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Peggy Guggenheim A Celebration
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Peggy Guggenheim
A Celebration
Karole P. B. Vail
GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM
Published on the occasion of the exhibition © 1998, 1999 The Solomon R.
organized by Karole P. B. Vail: Guggenheim Foundation, New York.
All rights reserved.
The operations and programs of the Peggy Guggenheim Photo credits: pages 16, 61 (top), 64, 65,
Collection are supported by: 68, 71, 84 (bottom), 85, 89, 90 (right),
INTRAPRES/E COLLEZIONE GUGGENHEIM 18, 62, Sergio Martucci; 26, Gerard Blot,
© RMN; 35, 83, 86, 90 (left), 91, 93,
Aermec iGuzzini llluminazione 98 (left and right), 99, 101, 109, 115,
Arclinea Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca 116, David Heald.
Automotive Products Italia dello Stato
Banca Antoniana Popolare Leo Burnett All works of art in the Peggy Guggenheim
Veneta Lubiam 1911 Collection reproduced in color were
Barbero 1891 Luciano Marcato photographed by David Heald, except those
Bisazza Rex Built-in on pages 32, 61 (bottom), and 79, which
DLW AG Safilo Group were photographed by Sergio Martucci.
Gretag Imaging Group Swatch
Gruppo 3M Italia Wella
Gruppo Imation Italia Zucchi-Bassetti Group FRONT COVER
Peggy Guggenheim, photographed around
Management by Bondardo Comunicazione 1924 by Man Ray (detail). Private collection
BACK COVER
Jean Cocteau, drawing in Peggy
Guggenheim's third guest book, 1956
(detail). Private collection
FRONTISPIECE
Peggy Guggenheim, photographed around
1940 by Rogi Andre (detail). Bibliotheque
Nationale de France, Paris, Departement
des Estampes et de la Photographie
In memory of my parents, Sindbad and Peggy Angela Vail
Contents
9 Foreword
Thomas Krens
11 Acknowledgments
Karole P. B. Vail
Cornel West
Trustees Ex Officio Michael F. Wettach
Dakis Joannou John Wilmerding
Luigi Moscheri William T. Ylvisaker
Director Emeritus
Thomas M. Messer
PEGGY GUGGENHEIM COLLECTION ADVISORY BOARD PEGGY GUGGENHEIM COLLECTION
FAMILY COMMITTEE
Christian Habermann
Jacques Hachuel M.
Gilbert W. Harrison
Robert A. Hefner III
W. Lawrence Heisey
William M. Hollis, Jr.
Evelyn Lambert
Jacques E. Lennon
Samuel H. Lindenbaum
June Lowell
Cristiano Mantero
Achille Maramotti
Valeria Monti
Luigi Moscheri
Raymond D. Nasher
Christina Newburgh
Giovanni Pandini
Annelise Ratti
Benjamin B. Rauch
Richard A. Rifkind
Nanette Ross
Miles Rubin
Aldo Sacchi
Gheri Sackler
Sir Timothy Sainsbury
Denise Saul
Evelina Schapira
Hannelore B. Schulhof
James B. Sherwood
Riki Taylor
Jean Wagener
Nancy Pierce Watts
Ruth Westen Pavese
Sponsor's Statement
HUGO BOSS
Foreword
tion. In L993, the palazzo and its garden were renovated and the
museum enlarged to include a neighboring two-story building.
While special exhibitions have given the institution an
added luster, it is Peggy's collection that continues to Berve a-
the institution's greatest draw, luring some 250,000 visitors
annually. The collection, however, has been augmented
through extended loans of Modern and contemporary sculpture
from the Patsy R. and Raymond D. Nasher Collection, and
early twentieth-century Italian art from the Gianni Mattioli
Collection. With a new tradition of development and growth, the
future of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection promises to be as
bright as its past.
Peggy Guggenheim Collection. The show and this book are the
result of several years of research by Peggy's granddaughter
these guest books, which are still in family hands, are published
Thomas Krens
Director
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
10
Acknowledgments
dame du Surrealisme."
Many other Guggenheim Museum staff members contributed
enormously to the success of the exhibition. I am deeply grateful
to Jodi Myers, Assistant Registrar, who skillfully handled the
many complexities of the exhibition with constant good will and
humor, and to Suzanne Quigley, Head Registrar for Collections
11
Sculpture, and Nicole Basso, Conservation Coordinator. To
Jocelyn Brayshaw, Chief Preparator for Paper, and to Elizabeth
Jaff, Associate Preparator for Paper, I express my thanks for the
12
The publication of this handsome and elegant book would
not have been possible without the encouragement, generosity,
and enthusiasm of Anthony Calnek, Director of Publications.
I will be forever grateful to Edward Weisberger, Editor, for his
meticulous and painstaking editing; Elizabeth Levy, Managing
Editor/Manager of Foreign Editions, Esther Yun, Assistant
Production Manager, and Melissa Secondino, Production
Assistant, whose efforts ensured the beauty of this catalogue;
and Carol Fitzgerald, Associate Editor, and Nicole Columbus,
for their editorial thoroughness. I am delighted to have worked
with Patrick Seymour and Ji Lee, Tsang Seymour Design Inc.,
13
I would like to extend my heartfelt gratitude to the exhibi-
tion's lenders. I would particularly like to thank my sister, Julia
14
Robert Dance; Maxwell Davidson; Andre Emmerich; Amy Ernst;
Dallas Ernst; Meredith Etherington-Smith, Christie's, London;
Deborah Evetts; Claire Falkenstein; Felix Fertig; Stefano Fiuzzi;
Karole P. B. Vail
15
Peggy Guggenheim
Life and Art
Karole P. B. Vail
The Guggenheims
A little girl with long locks of hair clutches her hands tightly.
not guess her age — and, even more, the portrait, also by
Lenbach, of herself and her older sister, Benita, who with her
beautiful brown hair and brown eyes did not need fanciful
was born into two wealthy and famous New York Jewish fami-
lies: the Guggenheims and the Seligmans. A half century before,
in 1848 —a year of political turmoil throughout Europe — her
paternal grandfather, Simon Guggenheim, and his son, Meyer,
had left the ghetto of Lengnau in German Switzerland, and
sailed for Philadelphia, dreaming of success and freedom.
FACING PAGE
Indeed, Philadelphia and Pennsylvania were among the most
Franz von Lenbach
liberal of all the cities and states of the United States, as well Peggy Guggenheim, 1903
ca.
Oil on board, 129 x93 cm
as being important political, cultural, and economic centers.
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Father and son peddled household goods door-to-door, and 98.5247
17
Franz von Lenbach Meyer, taking full advantage of his newfound freedom, began to
Benita and Peggy Guggenheim,
ca. 1903
manufacture stove polish, the first of many family industries—
Oil on board, 88.3 x 54.6 cm which would come to include speculations in foodstuffs and
Private collection
spices, and lace and embroidery manufacturing. The greatest
wealth, however, would come from investments in mining, espe-
cially lead and silver mines near Leadville, Colorado.
Meyer had seven sons and three daughters with his wife,
plined each son to ensure that they would work hard and stay
together. He said that together the brothers were as strong as a
New York's Upper West Side, and the sons soon followed. In
1894, Benjamin married Florette Seligman from the very
successful international banking family. Joseph Seligman, the
the two families. James and his wife, Rosa, had eight children,
many of whom exhibited troubling eccentricities and ailments.
Of Florette 's two sisters, one sang rather than spoke her conver-
sations and the other was catatonic. Florette herself repeated
everything she said three times: "Shush, Peggy will see, Peggy
will see, Peggy will see." 3 Benjamin was upset that his wife's
19
silver, copper, and lead mines. Benjamin was to miss out on the
grandest era of Guggenheim business expansion, and Florette
and their daughters were to suffer the financial consequences.
was also filled with torments." 7 The love of Peggy's childhood was
her sister Benita, who served as substitute mother and best
friend. Their portrait by Lenbach conveys that sisterly love,
Peggy and her sisters were taught history, music, and litera-
her life from this early stage. These women introduced her to the
arts and social issues; they encouraged her liberation of spirit
and mind and a new social awareness.
In 1920, Peggy temporarily substituted for her dentist's
nurse. The experience— something quite extraordinary and
unheard of for a young woman in her social position— left her
17
feeling "in need of a job." Peggy went to work for her cousin
Harold Loeb, who was a coowner of Sunwise Turn, a radical
bookshop located near Grand Central Terminal; the store also
exhibited art. Loeb was the real-life inspiration for the character
Robert Cohn in Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises (1926).
