Co-laborers in the Collection

The Women Who Helped Establish the Freer Gallery

Correspondence in the Charles Lang Freer Papers illuminates the important roles that women had in establishing the Freer Gallery of Art. Industrialist-turned-art-collector Charles Lang Freer (1854–1919) was a pioneer when it came to facilitating the success of many women artists, administrators, and art collectors in the early twentieth century. Among those women were Katharine Nash Rhoades (1885–1965), Grace Dunham Guest (1872–1964), Agnes Ernst Meyer (1887–1970), and Louisine Havemeyer (1855–1929). Freer designated these women trustees, curators, and special advisors to the Freer Gallery before he died in 1919. During my initial visit to the archive six years ago, I was struck by Freer’s deep respect and admiration for these women. Their correspondence humanizes Freer, who was an otherwise elusive and private businessman. In some cases, correspondence with one woman mentions the name of—or is addressed to—one of the other women.1 This shows how Rhoades, Guest, Meyer, and Havemeyer were linked through their work with Freer and forged a network while establishing the Freer Gallery.

Katharine Nash Rhoades began her career as a photographer and art dealer at Alfred Stieglitz’s Gallery 291. Rhoades was from one of New York’s wealthiest families and never married or had children. As a wealthy single woman, she had freedom to pursue a career. After meeting Freer through their mutual friend, art collector Agnes Meyer, in 1913, Rhoades left New York behind to curate Freer’s collection.2 From then on, Rhoades helped the collector finalize plans for the Freer Gallery and prepared his vast collection of Asian and American art for its move from Freer’s Detroit home to his namesake gallery in Washington, DC.

Freer and Rhoades’s correspondence highlights how Rhoades’s job extended beyond that of a typical curator. She typed Freer’s letters and memoranda and settled bills as Freer added art to his collection. Like Rhoades, Freer had no spouse or children, so she fulfilled those roles as Freer’s health deteriorated during the last decade of his life. Freer often ended his letters to their mutual friends with a greeting from “Miss Rhoades” or “K,” which is evidence of their constant togetherness. Though the stress of caring for Freer led Rhoades to seek therapy and rest at a sanitorium at least twice, she remained steadfast in her commitment to her friend and employer and to his collection. In turn, Freer entrusted the future of his collection to Rhoades by making her a trustee of his museum. In August 1919, just weeks before Freer died, he wrote to Smithsonian secretary Charles Walcott that Rhoades had “insight and thorough understanding of the collection,” and that Walcott and the Smithsonian’s Board of Regents should consult with her on “matters of importance.”3 After Freer died, Rhoades moved to Washington to work as an “associate” at the gallery. She oversaw the move of Freer’s collection from Detroit, helped convince John Ellerton Lodge to accept the job of Freer Gallery director, worked with architect Charles Platt on the museum’s design, and collaborated with Lodge and Agnes Meyer to expand the collection. Rhoades continued to run day-to-day business at the Freer Gallery until her retirement in 1938. She was a trustee of the museum until her death in 1965.

Like Rhoades and Freer, Agnes Meyer and her husband, Eugene Meyer (1875–1959), a banker who eventually became publisher of the Washington Post, were avid art collectors. When Eugene became president of the War Finance Committee in 1917, the Meyers moved from New York to Washington. Agnes Meyer was the Freer Gallery’s unofficial spokesperson and helped publicize the museum among Washington elites before it opened in 1923. Freer encouraged her to study Chinese art and allowed her to photograph Chinese scrolls from his collection for her book, Chinese Painting: As Reflected in the Thought and Art of Li Lung-Mein, which she dedicated posthumously to Freer in 1923.4 Freer also helped Meyer expand her art collection by giving her access to shipments of art from his dealers and advising her about which works to purchase. Meyer was instrumental in adding important works to Freer’s collection. In 1916, she and her husband purchased a large stone bodhisattva from the Buddhist Cave Temples in Xiangtangshan, China, as a gift to Freer for his museum. When Meyer died in 1970, she willed the majority of her vast Asian art collection to the Freer Gallery. Because Meyer and Freer had built their collections side-by-side, the breadth of her collection mirrored his.

two pages of a handwritten letter, in a looping and large hand, with an upside-down footnote at the top of the first page.
Letter from Agnes Ernst Meyer to Katharine Nash Rhoades, undated, Charles Lang Freer Papers. National Museum of Asian Art Archives. Box 23, Folder 21.

