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Claude Monet, 'Path in the Wheat Fields at Pourville,' 1882. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.

Impressionist masterworks donated to Denver museum

Claude Monet, 'Path in the Wheat Fields at Pourville,' 1882. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.
Claude Monet, ‘Path in the Wheat Fields at Pourville,’ 1882. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.

DENVER – The Denver Art Museum announced Monday the largest gift ever given to the museum. Denver-based philanthropist Frederic C. Hamilton, the museum’s chairman emeritus, bequeathed 22 impressionist masterworks from his private collection to the museum.

The artworks are currently on view at the museum in “Nature as Muse: Impressionist Landscapes from the Frederic C. Hamilton Collection and the Denver Art Museum,” part of the trio of exhibitions in “Passport to Paris.” This presentation, on view through Feb. 9, is the first time the collection has been exhibited publicly.

This capstone gift marks 35 years of Hamilton’s generous giving to the museum. Over the years, Hamilton has supported numerous endeavors and exhibitions, including the groundbreaking 2012 exhibition “Becoming Van Gogh,” and leading the fundraising effort for the $110 million Hamilton Building.

“The addition of these paintings to the Denver Art Museum collection is a pivotal moment in this institution’s history,” said Christoph Heinrich, museum director. “Frederic Hamilton’s generosity, vision and commitment to making Denver a destination for art are unparalleled and have forever changed the museum’s ability to deliver world-class exhibitions and programs.”

The gift includes a painting by Vincent van
Gogh, Edge of a Wheat Field with
 Poppies, the first Van Gogh artwork to
enter the museum’s collection; four works
 by the impressionist master Claude Monet
including Path in the Wheat Fields at the
 Pourville, 1882, and The Houses in the Snow, Norway, that illustrate a range of output during the peak of Monet’s career; three paintings by Eugène Boudin, the first by the artist to enter the museum’s collection, including Scene at the Beach in Trouville, 1881; along with paintings by Paul Cézanne, another first for the museum’s collection, Edouard Manet, Berthe Morisot, Camille Pissarro, Auguste Renoir and Alfred Sisley, as well as those of their American contemporaries William Merritt Chase and Childe Hassam.

The addition of these 22 works elevates the museum’s holdings of impressionist works to one of the best in the Western United States.

“Collecting these paintings has been a joy for the past four decades and I am happy to know that future generations of visitors to the Denver Art Museum will be able to enjoy them as much as I have,” Hamilton said. “It is my hope that this gift will make the museum’s collection an even greater resource to everyone who lives in or visits our great city.”

Hamilton served as chairman of the Denver Art Museum board of trustees from 1994–2013 and played a pivotal role in the successful expansion of the museum campus with the 146,000-square-foot addition by Daniel Libeskind, which opened in 2006. The building, which bears Hamilton’s name, will house the collection in a dedicated installation space when the works arrive permanently.

Throughout his tenure, Hamilton has spearheaded two major endowment campaigns for the Denver Art Museum, growing those assets to more than $100 million. In addition to his contribution and support of the Hamilton Building, he also led a multi-million dollar renovation of the North Building in 1997 that resulted in the reinstallation of the American and European art and western American art collection galleries.

A pioneer in America’s oil industry, Hamilton founded Hamilton Oil Corp. in the late 1960s, built it into an international oil company and also formed a domestic gas company, both of which he merged into a major integrated oil company in the mid-1980s. He is now chairman of Hamilton Companies LLC, which is active in venture capital, private equity, oil and gas, real estate and acquisitions operations. He is on the National Petroleum Council and a director of the American Petroleum Institute. In addition to his commitment to the DAM, Hamilton serves as a member of the Trustee’s Council of the National Gallery of Art and trustee emeritus of the Smithsonian Institution, both in Washington, D.C.

For museum information, call 720-865-5000 or visit www.denverartmuseum.org.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Claude Monet, 'Path in the Wheat Fields at Pourville,' 1882. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.
Claude Monet, ‘Path in the Wheat Fields at Pourville,’ 1882. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.
Eugene Boudin, 'Le Havre, Anchored Vessels in the Harbor,' about 1868-1872. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.
Eugene Boudin, ‘Le Havre, Anchored Vessels in the Harbor,’ about 1868-1872. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.
Vincent van Gogh, 'Edge of a Wheat Field with Poppies,' 1887. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.
Vincent van Gogh, ‘Edge of a Wheat Field with Poppies,’ 1887. Bequest of Frederic C. Hamilton.