An enthusiastic, energetic, and eager worker, Peggy took care
of the bookkeeping. The catch was that she worked for free; in
compensation, she received a discount on any books she pur-
chased: "In order to have the illusion of receiving a big salary,
I bought many books of modern literature and read them
all with my usual voracity." 18
Peggy's wealthy aunts came to buy
books by the yard for their bookshelves at home. The bookshop
was frequented by celebrated artistic and literary personalities,
her early adult years— for better and for worse. Laurence, a
more serious man than Peggy has described in her memoirs, had
lived most of his life in France, where he was born in 1891 to
artistic, and social life. Writers and artists haunted the tables of
such Montparnasse cafes as Le Dome and, just across the way,
La Rotonde. Laurence spent hours sitting in cafes with Clotilde,
drinking, talking, looking, and being looked at. Djuna Barnes,
Mary Reynolds— two women who, according to Peggy, "had the
kind of nose I had gone all the way to Cincinnati for in vain" 23 —
The New Yorker art critic Robert Coates, Marcel Duchamp, Man
Ray, and writer and publisher Robert McAlmon were just some
of the friends, including many expatriate Americans, with whom
Peggy and Laurence spent time during the day and at parties
that went on all night. It is not surprising that this Parisian
milieu had a significant effect on Peggy's growing artistic aware-
ness. Years later, however, Peggy said that "perhaps I didn't like
where Peggy and Laurence had gone for the birth so that their
24
J\3 To OUA ATUUl /<XoO t
. f}2 6
In between wild parties and marital rows in Paris, trips to
Laurence had lived there as a child for his father had always
gone there in the autumn to paint. Laurence knew every stone,
every church, every painting in Venice; in fact he was its second
Ruskin. He walked me all over this horseless and autoless city
and I developed for it a lifelong passion." 25
During a trip to New York in 1925, Peggy— pregnant with
her second child — arranged for the exhibition and sale in gal-
leries and department stores of flower cut-outs by Mina Loy.
seems that Peggy did not much care for the portrait and decided
not to acquire it.
strike off on her own, borrowed money from Peggy up her Alfred Courmes
to set
Portrait of Peggy Guggenheim, 1926
own photography studio in 1926. A grateful Abbott repaid the Oil on canvas, 100 x 65 cm
Musee National de la Cooperation Franco-
debt by taking lovely photographs of Peggy sporting fashionably
Americaine. Chateau de Blerancourt.
short hair, wearing exotic earrings and bright lipstick, and Gift of the Amis du Musee, 1985
Peggy Guggenheim, photographed
around 1926 by Berenice Abbott.
Berenice Abbott/Commerce
Graphics Ltd, Inc.
Peggy never forgave herself for not having been with her sister
28
wife, Willa, translated the writings of Franz Kafka into English.
Peggy was immediately attracted to Holms: "He had a magnifi-
cent physique. . . . and looked very much like Jesus Christ." 27
The evening that Peggy met Holms was on the first anniversary
of Benita's death. The fateful kiss they gave each other— soon
after Peggy had danced on a table in a Saint-Tropez bistro —
marked the end of Peggy's marriage to Laurence. Some weeks
later, Peggy and Holms ran off together. As part of the divorce
know today. When I first met him I was like a baby in a kinder-
tors. It was here that the talented, chic, and dynamic, but rather
resentful, Barnes— to whom Peggy had been giving financial
support— wrote her famous novel Nightwood, which she dedicat-
ed to Peggy and Holms when it was published in 1936. (Until
Holms— who could write brilliantly but whose promise was John Holms and Peggy Guggenheim with
her children, Sindbad and Pegeen Vail,
largely unfulfilled because he was unable to write a book— around 1930.
conversed with Peggy and their guests when he was not drink- Private collection
first her father, then Benita, and now Holms. Regarding these
deaths, her sense of helplessness was understandable. However,
in situations during which she might have exercised genuine
responsibility she often did not do so. Throughout Peggy's life,
or grandchildren.
with Douglas Garman, whom she had met and been attracted
to while Holms was still alive. Garman, a fanatical Communist,
worked as a publisher for a progressive publishing house in
London. In a domestic fashion of sorts, in the summer of 1935,
Guggenheim Jeune
A turning point for Peggy occurred in May 1937, when her close
Her personal taste had been largely for Renaissance art and the
Old Masters. In fact, she had read all of Bernard Berenson's
books and swore by his aesthetic principles. She turned to
Marcel Duchamp, a lover of her and Laurence Vail's friend Mary
Reynolds, for guidance. He taught Peggy the difference between
abstract and Surrealist art and introduced her to Jean Arp, Jean
Cocteau, and many other artists. The charismatic Duchamp
31
had become a legend when his controversial painting Nude
Descending a Staircase No. 2 (1912, Philadelphia Museum of
Jean Arp
Head and Shell (Tete et coquille), ca. 1933
Polished brass, 19.7 cm high
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 54
32
w^
with Beckett, who liked liberated women. Peggy ultimately Marcel Duchamp, photographed in 1930
by Man Ray.
found him to be too passive and eccentric; she nicknamed him The Young-Mallin Archive. New York,
"Oblomov" after the neurotic, indolent hero of Ivan Goncharov's V. Thomson Papers
1858 novel. She certainly did not, and perhaps could not, fathom
this complex intellectual, and she infringed too much on his
33
to the general public, and Peggy only showed it to a few people
in private. Beckett translated Cocteau's catalogue text into
34
An exhibition of celebrity portraits by Cedric Morris Vasily Kandinsky
Dominant Curve (Courbe dominante),
(March 18-April 7) was followed by Exhibition of Contemporary April 1936
Sculpture (April8-May 2), which was proposed by Duchamp. Oil on canvas, 129.4 x 194.2 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum 45.989
Arp helped Duchamp with the selection, which was made up of
works by Arp, Brancusi, Alexander Calder, Raymond Duchamp-
Villon, Henri Laurens, Henry Moore, Antoine Pevsner, and
Sophie Taeuber-Arp. Much of the sculpture was shipped from
Paris, and more problems with British customs ensued. James
B. Manson, director of the Tate Gallery, London, refused to
Peggy for the opportunity. The London art scene had been sleepy
in comparison with that of Paris, but there were now such gal-
leries as the Mayor Gallery and the London Gallery, Peggy's
35
neighbors on Cork Street. The London Gallery, owned by the
wealthy writer, painter, and collector Roland Penrose, was
directed by E. L. T. Mesens, editor of London Bulletin, the official
being, for the first time in the gallery's brief history, a small
36
Yves Tanguy
The Sun in Its Jewel Case (Le Soleil
dans son ecrin), 1937
Oil on canvas, 115.4 x 88.1 cm
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 95
herself bought her first Ernst painting and a Llewellyn for what
41
she called "normal prices." Her comment is indicative of the
37
Henghes (April 14-May 6), and Charles Howard (April 14-
May 6), led up to Exhibition of Abstract and Concrete Art
(May 11-27), which included works by such artists as Arp,
was losing money, despite its being a successful artistic and cul-
tural venture. She approached Read, who had been the editor
of The Burlington Magazine in London since 1933. In such books
as The Meaning of Art (1931), Art Now (1933), Art and Industry FACING PAGE
(1934), Art and Society (1936), and Surrealism (1936), he wrote Piet Mondrian
Composition. 1938-39
about art in general as well as contemporary art. He had been Oil on canvas, mounted on wood support:
involved in organizing the 1936 International Surrealist canvas 105.2 x 102.3 cm: wood support
109.1 x 106 x 2.5 cm
Exhibition, and his friends included the circle of artists around Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 39
Hepworth, Moore, and Nicholson. Through his writings and
his active involvement with artists, he had done much to popu-
larize avant-garde art in the English-speaking world. He had
been interested in founding a museum of Modern art in
Edinburgh, where he was teaching in 1931, but when he heard
from Peggy that she wanted him to run a museum she was
planning to create in London, he was skeptical at first. Penrose
had been initially involved, but he and Peggy soon disagreed
39
S>£i5E«
40
)
Finding a suitable site was not easy, but then the London
residence of art historian Kenneth Clark on Portland Place
became available. Peggy was relatively oblivious to the impend-
ing war with Germany; she would later write with her usual
that she was preparing for the fast approaching war, and I
A Picture a Day
colony for the duration of the war," but shortly came to her sens-
es: "As soon as I got back to Paris and met a few of the people
41
Max Ernst, and Tanguy, and— eager to get to know them in
"in the least resembling" although she had "posed quietly for
several hours" for Thomson. 53
Peggy's life during the war was extraordinary to say the
least. From the time war was declared at the beginning of
and art dealers in order to buy artworks. The uncertainty of war Photographie
43
Antoine Pevsner and Peggy Guggenheim. meant that although artists were more anxious to sell, there
1940, with Pevsner's Developable
Surface (Surface developpable,
were fewer buyers; artworks were more readily available,
1938-August 1939), which she had and the prices were quite cheap. A photograph by Rogi Andre,
recently purchased from him.
Private collection
a former pupil and the first wife of Andre Kertesz, shows a
proud Peggy next to Constantin Brancusi's sculpture Maiastra
FACING PAGE
(1912 [?]), which she bought from Nicole Groult, a sister of
Constantin Brancusi
Bird in Space (L'Oiseau dans I'espace), Paul Poiret. Peggy had previously failed to buy Bird in Space
1932-40
(1932-40) from Brancusi; she had an argument with the artist
Polished brass, 151.7 cm high,
including base because she felt that he had demanded an excessively high
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 51
price. Months later, Peggy succeeded in buying it at a discount
with the help of van Doesburg and a good exchange rate.
Peggy bought a Jean Helion painting (which she subsequent-
ly exchanged), little knowing he would later become her son-in-
(1931-32) directly from his wife, Gala; although she did not par-
ticularly care for the Spanish painter, his name was
on her list, and she was disciplined enough to buy his work. The
acquisition of Alberto Giacometti's sculpture Woman with Her
Throat Cut (1932, cast 1940) followed after Peggy went to visit
the more ironic as she shows off her latest acquisitions. During
44
the last months before Paris fell to the Germans in June, ABOVE AND FACING PAGE. RIGHT
Peggy kept up the pace of her purchases, acquiring "fifty works, Peggy Guggenheim in Kay Sage's
apartment on the lie Saint-Louis,
56
thirty-seven of which are still in the collection" : four Jean photographed around 1940 by Rogi Andre.