An older woman looks down on an album.
Grace Guest. Smithsonian Institution Archives. Image # SIA2021-003662.
Detroit schoolteacher Grace Dunham Guest also worked closely with Freer on his collection. Guest became assistant curator of the Freer Gallery in 1922, making her the first woman in an official curatorial role at the Smithsonian. She was a self-taught art historian with a high school education. Her career as a curator began when she met Freer around 1910 at the Detroit Museum of Art. Freer was a patron there, and Guest gave regular gallery talks and taught art history classes at the Detroit School of Design, which was affiliated with the museum. Freer invited Guest to his Detroit house frequently during the 1910s to study his collection. Before Freer died, he discussed with Guest the possibility of moving to Washington to curate his collection. Correspondence reveals that Guest was trepidatious about uprooting her life and leaving Detroit, where she had worked as a schoolteacher for thirty years. The collector helped alleviate her anxiety by introducing her to curators and museum directors throughout the country. In December 1918, Freer arranged for Guest to meet with curators and museum directors in Toledo, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh. He organized another trip in the summer of 1919, during which Guest traveled to museums in Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Louis, and San Francisco to gain “some knowledge of the collections in the country.”5 Freer wrote letters of introduction on Guest’s behalf to museum directors like George Eggers at the Art Institute of Chicago, John R. Van Derlip at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and Robert Allen Holland at the City Art Museum of St. Louis. In these letters, Freer introduced Guest as his “friend” and a “student of the fine arts.”6 Guest’s visits to Eggers, Van Derlip, and Holland broadened her professional network and her knowledge about museums. She was more confident about changing careers after these men welcomed her.7

two pages of a handwritten letter in flowing, regular handwriting, dated Thursday.
Letter from Grace Guest to Charles Lang Freer, 25 May 1919. Charles Lang Freer Papers. National Museum of Asian Art Archives. Box 17, Folder 3.

Louisine Havemeyer was a trustee at the Freer Gallery who worked closely with Freer on his collection. The two met through Freer’s art advisor, Ernest Fennollosa, in the early 1900s. After Louisine’s husband, sugar industrialist Harry O. Havemeyer (1847–1907), died, Louisine went to work as a spokesperson for the women’s suffrage movement. Havemeyer gave speeches to large crowds during whistle-stop tours and hosted two exhibition fundraisers to raise money for the movement. When she was not campaigning for suffrage, she and Freer visited one another regularly to discuss their art collections. Freer and Havemeyer’s friendship is suggested in these letters. Freer offered his home in the Berkshires to Havemeyer so she could rest between campaign activities in 1917.8 During World War I (1914–18), Freer facilitated donations to Parke-Davis, a Detroit pharmaceutical company, on Havemeyer’s behalf. The donations were for medical supplies that were sent to troops in Europe. One letter from 1914 discusses the first of three donations Freer made to Parke-Davis and the Red Cross on Havemeyer’s behalf.9 The money may have come from suffrage fundraisers, as suffragists were linking their cause to the war effort. This suggests how Freer supported Havemeyer as she fought for women’s rights.

Letters in the Charles Lang Freer Papers show that Freer championed other women, too. On two occasions, Freer hired Detroit ceramicist Mary Chase Perry Stratton (1867–1961) to decorate his Detroit home with her signature Pewabic tiles. Freer encouraged curators at the Detroit Museum of Art to acquire Stratton’s work and promoted Stratton to other art patrons, including Agnes and Eugene Meyer.10 Freer collected the work of painter and interior decorator Maria Oakey Dewing (1845–1927) and took her advice seriously when her husband, painter Thomas Wilmer Dewing (1851–1938), decorated his Detroit home in the 1870s. Freer offered collecting advice to Belle da Costa Greene (1879–1950), the librarian and curator of banker J.P. Morgan’s library and art collection.11 During Freer’s many visits to Capri in Italy, he wrote to his business partner, Frank J. Hecker, of his admiration for American expatriate artist Romaine Brooks (1874–1970), who lived on the island. Brooks’s androgynous style of dress challenged social conventions at the time and made an impression on Freer.12

These letters reveal how Freer and his female friends were connected to nearly every aspect of the early twentieth-century art world, from the Stieglitz circle in New York to craftswomen like Mary Chase Perry Stratton in Detroit, and from the Asian art market to major art museums and leading scholars throughout the United States and beyond. While highlighting the important roles that women had in establishing the Freer Gallery, this correspondence adds depth to our understanding of how women contributed to the dynamic twentieth-century art world, broadly.

