Met announces gift of 220 Philip Guston works from artist’s daughter

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘The Line,’ 1978. Oil on canvas, 71 by 73 1⁄4in (180.3 by 186.1cm). Photograph by Genevieve Hanson © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘The Line,’ 1978. Oil on canvas, 71 by 73 1⁄4in (180.3 by 186.1cm). Photograph by Genevieve Hanson © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

NEW YORK — On December 14, the Metropolitan Museum of Art announced a transformative promised gift of 220 works by Philip Guston (1913–1980) from the personal collection of Musa Mayer, the artist’s daughter. Consisting of 96 paintings and 124 drawings — the earliest created in 1930 and the latest made in 1980 — the collection represents the full arc of Guston’s career. Ultimately, the gift will position the Met as the largest repository of works by the iconic American painter.

The collection of Musa Mayer is notable for the many consequential and foundational works it comprises, the majority created during the last three decades of Guston’s life, when he was especially innovative and prolific. Highlights of the promised gift include: Mother and Child (circa 1930), Untitled (1958), The Three (1964), The Studio (1969), Pantheon (1973), Pittore (1973), Yellow Light (1975), Both (1976), Floor (1976), Aegean II (1977), Sleeping (1977), The Line (1978), and Flame (1979).

The museum also announced a major gift of $10 million from Musa and Thomas Mayer to establish the Philip Guston Endowment Fund, which will be used to support initiatives related to the collection, advance scholarship regarding Guston and further the artist’s legacy.

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘Both,’ 1976.Oil on canvas, 78 by 116in (198.1 by 294.6cm) Photograph by Keldon Polacco. © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘Both,’ 1976. Oil on canvas, 78 by 116in (198.1 by 294.6cm) Photograph by Keldon Polacco. © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

“For over four decades now, this personal collection of my father’s paintings and drawings has served — and continues to serve — as a crucial source for exhibition loans,” said Musa Mayer. “That the Met — this amazing museum of world art — has agreed to prominently display and permanently house Philip Guston’s work in the city where he lived and worked is a deeply moving commitment to his legacy. My father was passionate about art and artists of the past. His influences spanned centuries. Yet his paintings resonate with artists working today. So, it’s immensely gratifying to know that his best works will find a permanent home in the company of the masters he so loved.”

In 2013, Mayer established the Guston Foundation (philipguston.org) to share her father’s work and further his legacy. Originally trained as a mental health counselor, Mayer became recognized as an advocate for patients with metastatic breast cancer. While she was a student at Columbia University pursuing an MFA in writing, she published her first book, Night Studio: A Memoir of Philip Guston (1988). In addition to curating exhibitions, she has authored several more books and catalogs on Guston in recent years.

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘Mother and Child,’ circa 1930. Oil on canvas, 40 by 30in. (101.6 by 76.2cm). Photograph by Genevieve Hanson © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer


Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘Mother and Child,’ circa 1930. Oil on canvas, 40 by 30in. (101.6 by 76.2cm). Photo by Genevieve Hanson © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

The Met has enjoyed a long, fruitful relationship with Guston and his family. The museum first began to purchase his work for the collection during his lifetime, beginning in 1950 and then again in 1973. It acquired a third work as a gift in 1972. It purchased his masterpiece The Street in 1983, and since then, it has acquired through gifts — including two bequests from Musa Guston — 12 additional paintings, drawings and prints. Guston’s work was featured in the landmark 1970 exhibition New York Painting and Sculpture: 1940–1970, organized by Henry Geldzahler, who also curated the 1973 exhibition Philip Guston Drawings 1938–1972. In 2003, the museum hosted Guston’s traveling retrospective, organized by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Fort Worth, Texas.

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘Pantheon,’ 1973.Oil on panel, 45 by 48in (114.3 by 121.9cm). Photograph by Genevieve Hanson. © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

Philip Guston (American (born Canada), 1913–1980), ‘Pantheon,’ 1973. Oil on panel, 45 by 48in (114.3 by 121.9cm). Photograph by Genevieve Hanson. © The estate of Philip Guston. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, promised gift of Musa Guston Mayer

A selection of works from Musa Mayer’s gift will be on view in a special installation opening May 27, 2023. The display, which will focus on the artist’s deeply philosophical approach to the nature of artistic identity and the aesthetic possibilities of painting, will be organized by Kelly Baum, Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky curator of Contemporary art in the Met’s Department of Modern and Contemporary Art.