Arps, one Giacomo Balla, two Brancusis, one Georges Braque, Bibliotheque Nationale de France, Paris,
Departement des Estampes et de la
one Giorgio de Chirico, two Dalis, one Robert Delaunay, one Photographie
47
Robert Delaunay Sindbad, who were living in Megeve. Peggy soon settled nearby
Windows Open Simultaneously
in Grenoble, and luckily, Nelly van Doesburg was a friend of
1st Part, 3rd Motif (Fenetres ouvertes
ere e
simultanement l partie, 3 motif), 1912 Andre Farcy, director of the Musee de Grenoble, who agreed to
ON on canvas, 57 x 123 cm
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
hide her artworks in the museum's cellar until they could be
76.2553 PG 36 shipped to New York. Thanks to the good sense of Peggy's ship-
per, Rene Lefebvre-Foinet, the collection was packed among
personal belongings, so that there would be less potential for
problems with customs officials.
Passage to America
villa called Air-Bel. Andre Breton and his family as well as the
writer Victor Serge were also put up at the villa. Kay Sage
cabled Peggy in Grenoble asking her to help finance the passage
to America of the Bretons, Max Ernst, and Pierre Mabille, a
favorite doctor of the Surrealists. After some protest, Peggy
agreed to help the Bretons and Max. She also took up the cause
48
of the Jewish Romanian artist Victor Brauner, but the Romanian
quota was so small that he was unable to get a visa. She would
continue to give financial support to Breton after he arrived in
New York. Forever grateful for her help and generosity, he would
write to her in 1965: "Je n'ai pas pour autant oublie New York,
ni ce Marseille au tournant de 1940 d'ou j'ai pu m'evader a
temps grace a vous. C'est evidemment une des grandes dates de
ma vie et je ne pense jamais sans emotion que tout a dependu
alors de votre genereuse intervention." 59 (I have certainly not
forgotten New York, nor Marseilles at the turn of 1940 when I
ing for his passage to America. She sent him money so that
depicting Peggy as she came toward him, that "her body and
walk suggested] considerable hesitation. . . . Her face was
strangely childlike, but it expressed something I imagined the
ugly duckling must have felt the first time it saw its reflection in
49
pleading, and the bony hands, at a loss where to go. . . . There
was something about her that wanted me to reach out to her,
50
By late September, Peggy and Max were back in New York, Peggy Guggenheim and Max Ernst being
interviewed by reporters upon their arrival
where they were destined to live in Hale House, a town house at in New York on July 14, 1941.
440 East Fifty-first Street and Beekman Place, overlooking the UPl/Corbis-Bettmann
East River. Peggy believed that it was "the ideal place for the
museum, except that it was too far away from the center of
relations with Max, who had sided with Paul Eluard after a split
51
disliked being photographed with Peggy, however, although
nothing to stop the awful fights they often had. Nor did it pre-
vent Max from refusing to use the intimate form of address, tu,
52
Mondrian wrote a preface, which the painter Charmion von
Wiegand translated into English. Dedicated to John Holms,
the book was published in May 1942. Thirty works still in the
gallery in New York. In this year, Peggy was one of the sponsors
Andre Breton, Marcel Duchamp, and sion and understanding of Modern and contemporary art in
Max Ernst standing behind Morris
Hirshfield's Girl Looking Through a
New York during the war years. Peggy, Rubinstein, and
Doorway, with Leonora Carrington seated, Schiaparelli were, as the art historian Leo Steinberg has so
photographed at Peggy Guggenheim's
East Fifty-first Street home around rightly said, literally "living feminism." 70
1942-43 by Matta. The art critic Clement Greenberg thought "the Surrealist
The Young-Mallin Archive, New York,
A. Alpert Papers influence has become exaggerated" and that before the war
Americans had seen "more good contemporary art in New York:
Miro, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky. . . . We saw a lot more than
the French did." 71 Greenberg believed that those masters of
Modern European art had more of an influence on American art
54
was Matta (Roberto Sebastian Matta Echaurren) who probably
had the most influence on the emerging Abstract Expressionists.
A Chilean, he had been one of the younger members of the
Surrealist circle in Paris. He organized evenings of Surrealist
exercises, during which such artists as William Baziotes,
Jackson Pollock, and Robert Motherwell became familiar with
automatism. Matta— fluent in English and personable— belonged
to the same generation as these Americans, and he was able to
letter to Kiesler, dated February 26, she wrote, "Will you give me
some advise [sic] about remodelling two tailor-shops into an
Art Gallery?" 72
He felt challenged by the project, submitting a
proposal on March 7, in which he acknowledged, "It is your wish
that some new method be developed for exhibiting paintings,
55
the God, the deer and the image of the deer existed with
equal potency, with the same immediate reality in one
living universe. 76
blue canvas, laced to the floors and ceiling. . . . The floors were
painted turquoise, Peggy's favorite color. Unframed pictures
peep through a hole and turn a wheel. A third kinetic object was
a shadow box that displayed Andre Breton's Portrait of the
Actor A. B. (1942); after lifting a lever, a diaphragm imprinted
with Breton's image opened to reveal the poem-object within
(the object was either destroyed or is lost).
56
Vasily Kandinsky
White Cross (Weisses Kreuz),
January-June 1922
Oil on canvas, 100.5 x 110.6 cm
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 34
58
and one made by [Alexander] Calder, in order to show my impar-
tiality between Surrealist and abstract art" 80
— was a huge suc-
cess with favorable articles appearing in the press.
Art of This Century came on the scene at a time, when, as
Sidney Janis would recall, "there were maybe a dozen galleries
morning and spent the day at the gallery greeting visitors and
planning exhibitions. Her relations with Jimmy Ernst continued
to be friendly— indeed far more pleasant than those with his
father— and for a short time he worked as her assistant. Peggy
had decided, on the advice of Reis, that Art of This Century
should not only be a museum space that exhibited European
masters but also a commercial gallery that sold the paintings of
young American artists.
1942-February 6, 1943) was selected by a jury that consisted Peggy Guggenheim wearing earring with
miniature painting by Yves Tanguy, 1949.
of Breton, Duchamp, Jimmy Ernst, Max Ernst, Putzel, James Private collection.
Thrall Soby, James Johnson Sweeney, and Peggy. Peggy had © Cameraphoto-Epoche, Venice
asked Max to visit the women's studios, and one of the artists
stupid, vulgar and dressed in the worst possible taste but was
quite talented and imitated Max's painting, which flattered
83
him immensely" ; she always thought that Leonora Carrington
59
Joseph Cornell
Fortune Telling Parrot (Parrot Music Box),
ca. 1937-38
Box construction, 40.8 x 22.2 x 17 cm
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 126
BOX-VALISE
collect It i »i\r% niiu icproducitoni In coloi
rcprcieutlng ihe life-work ol ihc artist
JOSEPH CORNELL
LAURENCE VAIL
Fo'UrVTCTSIX'IFfflr:
was superior to Tanning. Nonetheless, Max and Tanning began Exhibition announcement
(recto) for Objects by Joseph Cornell
an affair, and they would marry in 1946 in a double ceremony
and (verso) for Marcel Duchamp: Box-Valise
with Man Ray and Juliet Browner. Exhibition by 31 Women and Laurence Vail: Bottles, 1942.
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Archives,
included works by Xenia Cage (then married to John Cage), Bequest of Peggy Guggenheim. 1976
George Grosz, then living in New York, Pablo Picasso, and Kurt Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 289
Schwitters were shown alongside such American artists as
William Baziotes, Cornell, David Hare, Robert Motherwell,
Pereira, Jackson Pollock (his name misspelled on the announce-
61
Leonora Carrington ment as "Polloch"), Ad Reinhardt, and Sterne; works by Jimmy
The Horses of Lord Candlestick, 1939
Oil on canvas, 59.7 x 91.4 cm
Ernst and Laurence Vail were also included. Motherwell and
Private collection Pollock were uneasy about collage but very much wanted to be
62
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Parcel Duchonp
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s
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Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Archives, ««• 3 \ ".,eo "'.
64
tic arrangement, Peggy and Macpherson moved into a duplex
apartment in a brownstone at 155 East Sixty-first Street; in A FIRST EXHIBITION
R
effect, they were able to have separate apartments on each floor. T
Iowa City), his largest work, for the duplex. In 1945, Andre
Kertesz, who admired Peggy, would photograph her in her sit- Exhibition announcement for Jackson
Pollock: Paintings and Drawings, 1943.
ting room with Paul Delvaux's The Break of Day (L'Aurore, July
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Archives,
1937) in the background, and her earrings hanging on the walls. Bequest of Peggy Guggenheim, 1976
65
(October 24-November 11), and Hare (November 14-December 2).
had become friends with Jane and Paul Bowles, and in October
and perhaps the greatest one to appear since Miro." 91 The season
ended with The Women (June 12- July 7), the gallery's second
group exhibition dedicated to women artists; it included many of FACING PAGE
the artists shown in 1943 as well as Louise Bourgeois and Janet Robert Motherwell
Personage
Sobel— "the best woman painter by far in America," according
(Autoportrait),
December 9, 1943
to Peggy 92 — Sterne, and Charmion von Wiegand. Paper collage, gouache, and ink on board.