Accounting for Art

Charles Lang Freer’s Art Vouchers

In 1893, Charles Lang Freer (1854–1919) began implementing the voucher system, an accounts-payable process developed in the late nineteenth century that was widely adopted by large corporations, to manage purchases of artworks and other expenses related to his renowned collection of Asian and American art. As a former accountant for the New York, Kingston, and Syracuse Railroad Company and then an owner and executive of the Peninsular Car Company, Freer had experience managing finances, so it comes as no surprise that he maintained impeccable financial records for his collection. The voucher system allowed Freer, the litany of clerks affiliated with the banks he patronized, and his private accountants to track his many purchases from the moment the collector identified something to buy to the moment vendors debited his accounts. Today, these records are preserved in the National Museum of Asian Art Archives and allow researchers to study not only Freer’s personal collecting practices but also several other facets of art history and daily life at the turn of the century.

assorted vouchers laid out on a black surface
Contents of voucher for purchase by Charles Lang Freer from Lai-Yuan & Company, November 1915. Charles Lang Freer Papers. National Museum of Asian Art Archives. Box 121, Folder 7.

A voucher is a document that confirms a business transaction is truthful. The voucher system uses individual records to organize outgoing expenses, grouping all documents related to a singular purchase and indexing the information found on those documents. Freer’s vouchers, measuring roughly seven-by-eight inches, were designed to fold in half to contain purchasing paperwork, including correspondence from dealers and other vendors, provenance documentation, photographs, publications related to works of art, and invoices. Emblazoned with “C. L. Freer” in bold lettering, each voucher provided a place for the accountant to record the purchase price and month of purchase and to describe the transaction. The accountant would also record the date of payment and the corresponding check number and note where one could locate the debit recorded in Freer’s central voucher registration book in which all outgoing payments were recorded.

Accountants would track the progress of a purchase on the interior of the voucher. After recording the arrival date of the invoice and itemizing the proposed purchase, the accountant signed in approval and then presented the voucher and its accompanying paperwork to Freer. It seems that at this stage Freer annotated the voucher and its contents, identifying where he wanted objects to go: his home, to a friend, or, after 1903, directly to the Smithsonian Institution. Upon Freer’s approval, accountants issued a check, which they sent to the vendor along with the voucher itself. Upon deposit, the vendor signed, dated, and returned the voucher to Freer’s home in Detroit, where clerks filed it for reference.1

a dark colored vessel in the shape of a bird with a small head and a large round belly
National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, Freer Collection, Gift of Charles Lang Freer, F1904.331a–b.

While the vouchers themselves offer great insight into financial practices at the turn of the century, the documents that accompany them are vital to understanding the global art market at the time. Freer made purchases from dealers, fellow collectors, and artists in America, Europe, and Asia whom he met during his travels. When Freer’s health began to fail in the early 1900s, vendors frequently sent large crates of artworks to his Detroit home, allowing him to select wares comfortably and at a leisurely pace. Dealers often sent Freer more than he requested for purchase, hoping something else would catch the famed collector’s eye. Through the voucher documents, researchers can reconstruct an object’s journey across the globe and discover the histories of not only the objects that Freer acquired but also those he turned down. Freer routinely annotated the invoices and letters that were filed with the final vouchers, noting which works to gift to friends, striking through objects to return, and listing features of certain objects that appealed to him. Researchers can explore how Freer negotiated prices, demonstrated a preference for particular types of works, and developed his ideas about taste and aesthetics. For example, the annotations on a November 26, 1904, invoice from Yamanaka & Company highlight Freer’s fascination with color and saturation. Next to the dealer’s object descriptions, Freer noted the “brilliant colors” in a kakemono (F1904.340a–h) and “the chocolate-colored glaze with an overflow of dark brownish red and orange” on an Edo-period rooster ewer (F1904.331a–b).2

