The Norfolk museum that would one day bear the Chrysler name was
always a good museum of its kind, home to a respectable collection
serving a smallish city. But when Norfolk native Jean Outland
married Walter Chrysler, heir to the automobile manufacturing
fortune and an avid art collector, the museum found a person with
whom its fortunes would be intertwined, sometimes spectacularly,
for decades to come. Walter had already established a Chrysler
Museum in Provincetown, Massachusetts, but in 1971--in need of more
space and, admittedly, a fresh start--he relocated the operation to
Norfolk.
The museum that had once fretted over the possible purchase of a
minor Cezanne because it would by itself deplete the entire budget
now found itself playing host almost overnight to works by the Old
Masters as well as many of the most notable modern artists.
Chrysler's was a world-class art collection, containing pieces by,
among others, Fragonard, Ingres, Gericault, Tiffany, Matisse, and
Braque. The groundwork was laid for Norfolk's place on the cultural
map.
In Legacy, Peggy Earle paints a vivid picture of this provincial
museum's transformation into one of the finest art museums on the
East Coast. She also delivers a captivating portrait of Walter
Chrysler, a generous and demanding man who found in art patronage a
focus not only for his wealth but also for his tremendous energy.
Not content to merely admire the work, Walter had a naturally
gregarious side and was apt to deal with artists such as Pablo
Picasso directly. And yet he was also intensely private. Earle
provides readers with a fascinating view of the politics of the
museum world, where even good relationships are never
uncomplicated. (The addition of the Chrysler collection's works to
the museum was not unanimously applauded by the community; nor was
it a foregone conclusion that, upon Chrysler's death, the pieces
would even stay with the museum.)
This lively account of the unlikely union between an arts
maverick and a city on the cusp of cultural evolution sheds new
light on how great art finds a place to call home.
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