103.8 x 65.9 cm
The fourth season at Art of This Century opened with
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Autumn Salon (October 6-29), which included many artists 76.2553 PG 155
67
previously exhibited at the gallery as well as such newcomers
as Willem de Kooning and Clyfford Still. Solo exhibitions by
Charles Seliger (October 30-November 17), a friend of Jimmy
Ernst; Paul Wilton (October 30-November 17); Lee Hersch
(November 20-December 8); and Ted Bradley (November 20-
December 8) were followed by Christmas Exhibition of Gouaches
(December 11-29), which included a work by Arshile Gorky.
Gorky's participation was surprisingly the only time he was
shown at the gallery, although sometime around 1945 Peggy
bought one of his mature paintings, Untitled (summer 1944), for
A (May 14- June 1). Still's exhibition, his first individual showing,
R
T had been proposed by Rothko, who wrote the catalogue preface,
O and installed by Greenberg and David Porter. Peggy occasionally
F
* ALBERTO bought works that were in the exhibitions, and she purchased
s GIACOMETTI Still's Jamais (May 1944). He would later write, "Peggy was
c was doing
E the only one doing an honest job at this time. She
N
T something personal. The closing of her gallery [after the 1946-47
U
93
R
FEB 10 -MAR 10
season] was the biggest loss to the art world." De Niro (the
Y 30 WEST 57
B— —HI—IT father of the actor Robert De Niro) was praised by Greenberg for
S3W
k^Htt .'J L \ -*^z2
create a genuinely violent and extravagant art without losing
W. 94
-" ' ^'^bVb^bW J stylistic control."
tmt^ /
In March, the publication of Peggy's memoirs Out of This
*OMAN WITH A CUT THnOAT Century: The Informal Memoirs of Peggy Guggenheim— the title
Exhibition announcement for Alberto a play on the gallery's name — coincided with Pegeen's first solo
Giacometti, 1945, with illustration
of Giacometti's Woman w/th Her Throat
exhibition. Max Ernst had provided art for the front of the dust
Cut (Femme egorgee, 1932, cast 1940). jacket, and Pollock had done so for the back. In discussing
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Archives,
Bequest of Peggy Guggenheim, 1976
certain relationships, Peggy amusingly used fictitious names, for
example, "Florenz Dale" for Laurence Vail and "Oblomov" for
FACING PAGE
Samuel Beckett. She spared no details in discussing her sexual
Peggy Guggenheim in her Sixty-first Street
apartment, photographed in 1945 by affairs or the treatment she received during her marriage
Andre Kertesz.
to Max, whom she referred to by name. The book received many
Estate of Andre Kertesz
reviews, mostly harsh, by such critics as Katharine Kuh, who
called the memoirs a "vulgar autobiography" that was "doubly
offensive" because of Peggy's "discriminating collection." 95
68
Herbert Read, however, upon receiving a copy from Peggy,
promptly wrote to her:
accompany them, and she was glad to leave Paris, where she
now felt like a stranger. She would write:
70
I would be happy alone there. I set about trying to find a
Century's 1946-47 season would be its last. The only group exhi-
Helen Sch winger (December 24— January 11); Pollock (January 14—
Dreams That Money Can Buy (1947). Under the auspices of Art
71
of This Century Productions, Peggy provided most of the financ-
ing for the film although only Macpherson's name appears in
Lee Krasner and Jackson Pollock, paintings from two series, Sounds in the Grass and Accabonac
photographed in the late 1940s by Wilfrid
Zogbaum.
Creek, and Greenberg thought the exhibition "signals what may
Private collection be a major step in his development. . . . Pollock has gone beyond
FACING PAGE
the stage where he needs to make his poetry explicit in ideo-
Jackson Pollock graphs. What he invents instead has perhaps, in its very
Enchanted Forest, 1947
abstractness and absence of assignable definition, a more rever-
Oil on canvas, 221.3 x 114.6 cm
Peggy Guggenheim Collection berating meaning. . . . Pollock points a way beyond the easel." 102
76.2553 PG 151
Nonetheless, Pollock's work did not sell well, and few dealers
were ready to represent him. Peggy finally succeeded in placing
Pollock with Betty Parsons, who would first exhibit his work at
the fact remains that in the three or four years of her career
as a New York gallery director she gave first showings to
more serious new artists than anyone else in the country. . . .
72
—
Peggy Guggenheim, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., During the summer of 1947, Peggy went to Venice and found
and Margaret Scolari Barr at the Venice
Biennale, photographed in the summer of
temporary quarters in the hotel Savoia e Jolanda on the Riva
1948 by Lee Miller for Conde Nast degli Schiavoni. She set about exploring and rediscovering
Publications.
Courtesy of The Museum of Modern Art
La Serenissima (literally meaning "the most serene," this was an
Archives, New York, Margaret Scolari Barr historic name for the Republic of Venice). Thanks to the propri-
Papers. © Lee Miller Archives
etor of the Cafe Angelo near the Rialto bridge, she went to the
degli artisti" (the artists' hangout), and here she met Vedova and
Giuseppe Santomaso, both of whom had heard of Peggy as well
as of her uncle Solomon's Museum of Non-Objective Painting in
from the Accademia on the Grand Canal; Henry James had lived
in this palazzo during the writing of The Wings of the Dove
(1902). Because she had not yet found a permanent home for
74
Biennale, that Peggy's collection should be exhibited. Greece was
embroiled in civil war, and the Greek government agreed that
its pavilion —which would otherwise have been vacant—could be
used to exhibit Peggy's collection. The pavilion was soon hand-
somely refurbished by the architect Carlo Scarpa. Although the
Biennale had been founded in 1895, it was really not until 1948,
the year of the first Biennale since 1942, that Venice began to
play an international role in Modern and contemporary art. The
1948 Biennale (June 6-September 30) featured a prestigious pre-
sentation of Impressionist paintings curated by the art historian
Roberto Longhi and a retrospective of Pablo Picasso paintings
from 1907 to 1942. Restitution of a kind was made by the exhibi-
tion in the central pavilion of works by Otto Dix, Karl Hofer,
and Max Pechstein, whose art had been labeled "degenerate" by
the Nazis. Among the foreign pavilions, the American exhibition
of a diverse group of seventy-nine artists, each represented by
LEFT
75
a single work, included Stuart Davis, Arthur Dove, Marsden
Hartley, John Marin, Georgia O'Keeffe, Maurice Prendergast,
and Max Weber.
Collezione Peggy Guggenheim was a defining event of the
Biennale. Peggy's collection was the most comprehensive
survey of abstract and Surrealist art yet seen in Italy, and such
American artists as William Baziotes, Jackson Pollock, Mark
Rothko, and Clyfford Still were for the first time being shown
outside the United States. Peggy's collection gave Europeans the
opportunity to catch up with the best avant-garde art of the
recent past and to be introduced to the New York painters who
would come to dominate the art scene of the 1950s. Although
Peggy's collection was featured in the Biennale's catalogue, she
105
one's duty to protect the art of one's time." To which Berenson
retorted, "You should have come to me, my dear, I would have
106
found you bargains." Significantly, he liked Pollock's paintings,
which "to him, were like tapestries." 107
A photograph by Lee
Miller charmingly captured an ecstatic Peggy being visited
in her pavilion by art critic Lionello Venturi. In British Vogue,
76
The 1948 Biennale was a boost to the cultural life of Venice,
zo's basement and ground floor were completed. Long and wide,
it is often mistaken for a modern building and has one of the
77
%m<
m i i
\
\
rv
\
Alexander Calder for Chimpanzee (March 1957). She would display a selection of
Silver Bedhead, winter 1945-46
131 cm
Laurence Vail's collage bottles; elsewhere in the palazzo, she
Silver, 160 x
Peggy Guggenheim Collection kept his Screen (1940). The bedroom became her private retreat
76.2553 PG 138
in the years to come when visitors strolled through the galleries
in which her collection came to be installed. Or she would take
refuge by sunbathing on the roof terrace during the summer
months. This wing of the palazzo also contained several guest
bedrooms, and the other wing had the living and dining rooms
as well as the kitchen.
Peggy's collection had been brought into Italy on a temporary
permit for exhibition at the Biennale. To avoid high import
duties she would have to send the collection out of the country
and then bring it back in at a lower valuation. Until such an
arrangement could be made, she needed to keep the collection
traveling within Italy to other exhibition venues in order to
avoid being penalized by the Italian government. After she
moved into the palazzo in 1949, her collection was shown in the
78
In May 1949, Peggy decided to keep guest books. Handmade
and leather bound, they are personalized with her initials, P. G.,
on the cover of the first book and her first name, PEGGY, on the
covers of the remaining four. Leafing through them is to experi-
She also discovered the previously unknown drawings sketched Laurence Vail
Screen, 1940 (front and back)
on pages of the guest books. Tragically, in May 1986, after many
Gouache and paper collage on canvas,
years of illness, Sindbad died of cancer. Peggy Angela had also mounted on wood screen, three panels,
approximately 170 x 165 cm overall
contracted cancer, and two years later to the day, she passed
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
away My mother's project came to a halt, and my sister and I 76.2553 PG 123
79
inherited the guest books. I came across a pile of notes and
mind. Within this larger project, excerpts and drawings from the
guest books are published here for the first time.
