridge, New York. 1911.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.110. © Estate of Leon Kroll


Ernest Lawson. Croton Falls. c. 1920.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.111


Bennard Perlman. Orchestra Rehearsal (Pittsburgh). 1948.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.128


John Singer Sargent. Miss Enid Morse. 1911.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.139


Everett Shinn. Opening Night. c. 1915.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.143

John Sloan. From Schoolhouse Hill, Gloucester. 1914.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.165


John Sloan. Fun, One Cent. 1905.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, 2025.152

John Sloan. Barber Shop. 1915.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, 2025.164


Abraham Walkowitz. Isadora Duncan. n.d.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.174


Guy C. Wiggins. Midtown Looking Down Fifth Avenue. Mid-20th century.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.175


Grant Wood. Fertility. 1939.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, BMA 2025.176


Marguerite Thompson Zorach. Provincetown. 1916.
Baltimore Museum of Art, Sigmund M. and Mary B. Hyman Collection, 2025.170. © The Zorach Collection


The Nabi Shock

Waddington Custot, Paris

8 April to 6 June 2026


The Nabi Shock, a landmark exhibition devoted to a movement at the heart of the gallery’s expertise. Bringing together key works by Émile Bernard, Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis, Charles Filiger, Paul Ranson, József Rippl-Rónai, Ker-Xavier Roussel, Paul Sérusier and Edouard Vuillard, the exhibition foregrounds the subtle radicalism of these modernist artists. Presented alongside works by contemporary artists, such as Etel Adnan, Ben Arpéa, Marcel·la Barcelò, Ian Davenport, Marcel Dzama, Pierre Knop, François Réau, Anne Rothenstein, Christine Safa, and Fabienne Verdier, The Nabi Shock reveals the striking contemporary resonance of the Nabis aesthetic, in which colour, rhythm, and interiority remain the driving forces. 

The exhibition brings together around thirty works by the leading figures of the movement, including Émile Bernard, Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis, Charles Filiger, Paul Ranson, József RipplRónai, Ker-Xavier Roussel, Paul Sérusier and Edouard Vuillard.



Paul Sérusier, Bretonne allaitant, 1892, oil on canvas, 73x55 cm (28,7 x 21,6 in)

As proponents of Paul Gauguin's philosophy, which advocated the right "to dare anything", the Nabis drew inspiration from the painter's quest for colour liberation and his conception of painting as an inner spiritual journey. One of the most notable works produced under Gauguin's direct influence was Le Talisman by Paul Sérusier, which became a foundational work and aesthetic touchstone for the group. 

The term “Nabi”, borrowed from Hebrew and meaning “prophet”, reflects both the spiritual quest and innovative ambition of this collective, which saw itself as heralding an artistic renewal. The Nabis favoured simplified forms and swathes of colour, as seen in Bretonne allaitant by Paul Sérusier. The influence of Neo-Impressionism is also prevalent in Pierre Bonnard's Étude pour Le Corsage à Carreaux, while Japonism shaped the work of artists such as Paul Ranson, exemplified in Le Grand Tigre. 

Closely aligned with Symbolism, the Nabis were equally attentive to contemporary life, seeking to celebrate the everyday. Interior scenes, contemplative figures and stylised landscapes were thus elevated to the status of artistic subjects in their own right. 

Despite being composed exclusively of men, the group drew constant inspiration from women, making "their mother, their companion or wife, their sister" as "privileged models" (Gilles Genty), as exemplified by Maurice Denis's Portrait de Marthe au tablier rouge (esquisse) and Ker-Xavier Roussel's Femmes au jardin.

Drawing inspiration from prints, stained glass and folk art, the Nabis movement rejected the traditional hierarchy of genres and advocated continuity between the so-called 'major' and 'minor' arts. 


The same rigorous approach was therefore applied to painting, decoration, printmaking and the applied arts, resulting in a variety of projects, such as Maurice Denis' stained-glass design Le Cheval blanc. This openness enabled the group to experiment with a variety of media, playing a pivotal role in the evolution of the decorative arts and reproducible practices at the dawn of modernity. 

The 'Nabi shock' is embodied through an unprecedented dialogue between works by the Nabis and contemporary pieces by Etel Adnan, Ben Arpea, Marcella Barceló, Ian Davenport, Marcel Dzama, Pierre Knop, François Réau, Anne Rothenstein, Christine Safa and Fabienne Verdier, highlighting a shared conception of painting as an autonomous, sensory and interior space. 