Freer’s voucher collection provides a sense of how World War I (1914–18) shifted the art market from Paris to New York. European dealers and collectors hurriedly sold collections for lower prices as sales were increasingly directed through New York galleries, where Americans were enthusiastically buying. For example, the documentation created in 1915 for a collection of important Chinese bronzes and a jade (F1915.102, F1915.103a–b, F1915.104, F1915.105, F1915.106a–f, F1915.107, F1915.108, F1961.30a–b, F1961.31a–b, F1961.32a–b, F1968.28 and F1968.29) from the jeweler and art dealer Marcel Bing (1875–1920), brokered by C. T. Loo (1880–1957) through his New York gallery, Lai-Yuen & Co., illustrates this market shift and highlights the American economic advantage. In a letter to Freer explaining his refusal to further discount the bronzes, Bing laments that “[he] should not desire [to] come down to this [previously identified] price, had circumstances been as usual.”3 The war’s impact on global economics led the value of the United States dollar to skyrocket and presented Americans with an opportunity to compete with European elites more boldly in the purchase of fine art. Freer and his friends and fellow collectors Eugene and Agnes Meyer (1875–1959; 1887–1970), with whom he purchased the group of bronzes, therefore secured the works for a competitive price by paying in francs.4

The vouchers and documents also provide an opportunity to trace the evolution of how the West studied Asian works of art. Correspondence pertaining to acquisitions between Freer, the dealer Bunkio Matsuki (1867–1940), and the intellectuals Ernest Fenollosa (1853–1908) and Edward S. Morse (1838–1925) reveal how the early study of Chinese and Japanese ceramics depended upon art historical comparisons of objects. Dealer invoices and letters contain words and phrases used to identify types of glazes, painting techniques, and bronze patinas and illustrate how those classifications evolved. Freer often sought works of art by named artists. The correspondence and annotations on dealer invoices reflect his desire to know details about craftsmen and his growing knowledge of the works in his collection as well as improvements in his ability to identify styles and artists.

When Freer began to consider giving his collection to the Smithsonian Institution around 1902, he and his accountants retroactively applied the voucher system to his earlier art purchases, thereby organizing all acquisition information for nearly his entire collection.5 It is unclear what exactly drove this decision; however, it is clear that Freer saw this resource as indispensable information. Before his death, Freer reserved all the vouchers and the documents they enclosed for transfer to the Smithsonian, where they have been located since 1920. Freer and his contemporaries surely understood the materials’ practical importance in transferring ownership of the collection, but did the group also have the foresight to consider them invaluable assets for future scholars? Indeed, this trove of primary sources proves significant to advancing knowledge of not only the history of Charles Lang Freer’s renowned collection but also financial management, the global art market in the early twentieth century, histories of collecting and taste, and the understanding of Asian art in the West.

Selected Collectors and Dealers

Shaping the Collections: Dealers and Collectors of Asian Art

Asian Art Provenance Connections Project

Provenance research at the National Museum of Asian Art encompasses research into ownership, collecting, and art market histories. In addition to tracing the history of one object at a time, our researchers investigate the sources of the works of art in our collections. Sources take a variety of forms, including, but not limited to, private donors and collectors, auction houses, galleries, and dealers. In turn, these individuals and businesses procured their collections from other sources around the world. It is the provenance researcher’s job to identify an object’s journey across time and space, from its creation to its arrival at the museum, tracing its connection to different individuals.

This page presents biographies of dealers and collectors who were instrumental in shaping the collections of the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. Each biography can be accessed as a PDF document. Collection objects and archival materials associated with each individual collector and dealer are also linked. Researchers update existing documents and write new biographies when they uncover new information.

This resource, which began in 2016, is generously funded by the David Berg Foundation.


Diedrich Abbes (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Wiliam Cleverly Alexander (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

George Findlay Andrew (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Abel William Bahr (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Peter Johannes Bahr (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Siegfried Bing (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Carl Whiting Bishop (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Bluett and Sons (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Alice Boney (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Edward Chow (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Thomas Benedict Clarke (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Charles Anderson Dana (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

David David-Weill (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Duanfang (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Gustav Ecke (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Eskenazi Ltd. (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

George Aristedes Eumorfopoulos (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Ernest Fenollosa (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

John C. Ferguson (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Charles Lang Freer (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Leonard Gow (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Desmond Gure (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Isaac Taylor Headland (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Arthur Lonsdale Hetherington (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Mrs. Christian R. Holmes (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Jun Tsei Tai (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Orvar Karlbeck (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Dikran Kelekian (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Thomas Joseph Larkin (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Berthold Laufer (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

John Ellerton Lodge (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

C.T. Loo (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Henry Gurdon Marquand (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Agnes Meyer (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Eugene Meyer (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Percival David Foundation for Chinese Art (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Friedrich Perzynski (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

James Marshall Plumer (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

John Alexander Pope (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Arthur M. Sackler (pdf)
Related Smithsonian records