Not only did Peggy acquire works of art, she also assembled
Peggy's, in the same way that they flocked to Harry's Bar, diago-
nally opposite her palazzo, on the other side of the Grand Canal.
In January 1958, Al Hirschfeld would wittily depict the famous
bar with Peggy in full regalia showing off her Calder earrings
and heartily biting into a sandwich.
si
—
Toro. White Angel, and even Pegeen I after her daughter' and Sir
-.
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Cf 4 1
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7 It 4* t* A—
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kVt^L-
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British, American, Irish, and French writers. The collectors
Bernard and Becky Reis, Peggy's friends from New York, became
regular guests. Saul Steinberg and Hedda Sterne's first visit was
commemorated by Sterne's sketch in the guest book of Pecora,
Peggy Guggenheim at the Palazzo the exhibition at the Palazzo Reale in Milan. At some point,
Venier dei Leoni, 1949, with sign
announcing the contemporary
Peggy returned the sculpture to Marini to be cast in bronze, at
sculpture exhibition held in which time he made a separate phallus, "so that it could be
September and October. 113
© Cameraphoto-Epoche, Venice
screwed in and out at leisure." Peggy could remove it to avoid
Pegeen
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
first guest book, 1949
Ink on paper; page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Private collection
FACING PAGE
Pavel Tchelitchew
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
first guest book, 1949
Ink on paper; page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Private collection
84
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The 1950s
FACING PAGE
The guest book entries, most limited to signatures and some-
Alberto Giacometti
times short comments, proliferated in the 1950s; the books that Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
first guest book, 1949
cover these years reflect the intense social life at the Palazzo
Pencil on paper; page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Venier dei Leoni during the period. The decade began with visits Private collection
s:
book, Matta drew an amusing sketch of figures kissing one
another's backsides. James Lord and his companion, Bernard
Minoret, visited in June, just a few days before Mark Rothko
whose sketch in Peggy's book featured a gondola — and then
Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson. Curator Willem
Sandberg came to see Peggy to arrange an exhibition of her col-
89
LEFT "It seemed to place Pollock historically where he belonged as
Jean Arp one of the greatest painters of our time." 119 She also organized
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
first guest book. 1950
Jean Helion's solo exhibition, held during August and
Pencil on paper; page 22.9 x
September, at the Sala degli Specchi in the Palazzo Giustinian.
15.6 cm
Private collection In August, on facing pages of the guest book, Jean Arp left
15.6 cm
designer Eugene Berman drew the first of his witty sketches of
Private collection Peggy's dogs in the guest books; it shows a winged Lhasa
apso perched on top of a tall Greek column, an allusion to the
90
"
Consagra left ink drawings in the book. At the end of the month,
John Rothenstein, director of the Tate Gallery, visited.
Italy. Peggy wrote, "It was all very easy. . . . they [the artworks]
were brought in at four o'clock in the morning— an Alpine pass.
These very stupid, sleepy douaniers, who didn't know what
120
it was all about, let them come in for I think $1000. In this
manner, Peggy was finally able to permanently move her
collection into the palazzo.
Peggy Guggenheim in her bedroom at the In 1951, Peggy's collection was installed throughout the
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, early 1950s.
Private collection.
palazzo; the courtyard became a sculpture garden. From the
© Cameraphoto-Epoche, Venice spring into the fall, the collection could be seen, free of charge,
FACING PAGE
by the public on three afternoons a week. The architectural
Marc Chagall firm bbpr (Lodovico Barbiano di Belgiojoso, Enrico Peressutti,
Drawing Peggy Guggenheim's
in
and Ernesto Nathan Rogers) presented a plan for the restoration
first guest book, 1950
Ink on paper; page 22.9 x 15.6 cm of her palazzo and additional exhibition space, conceiving,
Private collection
according to Peggy, "a two-story gallery elevated from my roof
on pillars twenty feet high. The front was to resemble the Doge's
Palace, and in their minds they [bbpr] conceived something that
they thought would be a link between the past and the
present." 121 Peggy disliked the design and decided against it. In
the early 1950s, with the help of Matta, Peggy turned the base-
ment rooms into galleries.
92
envying her for her many male conquests. In September,
Stephen Spender, who would visit regularly, was one of many
guests. Wifredo Lam drew a small dragon in the guest book
in December, and an appreciative Nelly van Doesburg filled
95
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>^<xM,l?£~/
w
i^**f> ;n A ois-*~/^ c
l ^M^V ,
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LEFT a Jew, she would have been denied the rental. Perhaps such
Friedensreich Hundertwasser memories played some part in her generous donation, through
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's second
guest book, 1952
the American Fund for Israel Institutions, of thirty-four
Colored pencil on paper; page 22.9
15.9 cm
x
paintings—including works by William Baziotes, Max Ernst,
Private collection Helion, Andre Masson, Man Ray, and Pollock—to the Tel-Aviv
Museum in 1952; indeed, of the many gifts she gave to museums
RIGHT
around the world, this was to be her second-largest donation to a
Hans Hartung
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's second single institution. Eugene Kolb, chief curator of the museum,
guest book, 1952
Ink and pencil on paper; page 22.9 x
wrote, "It has been the purpose of this gift —for which we cannot
15.9 cm
Private collection
be grateful enough —to encourage the creation of a special collec-
128
tion of abstract and surrealist art in our Museum."
FACING PAGE In September, Joan Miro sketched a delightful constellation-
Joan Miro
like form in the guest book. At the end of the month, Hans
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's second
guest book, 1952 Hartung drew sketches on two pages and Capote as well as
Ink on paper; page 22.9 x 15.9 cm
Read, again quoting from Eliot's The Family Reunion,
Private collection
•w
Peggy Guggenheim and Caresse In March 1953, Laurence Vail and his companion, Yvonne
Crosby, photographed in Venice
Hagen, the art columnist for the International Herald Tribune,
by Roloff Beny.
Roloff Beny Collection, Documentary were among Peggy's visitors; Laurence's wife, Jean Connolly, had
Art and Photography Division,
FACING PAGE
Caresse Crosby—who had fostered many writers through the
Black Sun Press in 1920s-30s Paris —became a frequent guest
Victor Brauner
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's and often accompanied Peggy in her gondola. Some guest book
second guest book, 1954
entries are all the more extraordinary in that several notable
Watercolor on paper; page 22.9 x
15.9 cm personalities visited at the same time; for example, Cecil Beaton,
Private collection
Capote, and Matta, who wrote, "beware of the 'never man'
sometimes it 'appears' as a tru man," 129 all appear on one page
100
t» t
4 t
/ c
'-Mi
ffC,/£
'ere**.
- •
m 1
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LEFT "peace for ever un vrai ami est revenu for ever Contre signe dar-
131
Clement Greenberg, Helen Frankenthaler, ling Peggy" (peace for ever a real friend has come back for
and Peggy Guggenheim traveling to Milan,
1954. ever counter signed darling Peggy). Max was now a welcome vis-
Private collection itor at the palazzo, and he and Victor Brauner spent much time
RIGHT in Peggy's garden playing with her dogs. As always, summer
Edmondo Bacci, Tancredi, and Peggy during a Biennale was the busiest time, with visits from curators
Guggenheim in the garden of the Palazzo
and collectors, as well as such artists as Karel Appel, Arp,
Venier del Leoni, mid-1950s.
Private collection Robert Brady, Matta, Marino Marini, and David Smith. Clare
Booth Luce, the United States ambassador to Italy from 1953 to
1956, whom Peggy described "as usual, was very polite and
charming, and of course marvelously dressed, looking younger
and more glamorous than ever," 132 visited one evening. Luce
appeared to like Pegeen's paintings best because of or despite
the fact that she thought the people in them appeared to have
"nothing to say." 133 Arp and his wife, Marguerite, stayed with
Peggy for a few days and were delighted to ride in her gondola.
In the guest book, Brauner left a beautiful watercolor reference
to his painting The Surrealist (January 1947) in Peggy's collec-
102
stunning without beauty ... a force in the world of art." 136 Tancredi
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
Helen Frankenthaler and Clement Greenberg were guests in
third guest book, 1955
September 1954. Peggy would travel with them to Milan. Ink, watercolor, and gouache on paper;
page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Frankenthaler has fondly recalled Peggy's "somewhat camou- Private collection
flaged diction" and that she was a "queen who ran a rather for-
FOLLOWING TWO PAGES
mal palazzo and entertained in Guggenheim style on the Grand
Matta
Canal." 137 Greenberg sketched a gondola in the guest book and Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
second guest book, 1954
wrote, "To Peggy, who's transferred her light from N.Y. to Venice,
Pencil and crayon on paper; page 22.9 x
138
to the former's infinite loss and the latter's infinite gain." 15.9 cm
Private collection
After Gregorich died in a car accident in September, Peggy
felt devastated. 139 Sometime in late fall or in early winter
visit Paul and Jane Bowles. She then set off alone for India,
103
/T-^rw*****"^
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(
other collectors and keep two of his paintings, including Event
#247 (1956), for her collection. In the catalogue of Bacci's solo
exhibition at Carlo Cardazzo's gallery II Cavallino in 1957, she
wrote, "Each new work is more vital than the previous one.
