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Last Days to See the Modern Masters

Exhibit from the Cone Sisters' collection ends run at Nasher Museum Feb. 10

Matisse

Henri Matisse fondly called Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta Cone "my two Baltimore ladies." The two Cone sisters began buying art directly out of the Parisian studios of avant-garde artists in 1905. At a time when critics disparaged Matisse, and Pablo Picasso was virtually unknown, the Cones followed their passions and amassed one of the world's greatest art collections. The exhibition tells this story and features more than 50 of these masterpieces -- including paintings, sculptures and works on paper by Matisse, Picasso, Gauguin, Renoir, van Gogh, Pissarro, Courbet and more -- on loan from The Baltimore Museum of Art.

The exhibit's run at the Nasher Museum of Art ends Sunday, Feb. 10.

In addition to modern masterpieces, the exhibition includes textiles and decorative arts from Europe, Asia and Africa that the Cones collected, as well as photographs and archival materials to highlight the remarkable lives of these sisters. Also featured in the exhibition will be an interactive virtual tour of their adjoining Baltimore apartments, showing their remarkable collection as it was displayed in their home.

All works are from the collection of The Baltimore Museum of Art: The Cone Collection, formed by Dr. Claribel Cone and Miss Etta Cone of Baltimore.

Listen to a Duke Today podcast on the exhibit:

Above: Henri Matisse, Striped Robe, Fruit, and Anemones, 1940.

Below:  Paul Gauguin, Vahine no te vi (Woman of the Mango), 1892. 

Gauguin -- Cone Collection