The Prague Post - Making an impression: Swiss collection shown in a new light

EUR -
AED 4.292509
AFN 81.817739
ALL 97.421252
AMD 448.63007
ANG 2.091845
AOA 1071.812532
ARS 1489.076848
AUD 1.790967
AWG 2.106807
AZN 1.983207
BAM 1.960555
BBD 2.357117
BDT 141.984384
BGN 1.954872
BHD 0.440679
BIF 3424.657227
BMD 1.168825
BND 1.497413
BOB 8.066393
BRL 6.508366
BSD 1.167432
BTN 100.723012
BWP 16.680101
BYN 3.820317
BYR 22908.969848
BZD 2.344958
CAD 1.598778
CDF 3373.229307
CHF 0.933488
CLF 0.029061
CLP 1115.198944
CNY 8.38752
CNH 8.382807
COP 4716.606244
CRC 589.028693
CUC 1.168825
CUP 30.973862
CVE 110.628923
CZK 24.622821
DJF 207.724105
DKK 7.464783
DOP 70.544408
DZD 151.927959
EGP 57.565563
ERN 17.532375
ETB 159.783297
FJD 2.630788
FKP 0.871305
GBP 0.866795
GEL 3.167858
GGP 0.871305
GHS 12.184952
GIP 0.871305
GMD 83.571634
GNF 10117.348825
GTQ 8.965746
GYD 244.144864
HKD 9.17499
HNL 30.798676
HRK 7.532847
HTG 153.189596
HUF 399.10114
IDR 19093.925073
ILS 3.914109
IMP 0.871305
INR 100.74763
IQD 1531.16074
IRR 49222.14476
ISK 142.398405
JEP 0.871305
JMD 186.6828
JOD 0.8287
JPY 172.451974
KES 151.363891
KGS 102.214084
KHR 4698.676135
KMF 493.24363
KPW 1051.942582
KRW 1616.846884
KWD 0.356866
KYD 0.972839
KZT 618.903211
LAK 25205.711356
LBP 104668.278294
LKR 352.259888
LRD 234.933632
LSL 20.594463
LTL 3.451237
LVL 0.707011
LYD 6.340836
MAD 10.553311
MDL 19.839697
MGA 5177.894323
MKD 61.524469
MMK 2454.384982
MNT 4191.003456
MOP 9.438574
MRU 46.542464
MUR 53.403837
MVR 17.997207
MWK 2029.667499
MXN 21.822316
MYR 4.945879
MZN 74.757287
NAD 20.594557
NGN 1788.290838
NIO 42.954752
NOK 11.890573
NPR 161.156819
NZD 1.958914
OMR 0.449415
PAB 1.167407
PEN 4.161011
PGK 4.849163
PHP 66.751649
PKR 334.810219
PLN 4.244435
PYG 8878.534941
QAR 4.255225
RON 5.067328
RSD 117.136163
RUB 91.398952
RWF 1681.354751
SAR 4.384906
SBD 9.683826
SCR 17.041189
SDG 701.881319
SEK 11.196847
SGD 1.497165
SHP 0.918513
SLE 26.883171
SLL 24509.680288
SOS 667.989019
SRD 42.866664
STD 24192.317491
STN 24.77909
SVC 10.214776
SYP 15196.937153
SZL 20.59479
THB 37.659231
TJS 11.165748
TMT 4.102576
TND 3.363293
TOP 2.737508
TRY 47.250779
TTD 7.925121
TWD 34.306652
TZS 3027.256743
UAH 48.861113
UGX 4183.146247
USD 1.168825
UYU 47.134325
UZS 14756.41565
VES 136.711584
VND 30570.617672
VUV 140.013
WST 3.093764
XAF 657.537798
XAG 0.030011
XAU 0.000345
XCD 3.158808
XCG 2.103876
XDR 0.820772
XOF 656.879877
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.628944
ZAR 20.59486
ZMK 10520.827257
ZMW 26.849549
ZWL 376.361171
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Making an impression: Swiss collection shown in a new light
Making an impression: Swiss collection shown in a new light / Photo: Valentin Flauraud - AFP

Making an impression: Swiss collection shown in a new light

The Langmatt's prestigious collection of Impressionist masterpieces is being seen in a new light, literally, after leaving the museum in northern Switzerland on loan for the first time.