I feel they are so explosive that they put in danger the security
of my palazzo. Each time that an American enthusiast takes
one away, I feel that my house is in a less dangerous predica-
ment. But then, Bacci brings me a new one. Each one is more
141
marvellous, more exciting and more dangerous."
Peggy could be generous and gracious spontaneously and
often unexpectedly, but she could also be selfish, cold, and
manipulative. In the third guest book, which begins in May
1955, Sindbad, as he often did, wrote a poem:
Indeed it is hard
to be an eternal bard
To tax one's imagination
is a perpetual frustration
It is also banal
To talk of a canal
or love and sex
as an eternal hex
What a pity
to be witty
without the ability.
The last four lines —I cannot write anymore / because I must FACING PAGE
keep a surplus / for my next visit / to this town where one does Edmondo Bacci
not always find love — in particular suggest Sindbad's both Event #247 {Awenimento #247),
1956
tender and caustic feelings for his mother. Oil with sand on canvas,
140.2 x 140 cm
Hans Richter was a frequent guest; in recent years, he had
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
been working on the Venetian episode of his film 8x8 (1957). 76.2553 PG 164
107
In spring 1956, poet Alan Ansen made his first visit; in 1959,
and she talked with Moravia about literature, perhaps her true
passion, for hours. For his Cavallino editions, Carlo Cardazzo
asked Peggy to write a book of anecdotes, which Laurence
Vail entitled Una collezionista ricorda (1956); the dust jacket
Truman Capote on the roof terrace of the nearly dancing, across the page, and Anthony Caro, whose hand-
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, 1950s.
writing is tidy and cramped, appear on one page of the guest
Private collection
book in September. In October, Thomas Messer, not yet the third
FACING PAGE
director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, paid the first
Jean Cocteau
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's of many visits.
third guest book, 1956 The first few months of 1957 were relatively quiet until the
Ink on paper; page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Private collection arrival of Claire Falkenstein, who a few years later designed
the beautiful Entrance Gates to the Palazzo (1961) for the palaz-
zo's calle (alleyway) entrance. Art historian Leo Steinberg
wrote in the guest book that Peggy's palazzo was "the only house
in Venice that does not make one feel ashamed to be of this
146
century" Margaret Scolari Barr had instructed Steinberg on
how to handle Peggy when he visited her: "She will certainly
take you for a ride in her gondola, and then, if she takes your
hand, I suggest you let her, on the principle of ga coute si peu et
m.s
this respect, however, because she began to complain about an
art museum to which she had given a Pollock painting. Now
that the Pollock had become so valuable, she wished to retrieve
it. Steinberg, who advised her to take pride in what she had
done to promote Pollock's work, was pleasantly surprised by her
enthusiasm for and knowledge of Venetian art and culture. He
was delighted that a collector of Modern and contemporary
art should be so taken with classical Italian art. 148
echoes of Partisan Review & the 20's & surrealists, butlers &
gondolas, enjoy a little fame and escape the illusion of
no
I see Venice as Death and would embrace it
The winter months were quiet in Venice and work was under
way to build a barchessa— the Venetian word for a place in
Passero was urged to have the barchessa ready in time for the
Biennale. Peggy gave the workmen a dinner party in her favorite
restaurant, and she asked them all to write in the guest book.
ladies liked being catered to, though not at all in the same
manner. When we left the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, Dora
said: "Madame Guggenheim merits our compassion, but
she wouldn't know how to go about being worthy of it."
Bernard asked what that meant, and Dora replied, "That's
152
the mystery"
111
time since 1948. She was in New York when Frank Lloyd Wright
died in April. She visited with friends and family, including
Harry Guggenheim, who gave her a tour of Wright's nearly com-
pleted building for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.
Peggy described Wright's building as "a huge garage ... It is
built on a site that is inadequate for its size and looks very
cramped, suffering from its nearness to adjacent buildings. . . .
the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where she could once again see
Walter and Louise Arensberg's collection, and the Barnes
Foundation, just outside Philadelphia. Peggy found the New
York art world very changed and could not afford to buy contem-
porary art, so she began to buy pre-Columbian, African, and
Oceanic art. She would write, "In fact, I do not like art today. I
154
think it has gone to hell, as a result of the financial attitude."
guest book.
The 1960s
112
Museum. Friends came to the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni during
the summer, but the guest books contain surprisingly few
entries during those months. In a letter to Robert Brady, Peggy
described the Biennale as "worse than ever and Fautrier got
the biggest prize. He is undoubtedly the worst painter in the
Biennale. ... I have never seen such a horrible Biennale. Also it
is more and more like a big money art market and absolutely
everyone was here." 156 In September, Marcel Duchamp was wel-
comed to the palazzo, as were composer John Cage, choreograph-
er Merce Cunningham, dancer Carolyn Brown, and composer
David Tudor. Cage was a celebrity in Italy, and Cunningham
wrote in the guest book about the wonderful parties Peggy gave
for him and his entourage: "party!! party!! all marvelous!!" 157
In the book, Cage filled two pages with musical bars and his rec-
When Xenia [then his wife] and I came to New York from
Chicago, we arrived in the Bus Station with about 25 cents.
We were invited to stay for a while with you and Max Ernst.
Max Ernst had met us in Chicago and had said: "Whenever
you come to New York, come and stay with us. We have a
big house on the East River." I went to the phone booth in
the Bus Station, put in a nickel, and dialed. Max Ernst
answered. He didn't recognize my voice. Finally he said, "Are
you thirsty?" I said, 'Yes." He said: "Well, come over tomor-
row for cocktails." I went back to Xenia and told her what
had happened. She said: "Call him back. We have everything
to gain and nothing to lose." I did. He said, "Oh! It's you.
We've been waiting for you for weeks. Your room's ready.
Come right over." East River 1942, Grand Canal September
158
1960 (con La Fenice!)."
many years, came to visit, and his friend and fellow Dadaist,
Tristan Tzara, whom Peggy had known in Paris in the 1920s,
113
was sit at a gambling table, for which she was paid a fee of
sion series about the joys of Venice in winter. Ugo Mulas took
photographs for Michelangelo Muraro's book Invito a Venezia
(1962; published in English as Invitation to Venice in 1963), and
Peggy wrote the introduction, in which she conveyed her love
for the city. She wrote that "to live in Venice or even to visit it
means that you fall in love with the city itself. There is nothing
left over in your heart for anyone else." 160
Albertazzi returned in early February and inaugurated the
fourth guest book. It was during this month that Peggy was
made an honorary citizen of Venice. She wore an extravagant
black-plumed hat for the occasion and was presented with a cer-
the ceremony. It was not until the summer that the Biennale
attracted such old friends as Nelly van Doesburg and E. L. T
of Canada, Ottawa
FACING PAGE
Man Ray
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
third guest book, 1961
Ink and postage stamp on paper;
page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Private collection
114
/
/
Mesens. In the fall, she went to Japan, where she traveled with
Cage, Tudor, and Yoko Ono, who accompanied them as a transla-
tor. (In later years, Ono and John Lennon would visit Peggy
several times, but they did not sign the guest book or leave any
sketches.)
Falkenstein was back to repair the gates. That same month, and
just a few days after the opening of her exhibition at Galerie
Laurence in Paris, Helen Frankenthaler came to the palazzo,
161
"nine years later," as she noted in the guest book. She was
Cecil Beaton
Drawing in Peggy Guggenheim's
fourth guest book, 1965
Ink on paper; page 22.9 x 15.6 cm
Private collection
116
accompanied by Robert Motherwell, then her husband, who
acknowledged Peggy as his "first patron" 162 and made a small
sketch in the style of his series Elegies to the Spanish Republic.
In January 1964, Peggy went to London to celebrate Herbert
Read's seventieth birthday. Beginning that April, few drawings
appear in the guest books. Peggy described the year's Biennale
as dull, but not quite as dull as the one in 1962; she felt,
Amid yet another slow winter, Peggy lent her entire collec-
tion to the Tate Gallery at the invitation of its director, Norman
Reid. She traveled to London for the exhibition, which opened
at the very end of December and was shown until March 1965. It
was a special triumph for Peggy because in 1938 the Tate's then
director, James B. Manson, had refused to certify that sculptures
"to see the richly textured and complex collection again and to Peggy Guggenheim and John Cage in
Japan. 1962.
remember the old days in New York." 163
In June, Marcel Private collection
117
Peggy Guggenheim and Sindbad Vail, quiet, without even a tree in piazza San Marco. In December,
Venice, late 1960s or early 1970s.
Private collection
Peggy was made a commendatore of the Italian republic.
the visit of the poet Seamus Heaney and his family. Heaney,
lis
Maharajahs' palaces. She adored Indian food and was particular-
ly fond of popadum, a light waferlike bread. Because of its cheap
price and light weight, she ordered a huge quantity to be
Peggy went only once to this Biennale and saw little that inter-
ested her besides works by Marisol (Marisol Escobar) and Rufino
Tamayo. She cared less and less for contemporary art although
she claimed to like Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg; she
said, "I wanted to buy Rauschenberg's goat with a tire around it
family. When Peggy was back in Venice that spring Gore Vidal,
an old friend, and S. I. Newhouse, a first-time guest were among
her visitors.
