[There are few
practices more AmericanStudies, but also more complex, than that of collecting historical,
cultural, and artistic treasures and memorabilia. This week I’ll highlight and
analyze five such collections and the collectors who assembled them. Please
share collections and museums of interest to you for a collected weekend post!]
On the
inspiring life and the legacy inside my favorite American museum.
On the
surface, Isabella
Stewart Gardner’s life would seem to exemplify an upper class
experience of Gilded Age America. Born into a wealthy New York family, she
married into an even wealthier one—her husband John
“Jack” Gardner was the descendent of generations of Boston Brahmins on both
sides of his family—and benefitted from those connections
immensely: traveling extensively throughout Europe and Asia, befriending
numerous painters and artists, serving as a patron to many of them as well as
to organizations such as the Boston
Symphony, commandeering the Boston social scene for many decades, and so
on. It was not a life without significant losses—her only child, a son, died at
the age of two; she outlived her beloved husband by more than a
quarter-century—but certainly it was a life of great privilege and all that
comes with it; as Bruce
Springsteen put it, “a life of leisure and a pirate’s treasure /
Don’t make much for tragedy.”
Indeed
they don’t—but the key question to ask of Isabella Stewart Gardner is what she
did make of her life, and the answer is on multiple levels very inspiring. In
her private life, Gardner followed her passions and loves without (it seems)
the slightest worry about what was considered proper or how she might be
perceived—some of those loves were stereotypically highbrow (Venice, the opera,
priceless art and antiques), but others were anything but (Red Sox
baseball and Harvard football, boxing and horse racing, entertainments and
adventures wherever and however she could find them). In response to the rumors
and gossip that often sprang up around her, Gardner simply noted, “Don’t
spoil a good story by telling the truth” and continued to live her life. Even
more inspiringly, her relationships with the artists and authors she befriended
were far from simply financial or one-way streets—John Singer Sargent, the
painter to whom she was particularly close (and on whom more tomorrow),
considered her a lifelong friend, and his
painting of her from two years before her death is one of
the most sensitive and powerful portraits ever produced in America.
Gardner’s
legacy, as embodied in and exemplified by the Museum, is more inspring still. Literally
every aspect of the Museum—known at its 1903 opening as Fenway Court—represents
Gardner’s own design and inspiration, from its Fenway location to its use of a
transported three-story Venetian palace, the arrangements and specifics of each
room to the courtyard’s precise details of colors, flowers, and more. Gardner’s will
bequeathed a substantial amount to the upkeep and expansion of the Museum, with
the requirement that it maintain her vision and choices. And most importantly,
that vision was anything but a Gilded Age stereotype: she hoped that the Museum
could serve “for the
education and enrichment of the public forever,” and openly
and passionately hoped that all Americans could have the chance to visit the
Museum and experience its artistic, cultural, historical, and educational
environment and effects. Such goals are perhaps not unlike other Gilded Age
figures’ Gospel of Wealth, of philanthropic giving coupled to vast
fortunes—but in Gardner’s case, she offered not just her wealth but every inch
of her identity and perspective, of what she cared about and what she most
valued. You can feel that gift in every inch of the Museum.
Next collector
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Collections you'd highlight?
This is my favorite spot in Boston. Hopefully I get to haunt this place as a ghost some day.
ReplyDeleteI imagine Isabella still hangs around, AnneMarie, but I'm sure she wouldn't mind company!
ReplyDelete