While the Nabis championed a subjective, decorative and synthetic approach to painting, in which colour, rhythm and interiority took precedence over illusionistic representations of reality, this sensibility continues to resonate in contemporary practice. 

Through radical simplification and bold chromatic choices, Etel Adnan's compositions reflect the spiritual journey and symbolic depth of artists such as Charles Filiger. 

Fabienne Verdier's concentrated, meditative and physical gesture engages in dialogue with Maurice Denis's conception of painting as an inner experience. Ian Davenport's work features repetition, fluidity, and the musicality of colour, building upon the creative and rhythmic ambition evident in the oeuvre of Pierre Bonnard and Édouard Vuillard. 

Like the Nabis, these contemporary artists embrace a variety of artistic languages while sharing a common intention: to reaffirm a vision of painting in which surface, material, and colour become vehicles for a poetic and interior experience of the world. In doing so, they inscribe the Nabi aesthetic within a living and ongoing history. 

A catalogue featuring texts by art historian Gilles Genty further expands upon this perspective and sheds light on the historical and contemporary significance of this artistic constellation.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

William Blake: The Age of Romantic Fantasy

 National Gallery of Ireland

16 April - 19 July 2026 



William Blake, The Night of Enitharmon’s Joy (formerly called ‘Hecate’), c. 1795. Tate, Presented by W. Graham Robertson 1939. Photo: Tate.

William Blake, a visionary artist and poet, was a defining force in Romanticism. His imaginative and unconventional works continue to inspire today. This exhibition, curated by Tate in partnership with the National Gallery of Ireland, presents a selection of Blake’s most iconic works of art, alongside paintings and drawings by his contemporaries. 

Blake’s world was one of fantasy, imagination, and the ancient past, filled with fantastical creatures and visions of the underworld, expressed through a wide variety of media. By placing him in context - among the artists he admired and those he inspired - the exhibition offers insight into an era of extraordinary originality and innovation in late-eighteenth and early nineteenth-century art. 

Featuring over 100 works, including by James Barry (1741–1806), Henry Fuseli (1741–1825), John Hamilton Mortimer (1740–1779), Thomas Rowlandson (1757–1827), and J.M.W. Turner (1775–1851), the show explores how artists responded to a time of revolution and transformation, pushing the boundaries of their art into new imaginative territories.

Organised in collaboration with Tate.

Curated by Anne Hodge, Curator of Prints and Drawings at the National Gallery of Ireland and Alice Insley, Curator of British Art c. 1730 – 1850 at Tate.



To celebrate this exhibition, the National Gallery of Ireland is producing a companion book of essays to illustrate how Blake’s unique visions reflected his era and how they sit within the broader context of what is often termed the age of Romanticism.The book illustrates the breadth and beauty of William Blake’s art and the richness of his artistic vision as well as that of the artists who influenced him and others who were inspired by him. In addition, it will set his work within the context of Romantic and Gothic art, and will endeavour to show how inspirational his imagery and ideas were to generations of artists and writers. Running alongside the insightful essays are the themes of Horror and Peril; Fantastical Creatures; Enchantments; The Gothic; Romanticising the Past and The Underworld, all beautifully illustrated with full-page and double-page spreads of the key paintings, prints and drawings exhibited.

With essays by Alice Insley, Anne Hodge and Christina Morin
Published by the National Gallery of Ireland

Alice Insley (PhD, University of Nottingham) is Curator of Historic British Art c.1730–1850 at Tate Britain.


Anne Hodge (MLIS, University College Dublin) is Curator of Prints and Drawings at the National Gallery of Ireland.


Christina Morin (PhD, Trinity College Dublin) is Assistant Dean of Research and Professor of English at the University of Limerick.

144pp, c. 100 colour illustrations, 260 x 225 mm
Hardback
ISBN: 978-1-911716-12-9

IMAGES

Satan Smiting Job with Boils (c. 1826), William Blake. Tate Collection. Photo: Tate
The Body of Abel Found by Adam and Eve (c. 1826), William Blake. Tate Collection. Photo: Tate
House of Death (c. 1795–c. 1805), William Blake. Tate Collection. Photo: Tate

Sotheby’s Modern Evening Auction May 19 Part III