The 1970s
Fewer guests came to see Peggy in the 1970s, and of those most
were familiar faces. Robert Graves was among the few new visi-
I Hi
to see Peggy during this period. John Hohnsbeen, Peggy's new
assistant, provided her with much-needed companionship. In
May, Peggy traveled to Florence with Roloff Beny to see the
Henry Moore retrospective at Forte Belvedere. The fourth guest
book concludes in June 1972 with signatures of faithful friends.
By this time, Peggy was disillusioned with the art world, and
younger artists either snubbed her or felt snubbed by her.
The fifth and final guest book consists almost entirely of sig-
natures. The book covers the period from mid-June 1972 until
the last time and sketched a figure in the guest book. In April
1974, Brassai (Gyula Halasz) came to see her. Among Peggy's
visitors in June were European aristocracy and royalty;
120
Collection — and hosted by Nico Passante, the hotel's director, Claire Falkenstein's Entrance Gates to the
guests included Sindbad and Peggy Angela, Ashley Clarke, © Piermarco Menini
172
most respect in the world."
In October, Jimmy Ernst and his wife, Dallas, were the last
121
Peggy Guggenheim's passport Peggy's lack of pretentiousness and whom he had not seen for
photographs mounted
photo albums.
in one of her
many years —wrote fondly, "My love for you stretches from the
Private collection East River to the Grand Canal. It will last as long as both bodies
of water exist . . . and longer." 173 Just over two months later, on
December 23, Peggy, who had not been well for some time, died
in the hospital in Camposampiero, near Padua. That day in
Venice, there were floods, and Sindbad and Peggy Angela, both
knowing that this is what his mother would most appreciate,
were busy saving her legacy —her art collection, guest books, and
other possessions —from the tumultuous Venetian waters.
122
NOTES
Venier dei Leoni, are referred to by page 29. Weld. 97. incorrectly attributes this
p.
designations in which the first guest book is appellation to Jane Bouche Strong, who would
indicated by A, the second by B. the third by subsequently point out that "for a ten and a
C. the fourth by D. and the fifth by E. half year old going on eleven that would have
been a bit much! ... We all called it that."
1. Peggy Guggenheim. Out of This Century: See Strong to Sindbad and Peggy Angela Vail.
Confessions of an Art Addict (New York: March 24. 1986. private collection.
Universe Books. 1979). p. 7.
30. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 154.
2. Ibid.
31. Peggy Waldman to Peggy Guggenheim,
3. Ibid., p. 49. May 11. 1937. quoted in Dortch. p. 54.
4. Quoted in Jacqueline Bograd Weld. Peggy: 32. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 161.
The Wayward Guggenheim (New York: E. P.
Dutton. 1986). p. 16. 33. Ibid., p. 162.
13. Kohn to Dortch. in Dortch. p. 37. 44. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 197.
14. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 22. 45. Herbert Read to Douglas Cooper. April 15,
1939. Getty Research Institute for the History
15. Ibid. of Art and the Humanities. Los Angeles,
Special Collections. Douglas Cooper Papers.
16. Ibid.
46. Ibid.
17. Ibid., p. 23.
47. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 199.
18. Ibid.
123
58. Guggenheim, Out of This Century, p. 219. 87. Robert Motherwell, review in Partisan
Review (winter 1944), quoted in Rudenstine,
59. Andre Breton to Peggy Guggenheim, p. 776.
August 13, 1965, private collection.
88. Nell Blaine to Virginia M. Dortch, June 14.
60. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 245. 1977. in Dortch. p. 123.
61. Jimmy Ernst, A Not-So-Still Life (New York: 89. Weld, p. 313.
St. Martin's/Marek, 1984). pp. 199-200.
90. Rudenstine, p. 777.
62. Ibid., p. 205.
91. Clement Greenberg, review in The Nation,
63. Guggenheim, Out of This Century, April 7, 1944, quoted in ibid., p. 784.
pp. 250-51.
92. Peggy Guggenheim to David Porter,
64. Ibid., p. 251. November 17, [1943 or 1945], Archives of
American Art, Smithsonian Institution, David
65. Ibid., p. 258. Porter Papers. This letter is not dated with a
year, but it relates to one of two exhibitions at
66. Ibid., p. 263. Art of This Century: Exhibition by 31 Women,
held in 1943. or The Women, held in 1945.
67. Ibid., p. 270.
93. Clyfford Still to Virginia M. Dortch,
68. Rudenstine, p. 316. October 14, 1971. in Dortch, p. 122.
73. Frederick J. Kiesler to Peggy Guggenheim, 98. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 324.
March 7, 1942, reproduced in ibid., p. 763.
99. Ibid., p. 320.
74. Lisa Phillips, Frederick Kiesler (New York:
Whitney Museum of American Art in associa- 100. Quoted in Weld, p. 353.
tion with W. W. Norton & Company, 1989).
p. 114. 101. The phrase appears on the righthand
catalogue page: reproducedin Rudenstine,
77. Guggenheim, Out of This Century, p. 274. 104. Guggenheim, Out of This Century, p. 329.
pp. 275-76.
108. Lee Miller. "Venice Biennale." British
81. Quoted in Weld. p. 301. Vogue (August 1948), p. 90.
82. Clement Greenberg, review in The Nation, 109. Guggenheim, Out of This Century,
December 26, 1942, quoted in Laurence Vail, p.329.
exh. cat. (New York: Noah Goldowsky, 1974).
unpaginated. 110. Vittorio Carrain to Dortch, March 10.
1972 and April 11, 1983, in Dortch, p. 150.
83. Guggenheim. Out of This Century, p. 280.
111. Guggenheim, Out of This Century,
84. Jeffrey Potter, To a Violent Grave: An Oral p. 341.
Biography of Jackson Pollock (New York:
G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1985), p. 71. 112. A7 right.
85. Clement Greenberg, review in The Nation, 113. Guggenheim, Out of This Century,
May 29, 1943, quoted in Rudenstine. p. 774. p.334.
124
115. Guggenheim, Out of This Century, 147. Leo Steinberg, telephone conversations
p.346. with the author,November 1997.
p. 336.
152. James Lord. Picasso and Dora
120. Quoted in Weld. p. 373. (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1995).
p. 309.
121. Guggenheim, Out of This Century,
p.338. 153. Guggenheim. Out of This Century,
p.361.
122. A73 right.
p. 341.
136. Ned Rorem to the author. May 19, 1997. 166. Quoted in Weld, p. 397.
1957), unpaginated.
142. C4 left.
125
The History of a Courtship
Thomas M. Messer
I first met Peggy Guggenheim in the fall of 1956, not long after I
position of her collection was for the first time discussed with
Harry F. Guggenheim, then president of the Solomon R.
127
Marc Chagall would be the Modern Museum [Galleria Internazionale d'Arte
Rain (La Pluie), 1911
Oil (and charcoal?) on canvas,
Moderna di Ca' Pesaro] of Venice." But something must have
86.7 x 108 cm occurred to modify her thinking over the next few years,
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 63
for on August 4, 1964, Harry wrote to Peggy in response to
"your inquiry concerning the possibility of the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Foundation ultimately taking over the administra-
tion of your gallery in Venice and operating it." Peggy responded
on August 26, "I am very happy that you have not excluded
my idea as an eventual possibility."
Typically, however, Peggy had second thoughts. Less than a
year later, on March 8, 1965, she admitted to Harry, "I never
wrote to you again about my eventual leaving the collection to
your Museum, as I was a little afraid of being swallowed up by
your much more important Foundation." Ever the gentleman
and also never one to lose face, Harry replied on March 12, "As
for your collection eventually coming to our Museum here in
New York, I had really never given any thought to it. ... I have
no idea what your problems or wishes are."
For some time thereafter, any idea of pursuing the final dis-
128
ited project, the organization of a selection of works from her col-
129
words then at my command to reply "fiori." It worked, and
Peggy, to whom I eventually told the story, liked it and became
more readily accessible. But even long after we had established a
friendlier relationship, Peggy would lapse into moods of suspi-
"We are all happy to know that at long last, come 1968, we shall
have an exhibition of Guggenheim Jeune at the Guggenheim."
130
for a year and could not possibly consider any parties or doing
any publicity myself this year." I must have concluded well
replied on April 19, "I had not made the change from 1968 to
ficult reorganization."
Then, during a summer visit with Peggy, exhibition plans
were discussed in some detail and lists were drawn up. The
show was rescheduled to open in January 1969. I was thus able
New York next year and get into a whirl of parties and press
reviews." For good measure, she added, "I do not like your list. It
Also your values are much too low." In self-defense, I wrote back
on November 30, "With regard to the list, it should certainly
reflect correctly your collecting personality. . . . My insurance list
131
failed to hold out much hope: "I did not tell you," she wrote, "but
I am leaving the house and the collection here, and Italy has not
lost it after all. It is not that I think that they deserve it, but the
thing is complete in itself and must remain so."
