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...Tate's keepers, or administrators, simply had to muddle through, and they did so brilliantly. By watching their purse, they developed shrewd eyesight. Two Henry Moore drawings that cost a paltry $18 apiece in the early 1940s would now fetch a hundred times that; two Giacometti oils, bought for $112 and $168, are now worth around $25,000 apiece...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Britain's Liveliest Museum | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

...keepers also found rich friends. Sir Joseph Duveen gave a new wing to house the Tate's vast, unique J.M.W. Turner collection; his son (eventually Lord Duveen of Millbank, titled for the medieval name of the Tate's site) added the museum's soaring sculpture hall. Formed five years ago, the Friends of the Tate Gallery, some 830 amateurs who banquet by candlelight three times a year amid the modern sculpture, have already given six Henry Moores, bringing the museum's total to 35, and have widened the U.S. collection with works by Louise Nevelson, Jasper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Britain's Liveliest Museum | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

Over the years the Tate collection (see color) has grown to nearly 4,000 British paintings, more than 300 modern foreign paintings, and some 360 pieces of sculpture. Only in the museum's 86 works by William Blake can the romantic prophet who enthroned man's imagination be seen so amply. There are now 278 Turner oils. Before Rothenstein took over in 1938, the subtle, chromatic late Turners such as Norham Castle, Sunrise were kept in storage. Now their pale fire blazes across five Duveen Rooms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Britain's Liveliest Museum | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

Half Disestablished. What gives the Tate its latter-day prestige is Director Rothenstein, 62, an English painter's son who once taught art history at the University of Kentucky and the University of Pittsburgh. He knocked the stuffiness out of the museum, installed single-line hanging instead of stacking paintings up the walls the old-fashioned way, and made the rooms flow in chronological order. He vastly enlarged the U.S. collection because U.S. art "was seriously underestimated abroad." His great exhibitions are the talk of London: the 1963 survey of Australian art from aborigines to Sidney Nolan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Britain's Liveliest Museum | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

Rothenstein, who was knighted in 1952, has fought hard for the Tate-once with his fists. At a bubbly art-show opening, his chief detractor, the waspish critic Douglas Cooper, taunted Rothenstein once too often, and the bespectacled, bantamweight director flattened him with one fat punch. Rothenstein has to buy paintings before they get expensive and safe, and the result is a rare reputation for a public gallery. Its oldest painting dates from Henry VIII, but it also buys Britain's latest Pop artists. Says Rothenstein: "We're a nice mixture-something established and disestablished all at once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Britain's Liveliest Museum | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

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