Commemorating Dr. Sean B. Murphy (1924-2017): Prints and Drawings from Five Centuries
To pay tribute to this extraordinary man and his great generosity, it is most fitting that we should mount an exhibition of a selection of works on paper he donated to the Museum. The works exhibited range from the sixteenth to the late twentieth century, from Italy and Britain to the United States and Canada: among the Italians are fine Canalettos (ill. 4) and works by Giovanni Battista Piranesi and Giuseppe Bernardino Bison (ill. 10); from Britain, there are extraordinary drawings (and bronzes) by Henry Moore (ill. 7), prints by Stanley William Hayter and Lynn Chadwick, and a lovely Paul Nash watercolour; twentieth-century American print masters represented include George Wesley Bellows (ill. 6), Stow Wegenroth, Martin Lewis and Reginald Marsh; and Canadian masters Alfred Pellan (ill. 5), Jean-Paul Riopelle, Jean McEwen and Christopher Pratt. Other international modernists include Pablo Picasso (ill. 2), Rufino Tamayo, Marino Marini and Claes Oldenburg. The exhibition also features works by Sean’s two artist parents, the Canadian Cecil Buller (ill. 8) and the American John Murphy, as well as some of his own sketches.
Sean’s vision extended well into the future, and he established a fund in his mother’s name for the acquisition of prints. When he withdrew from his Museum duties, his many friends established the Dr. Sean B. Murphy Fund for the acquisition of works on paper. Furthering Sean’s legacy at the Museum, these funds have made it possible to acquire many masterworks, including an early rare print after Hieronymus Bosch, an engraving by Hendrick Goudt, the first Ludovico Carracci to enter the collection and a touching hand-coloured woodcut depicting a portion of the Lord’s Prayer by the German Expressionist Max Pechstein (ill. 9).
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