Paul Singer (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

John Sparks (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Julius Spier (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Spink and Son (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Harold Stern (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Tonying and Company (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Henri Albert Van Oort (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Albert von Le Coq (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Archibald Gibson Wenley (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Zhang Daqian (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records

Zhang Naiji (pdf)
Related Freer and Sackler collections
Related Smithsonian records


The National Museum of Asian Art provides this information for educational purposes only. The Museum does not endorse commercial entities or their products. The information presented on this website may be revised and updated at any time as ongoing research progresses or as otherwise warranted. Pending any such revisions and updates, information on this site may be incomplete or inaccurate or may contain typographical errors. Neither the Smithsonian nor its regents, officers, employees, or agents make any representations about the accuracy, reliability, completeness, or timeliness of the information on the site. Use this site and the information provided on it subject to your own judgment. The Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery welcome information that would augment or clarify the ownership history of objects in their collections.

Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art Announces “Freer’s Global Network: Artists, Collectors, and Dealers”

Groundbreaking Exhibition Uncovers and Amplifies the Many Voices and Perspectives That Inform the Museum Collection’s History

 

The National Museum of Asian Art will present “Freer’s Global Network: Artists, Collectors, and Dealers,” a groundbreaking exhibition that shines new light on the Freer Gallery of Art’s founder Charles Lang Freer. The exhibition opens Oct. 15—near the start of the museum’s centennial celebrations—and is ongoing. An innovative digital feature makes the exhibition accessible to global audiences. As the National Museum of Asian Art charts its next 100 years, “Freer’s Global Network” offers an opportunity to reflect on the past.

“Freer’s Global Network” looks closely at the interconnected web of artists, dealers and collectors who helped shape the Freer Gallery of Art’s collection amid the shifting political and economic environment of the early 20th century. The exhibition and its accompanying digital media are part of the museum’s work to uncover and amplify the many voices and perspectives that formed the museum.

The hybrid onsite and online exhibition highlights often-unseen elements of art history and museum practice, including provenance research, which documents the ownership of objects in the museum’s collection. The accompanying digital StoryMap allows visitors to explore the stories of four individuals, Bunko Matsuki, Dikran Kelekian, Mary Chase Perry Stratton and Yamanaka Sadajirō, each of whom played a major role in shaping the collection that Freer bequeathed to the nation.

“The National Museum of Asian Art has been a leader in provenance research for many years,” said Chase F. Robinson, Dame Jillian Sackler Director of the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art, the National Museum of Asian Art. “Especially as we move into our second century, we are committed to presenting the history of our objects in innovative ways.”

The 22 objects displayed in “Freer’s Global Network,” including American paintings and stoneware, Japanese ceramics, ancient Chinese bronzes and Near Eastern pottery, illustrate Freer’s network in operation. The exhibition is deeply informed by both archival material and ongoing scholarship on Freer and his time.

“It’s such a pleasure to put Freer in the larger context of his moment and to highlight individuals such as Agnes Meyer and Mary Chase Perry Stratton, women whose taste and artistic talent shaped Freer’s collecting in foundational ways,” said Diana Greenwold, Lunder Curator of American Art.

“Just as ‘Freer’s Global Network’ celebrates the many figures who shaped the institution’s art collection, the exhibition itself was not conceived as a singular vision,” said Katherine Roeder, guest curator. “Rather it was a collective project that brought together colleagues from different departments within the museum.”

About the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art is committed to preserving, exhibiting, researching and interpreting art in ways that deepen people’s collective understanding of Asia and the world. Home to more than 45,000 objects, the museum stewards one of North America’s largest and most comprehensive collections of Asian art, with works dating from antiquity to the present from China, Japan, Korea, South Asia, Southeast Asia and the Islamic world. Its rich holdings bring the arts of Asia into direct dialogue with an important collection of 19th- and early 20th-century American works, providing an essential platform for creative collaboration and cultural exchange between the United States, Asia and the Middle East.

Beginning with a 1906 gift that paved the way for the museum’s opening in 1923, the National Museum of Asian Art is a leading resource for visitors, students and scholars in the United States and internationally. Its galleries, laboratories, archives and library are located on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., and are part of the world’s largest museum complex, which typically reports more than 27 million visits each year. The museum is free and open to the public 364 days a year, making its exhibitions, programs, learning opportunities and digital initiatives accessible to global audiences.

