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The Need for New Acquisitions
Fernando Checa Cremades, Museum Director, 1996-2001The Need for New Acquisitions
Fernando Checa Cremades, Museum Director, 1996-2001
There is a problem, one that is less important today, but a problem that still exists, namely the idea that is held by cultivated circles (although they don’t seem that cultivated to me) that the Museo del Prado now has its collection, so there’s no real need to spend any more money. It is evident that the Museo del Prado, since it incorporated a good part of the Royal Collection throughout the nineteenth century, has been a superior collection, one that really has no equal. It’s worthy of all the superlatives you might wish to heap upon it. However, that collection belonging to the Museo del Prado, based on the Royal Collection, also incorporated the paintings of another national museum during the nineteenth century, a museum that had been founded in the 1830’s, the Museo de la Trinidad. That’s how almost all of the El Greco works at the Museum today were acquired. That is to say, if El Greco is one of the cornerstones of the collection at the Museo del Prado, together with the Spanish paintings of the seventeenth century, which also came from the Museo de la Trinidad, then it isn’t such a complete collection. The third source of paintings at the Museum consists of New Acquisitions, which is the only inventory that is open, because this is where the new purchases are incorporated. This is where most of the paintings reside. All of Goya’s work, for example. When the Museum opened, there were just three Goya paintings from the Royal Collection, and now we have more than one hundred and fifty of his works.
Director of the Museo del Prado from 1996 to 2001, art historian and museographer, specializing in Baroque painting and especially in collectionism and royal patronage in Spain during the 16th and 17th centuries.
Interview recorded on May 30, 2018
Increase of the collection
8 / 12-
The anonymous donation of a Picasso in the summer of 1974 -
The loyalty of the Friends -
The Nineteenth Century Collections and the Casón del Buen Retiro -
The Countess of Chinchón. Three Goyas for the price of one -
The Villaescusa legacy -
1986: We recover The Marchioness of Santa Cruz -
The New Acquisitions Policy: The Countess of Chinchón by Goya -
The Need for New Acquisitions -
Three of all the attributions -
1996-2001. Fernando Checa Cremades -
The Alhambra in Granada: The Crucifixion by Juan de Flandes -
The Countess of Chinchón on a seasonal basis
- Collective
- Management
- RDF
- RDF
Management
José María Luzón Nogué
Museum Director, 1994-1996
Francisco Calvo Serraller
Museum Director, 1993-1994
Felipe Garín Llombart
Museum Director, 1991-1993
Gabriele Finaldi
Assistant Director of Conservation and Research, 2002-2015
Manuela Mena Marqués
Head of the Department of Conservation of 18th Century Painting and Goya, 1978-2019