Then, out of the clear blue sky, came another outburst for
which I was ill prepared. On September 6, the same day I was
writing to her, she hurled the following accusation at me: "I have
received an invitation to your Peruvian show [Mastercraftsmen
of Ancient Peru, an exhibition held October 1968-January 1969]
and now realize why you have put off my show until January. I
moved to remark, "I suppose you will consider this another nasty
letter. I hope not." In my response of September 10, I allowed
that "after talking to you at length during the summer I can no
longer think of your letters as nasty, but I do think that you are
jumping to false conclusions." I then explained truthfully that
"the Peruvian show has nothing, whatsoever, to do with what FACING PAGE
replied, "I am happy to hear that the aqua was not so alta."
133
scheduled for January 15." Before this, on November 14, Peggy
had acknowledged, "I have just received the introductions of the
catalogue for my exhibition. I am extremely pleased with them."
She then added, "I am sending a [Theo] van Doesburg after
all . . . as it is badly in need of repair. . . . Also, the [Giuseppe]
removed but which I now deem necessary to show (if not too
late) as he has become a Trustee of the [Peggy Guggenheim]
Foundation."
On December 13, I wrote with obvious relief, "We have now
completed a detailed check of the shipment from Venice and . . .
Peggy let me know, "I would like to stay in a small hotel near
the Museum. What about the Adams?" But the suggestion was
withdrawn on December 22 because "I have been told by a friend
that the Adams Hotel is HORRIBLE." Also, since I had written
before that I was suffering from the Hong Kong flu, she now
asked, "Could you please, if possible, arrange to have your doctor
give me an anti-Hong Kong flu injection. But most of all I want
to know how long I am to be Harry's guest." I was at this time
away from New York, and these questions were fully answered
by my secretary in a letter dated December 26.
There was no further correspondence prior to Peggy's arrival
three p.m. We waited for a long time, but Peggy had failed to
appear. Milling around dejectedly in the crowded arrival area, I
suddenly spied her, and we fell into each other's arms— I out of
relief; she because her entire baggage was lost, and she needed
help. We had naturally provided for first-class passage, but
Peggy, as parsimonious with other people's money as with her
134
^
3i^^^^m
' m.
^^^J
**
^c^
L
*«
i. §
*
i
!
If 1
III' .
^-
r ^1
at the time vice president of our foundation, presided in Harry's Installation view of the Peggy Guggenheim
Collection, photographed in 1998 by
absence, which was due to the latter 's illness. It was the first
Sergio Martucci.
occasion for her to see my installation of her collection at the
135
I !
something she communicated to me and which, in turn, I was Pablo Picasso
On the Beach [La Baignade),
able to convey to Harry, who, sad to remember, remained inca-
February 12, 1937
pacitated throughout her visit and was therefore unable to see Oil, conte crayon, and chalk on canvas,
129.1 x 194 cm
her. Though uncertain and vacillating when details, arrange- Peggy Guggenheim Collection
ments, and procedures were at issue, Peggy held firm to her gift 76.2553 PG 5
commitment once it was made. A contractual letter stating the FACING PAGE
upon returning from Europe, I wrote on August 21, "I felt toward
you more than ever, open and relaxed, protective and affection-
137
Guggenheim Museum showing was to open in November.
I had my eye on the two Brancusis in her collection: Maiastra
(1912 [?]) and Bird in Space (L'Oiseau dans Uespace, 1932-40).
"I got more glamorous Brancusis, but no birds to speak of from
anyone, except from you, if you were angelically disposed, as I
hope you will be," I wrote. She was not and a brief angelic phase
was waning again. On October 1, she wrote that "the last five
paintings came back [from New York] at last. . . . Four are fine,
but the Cubist Picasso [The Poet (he Poete, August 1911)] looks
like hell."
return to the Picasso issue and wrote that "our conservation peo-
ple would really like you to send back the Picasso together with
anything else in need of conservation." And hoping against hope,
I returned once again to our upcoming Brancusi exhibition: "I
ter, she stated, "I am trying now to put this house in the name of
the Solomon Guggenheim Museum so as not to have to make
two transfers." Otherwise, partly perhaps because the urgencies
imposed by the exhibition Works from the Peggy Guggenheim
Foundation were no longer upon us, correspondence between us
became less frequent. After another summer visit to Venice,
139
crisis came through a letter, dated February 10, Peggy wrote to
her lawyer-accountant, Bernard Reis, which he forwarded to me:
"I had a bad surprise while I was in London; the girls [her ser-
vants] phoned to say that thieves had broken into my house and
stolen 13 paintings." The circumstances of the theft were never
can be improved? Would you also let me know whether the dam-
age reported in the case of one work needs our attention?" By
way of reply, I received a letter, dated March 14, which clearly
was not written by Peggy, except for the few corrections
inscribed upon the typed text in her handwriting. The somewhat
ponderous contents— articulated no doubt by Peggy's assistant,
John Hohnsbeen— proposed with respect to the security system
that "I would be most grateful if the Guggenheim Museum could
help defray this expense." Then, in Peggy's handwriting: "Or
should I possibly get it off my income tax?" I traveled to Venice
to survey the damage and assess our future options. I found
Peggy in high spirits, and we spent perhaps the most uninhibit-
ed and lovely time together, ever. She confirmed my own senti-
gay evening the other night before you left. I was very grateful
140
to surround herself with men and women of quality was rooted Rufino Tamayo
Heavenly Bodies, 1946
perhaps in her need for attachments that would uphold her.
Oil with sand on canvas, 86.3 x 105 cm
Despite such constraints, Peggy was capable of great courage, Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 119
style, and grandeur, and she translated these attributes into an
admirable life.
141
thieves came, broke through the grills of the sitting-room win-
dow and carried off ... 17 [paintings] in all." The second such
calamity within one year left me feeling stoic rather than
upset— at least in part because one began to expect a repetition
acceptable."
FACING PAGE
Alberto Giacometti
Standing Woman("Leoni") {Femme debout
["Leoni"]), 1947 (cast November 1957)
Bronze, 153 cm high, including base
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 134
142
u>
My visit to Venice in early 1973 took place in a climate
nothing less than euphoric— "Dear Tom nice Tom sweet Tom,"
Peggy wrote in February, no doubt in further allusion to my com-
plaints about her nasty epistolary manners. "Do come around
the middle of the month. If you wish I can put you up. Love"—
and she seemed entirely willing to pay for the already installed
security system with funds derived from our payment for a work
of art that would formally leave Peggy's collection to become
part of the Guggenheim Museum's permanent collection in
progress was being made on the legal front with efforts to have
arrangements between the Peggy Guggenheim Foundation and
the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation ratified by the Italian
authorities. Peter, toward whom Peggy had developed warm
sympathies, had written to her on July 25, 1972, in a spirit as
yet untainted by skepticism: "I gather everything will be wound
up relatively soon regarding our formal acceptance of your gift of
144
conversations with me, she introduced the notion that her Marino Marini
The Angel of the City {L'angelo del la citta),
favorite grandson, Nicolas Helion, should become "curator" of
1948 (cast 1950?)
her collection after her death. While I remained noncommittal, Bronze, 247.9 x 106 cm, including base
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Nicolas wrote in an undated letter in 1973, "Ma grand-mere, 76.2553 PG 183
Madame Peggy Guggenheim, vous a entretenu de mon project
145
foot, and on top of all, I got arthritis" and then adding "but, if
you want to come so please do." Apparently, I could not resist the
warmth of this invitation, and there were also new legal develop-
the maintenance of the palazzo and the collection was much dis-
146
FACING PAGE upset to learn that you wished the conditions she made with
Francis Bacon Harry Guggenheim withdrawn, and she insisted they be rein-
Study for Chimpanzee, March 1957
Oil and pastel on canvas,
stated. Why do you want this left out?" In the absence of any
152.4 117 cm
x basis whatsoever for such a charge, I decided not to bother with
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
76.2553 PG 172 Hohnsbeen but to wire directly to Peggy on September 12, "What
you assume to be a withdrawal of your conditions you need not
fear, Peggy. No one here has any thought, let alone intention, to
change our agreement." Peggy remained unconvinced, writing to
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni. after 1979. After this, she wanted to know details about her New York rela-
tives, specifically about how I got along with my Guggenheims.
I told her stories about how difficult and virtually impossible it
used to be to say "no" to Harry during his lifetime (he had died
in 1971); the best I could ever do was to say, "Yes sir, but . . .
."
She responded, "I love that, what you said was Yes, but no!'"
gratitude.
I IS
ing— one of his Contrastes de formes— that now appeared to be
pity nor lament as her life moved toward its close. Among the
questions she posed were those concerning arrangements regard-
ing the palazzo. She was apprehensive that anyone might stay
there after her death, and I assured her that this was not part of
our thinking. For obvious reasons, I did not as a rule volunteer
me on May 18, 1977, "As I had to pay this tax in the name of the
150
her concerns, I wrote on January 4, 1979, "I took the matter to
the Board and enclose the pertinent passage as well as the reso-
lution which, I trust, is in keeping with your request."
On April 16 followed my periodic announcement of a forth-
let me prepare a brief "To Whom It May Concern" for her signa-
ture. Dated May 3, it said, "This is to certify that the Palazzo
Venier dei Leoni and the art collection contained therein is the
property of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation in New
York. It is therefore my wish that Mr. Thomas M. Messer,
Director of the Guggenheim Museum in New York, or his deputy
be admitted without delay to the above premises upon my
death." Having considered the alternate situation, she simply
handed me the one key that would open the garden gate as well
as the palazzo portals.
151