Text size:

Around 50 paintings, including works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cezanne, Claude Monet and Edgar Degas, are being shown in brighter surroundings at the Hermitage Foundation in Lausanne while the Langmatt undergoes renovation.

"I've never seen the paintings in this light," the Langmatt's director Markus Stegmann said.

The collection has never been seen outside the cocoon of the Langmatt villa in Baden, near Zurich, where the artworks are displayed under the light of crystal chandeliers and latticed windows.

At the Hermitage, overlooking the western Swiss city of Lausanne, the 19th-century villa's large bay windows give free rein to the same play of light that inspired the Impressionists.

The collection includes Renoir's "The Braid" (1886-1887), Monet's "Ice Floes at Twilight" (1893) and Gauguin's "Still Life with Bowl of Fruit and Lemons" (1889-1890).

The exhibition, which runs until November 3, pays tribute to not only the 150 years since the start of the Impressionist art movement but also to Sidney and Jenny Brown, the couple who amassed the collection between 1908 and 1919.

- Art from the heart -

A wealthy family from the industrial bourgeoisie of northern Switzerland, the Browns showed exceptional taste.

All the works "were bought with the heart" rather than on the advice of art experts, Stegmann said.

Take for example Eugene Boudin's "Washerwomen on the Bank of the Touques" (1895), showing the women leaning over the water with a smoking factory in the background.

Bought by the Browns during their Paris honeymoon in 1896, the painting "is not an easy work, it's not a loveable work", said Hermitage Foundation director Sylvie Wuhrmann.

The Browns also collected works by the Munich Secession association of visual artists, before becoming exclusively passionate about contemporary French artists.

Renoir became a big favourite, alongside Cezanne and Camille Pissarro.

The couple's devotion to Impressionism was not without risk in society circles where such artists raised eyebrows.

- Change of style -

Alongside "The Boat" (circa 1878) and the portraits of his children, Renoir's "The Braid" is among the most recognisable works in the collection.

It is inspired by the classicist works of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, and it has even been nicknamed the Langmatt Mona Lisa.

It also goes well with the Hermitage's own collection: the Lausanne museum has an exceptional set of 17 paintings and drawings by Suzanne Valadon, the model depicted in "The Braid".

In 1919, for reasons difficult to pin down, the Browns changed their tastes. Out went Impressionism and in came 18th-century French painters.

They sold eight artworks, including paintings by Renoir and Cezanne, to buy "Young Girl with a Cat" (circa 1770) by Jean-Honore Fragonard, which is also being shown in Lausanne.

And the couple asked the Austrian artist Max Oppenheimer to paint their portrait in a style mixing Expressionism and Cubism.

In 1941, Sidney Brown died and Jenny Brown stopped buying art, living as a recluse at the Langmatt villa until her own death in 1968 aged 96.

- Firmer financial footing -

When Stegmann reached out for a temporary home for the Langmatt's paintings during the villa's renovation, the Hermitage enthusiastically said yes as it celebrates its own 40th anniversary.

Stegmann said the collaboration also made it possible to publish a comprehensive catalogue by experts on the Langmatt collection, something the Baden museum did not have the means to do alone.

In November, facing serious financial difficulties, the museum sold three Cezannes at auction in New York.

"Fruits et pot de gingembre" (1890-1893) fetched $38.9 million, "Quatre pommes et un couteau" (circa 1885) sold for $10.4 million, and "La mer a l'Estaque" (1878-1879) raised $3.2 million.

At the time, Stegmann called the sale a painful last resort to secure the museum's long-term future.

After Lausanne, the collection will be shown in Cologne, Germany, from March to July 2025, and then in Vienna from September next year to February 2026, before returning home to Baden.

X.Vanek--TPP