 

This Day in Freer History: November 22, 1920

The Museum Makes its First Purchase

On November 22, 1920, just over a year after Charles Lang Freer’s death, the Freer Gallery of Art initiated its first institutional purchases: two large stone wall reliefs that originated in the cave temples of Xiangtangshan, one depicting a gathering of buddhas and bodhisattvas and another depicting the Western Paradise of the Buddha AmitabhaEventually a Song dynasty sculpture of a seated tiger also became part of the acquisitionYet what seemed to be a straightforward and exciting purchase became an incredibly complex and lengthy process.

a carved stone relief depicting a number of figures surrounding the central figure of the buddha
Gathering of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, F1921.1.

An Object of Interest

Lai-Yuan & Company, the New York gallery specializing in sales of Chinese antiquities, had the sculptures in its warehouse by October 1920. Having worked with Charles Lang Freer in the past, the gallery co-owners, C.T. Loo and F.S. Kwen, knew plans for the Freer Gallery of Art were developing rapidly.

Portrait of Katharine Nash Rhoades
Portrait of Katharine Nash Rhoades by Alfred Stieglitz, 1915, Freer and Sackler Archives, FSA A.01 12.03.01.

They sent Katharine N. Rhoades, Freer’s former secretary and a newly appointed museum trustee, the description and cost of the sculptures on November 22. She shared the information with the museum’s director and curator John E. Lodge (served 1920-1942); Rhoades and Lodge quickly recognized these sculptures would be exciting additions to the collection.

Before his death, Freer mandated that purchases required the approval of his fellow collectors and friends Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer; Louisine Havemeyer; or Rhoades; and the Fine Arts Commission, led by the Secretary of the Smithsonian.

Knowing they needed more time to secure funds and meet Freer’s stipulations, Rhoades and Lodge requested that Lai-Yuan reserve the sculptures through January 10, 1921. Secretary of the Smithsonian Dr. Charles D. Walcott and Agnes Meyer traveled to New York in the new year and approved the sculptures. By January 10 the museum was poised to proceed with the purchase.

Problems Arise

Accountants finalizing Freer’s estate in Detroit, however, informed the Smithsonian that the residual funds that would pay for the sculptures could not be released until late April. Loo and Kwen expressed great frustration upon hearing this news, primarily because their business was closing. However, they agreed to accept payment in two installments when funds were released. With the closure of Lai-Yuan, Loo opened C.T. Loo Chinese Antiques and agreed to oversee the sale’s completion. When the sale encountered another delay after Freer’s estate realized funds would not transfer until May, Lodge asked Lai-Yuan to continue holding the sculptures. To sweeten the deal, he also asked to purchase a sculpture of a seated tiger that Walcott and Meyer had noticed at the gallery’s warehouse during their visit. The owners of Lai-Yuan accepted this plan, albeit noting bitterly in a letter to Lodge, “Were it not necessary for us to liquidate our stock at this time we hardly feel that we could have accepted [this proposal].”

The Sculptures Come to Washington

Thinking the deal complete, Lai-Yuan sent the sculptures via railway to Washington. Upon the acquisitions’ arrival in the capital city on March 26, the museum’s superintendent learned that one of the larger sculptures had broken during transport. Its crate was improperly braced and the train’s jostle had expanded old cleavages. Lacking supports, the sculpture’s midsection cracked into several pieces; rubble filled the bottom of the crate. The Lai-Yuan representatives were distressed, as their secretary had mistakenly secured travel insurance covering damage resulting only from “fire or collision.” Their negotiations with the insurance company remain unknown, but they reached a settlement in February 1922. On behalf of Lai-Yuan, Loo agreed to fund the repair. Museum staff followed the museum’s architect, Charles Platt’s suggestion that the sculptures be integrated into a gallery wall.

a carved stone relief depicting the life of the buddha
Western Paradise of the Buddha Amitabha, F1921.2.

Repairs and Installation

Loo routinely wrote to Lodge, inquiring about installation, but it was not until a year after the accident, in March 1922, that the sculptures were finally installed. Loo sent Mr. Takenaka, a conservator from Japan to conduct “finishing touches” and when he completed work, Rhoades presented Takenaka with $15.00 for overnight accommodations and train fare, marking the completion of this 2-year endeavor.

Additional resource

Freer Gallery of Art, Postcards of “Scenes from Life of the Buddha” (F1921.1) & “The Paradise of the Buddha Amitabha,” 1929, The Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Department of Conservation and Scientific Research, Research Files.