The permanent collection of the Bass Museum of Art spans more than
five hundred years and four continents, including Renaissance and
Baroque paintings; Rococo court paintings and English portraiture;
nineteenth- and twentieth-century landscape and historical paintings;
painting and sculpture from North America, Latin America and the
Caribbean; contemporary photography; Asian art; European decorative
arts; as well as a unique collection of works on paper. Works from the
collection will be rotated on a regular basis in the Sol M. Taplin
Gallery and the newly renovated Peter E. and Annemarie H. Houghton
Gallery, located on the first level of the museum.
In 1963 John and Johanna Bass donated their Old Masters collection to
the city of Miami Beach, a generous gift which has brought pleasure and
enlightenment to many thousands of visitors. The collection of more
than five hundred European works from the fifteenth to the
early-twentieth century, including an important group of more than two
hundred paintings and significant holdings of textiles and sculpture,
provided a solid foundation on which to develop a major institution with
one of the most comprehensive collections of European art in the
Southeast.
The nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century paintings that comprise
the collection bear witness to Mr. Bass’s continued links with his birth
country of Austria. The Bass Museum probably has a more representative
group of Austrian paintings, including local schools, than any other
collection in the United States. Among notable artists the museum’s
collection includes paintings by Jacob Jordaens, Peter Paul Rubens,
Gerard Seghers, Ferdinand Bol, Giovanni Barbagelata, as well as a
stunning altarpiece by Italian Renaissance masters Sandro Botticelli and
Domenico Ghirlandaio, one of only a handful of Botticellis on public
view in the United States.
In addition to painting, the collection contains sculpture, works on
paper, decorative objects and a handsome textiles selection. One of the
masterpieces in the textiles collection is the famous sixteenth-century
Flemish tapestry The Salute before the Tournament. It
has a particularly prestigious provenance in that it was part of Henry
VIII’s collection at Knole House in England and was later purchased by
J. Pierpont Morgan in the early-twentieth century before it came into
John Bass’s collection.
2100 Collins Ave
Miami Beach, FL 33139
For more info, visit: Bass Museum of Art Website
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