|
The Timken Museum
of Art has its roots in the serendipitous relationship
between two sisters, Anne R. and Amy Putnam-members of the
Ohio-based Timken family of the Timken roller bearing
fame÷and San Diego
attorney Walter Ames.
The Putnam sisters arrived in San Diego in the early 1900s
from Vermont, accompanied by their elderly parents and
preceded by their uncle, Henry Putnam, who retired in San
Diego in 1898.
The Putnam sisters spent decades acquiring European old
master paintings. Initial paintings from the sisters'
collection were donated to San Diego's Fine Arts Gallery
(now the San Diego Museum of Art). Their later acquisitions
were loaned to prestigious museums around the country until
the Timken Museum of Art opened in 1965.
In 1951, with the assistance
of longtime friend and advisor Walter Ames, the Putnam
sisters established the nonprofit Putnam Foundation, under
which their artworks became designated as the Putnam
Foundation Collection. In the early 1960's, Ames secured
financial support from the Timken family to help build the
museum.
In the years between the Foundation's establishment and the
opening of the museum, the Putnam Foundation Collection
paintings remained on loan to institutions such as the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City; the National
Gallery in Washington, DC; and Harvard University's Fogg Art
Museum. In 1965, the paintings were reunited, and hung in
their new permanent quarters at the Timken Art Museum.
Located on the Prado in San Diego's beautiful Balboa Park,
today's Timken Museum of Art displays more than 60
extraordinary artworks, predominantly paintings augmented by
a small holding of sculpture and decorative art
objects.
The works in the
Putnam Foundation Collection are primarily in three distinct
areas: European old master paintings, 18th and 19th-century
American art, and Russian icons. Each collection boasts
unique and priceless representations of the specific genre.
Notable works in the collection include Rembrandt's
Saint Bartholomew (the only painting by the
Dutch artist on view in San Diego); Pieter Bruegel the
Elder's Parable of the
Sower; John Singleton Copley's
portrait of Mrs. Thomas
Gage; Eastman Johnson's classic
The Cranberry Harvest, Island of Nantucket; and
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot's View of
Volterra.
The Timken Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Sunday from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
The museum is closed Monday. Admission is always
free.
Mission
Statement
The Timken Museum
of Art preserves the Putnam Foundation Collection of
European and American art for the education and benefit of
present and future generations of San Diego area residents
and visitors. The museum celebrates the important role of
art as a way of enriching the lives and nurturing the
creative spirit in all of us.
The Timken Museum of Art board and staff have further
defined the mission of the museum by embracing the following
values:
- Stewardship of
the Putnam Foundation Collection
- Excellence in
all museum endeavors
- Free access
for all visitors
- Diverse
educational opportunities for the public
- High-quality
care and conservation of the collection
- Growth of the
collection through wise and selective acquisitions
|