The Frick Pittsburgh partners with New York-based The Frick Collection for the first time to unite the collections of nineteenth-century industrialist Henry Clay Frick and his daughter, philanthropist Helen Clay Frick. Vermeer, Monet, Rembrandt: Forging the Frick Collections in Pittsburgh & New York explores the Fricks’ shared passion for art collecting, how their iconic acquisitions shaped the museums they established, and how we define great art today.
The exhibition features masterworks, including works by Titian, Rembrandt, Monet, Degas, Whistler, El Greco, Ingres, and Vermeer. The exhibition marks a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see artworks from these two extraordinary collections alongside—and in some cases reunited with—one another.
The paintings by Dutch and Flemish artists on loan from The Frick in New York are:
Follower of Rembrandt van Rijn
Portrait of a Young Artist, 1650s
Johannes Vermeer
Dutch, 1632–1675
Girl Interrupted at Her Music, ca. 1658–1659
Philips Wouwerman
Dutch, 1619–1668
The Calvary Camp, 1638–1668
Gerard ter Borch
Dutch, 1617–1681
Portrait of a Young Lady, ca. 1655–70
Salomon van Ruysdael
Dutch, ca. 1602–1670
River Scene: Men Dragging a Net, ca. 1667
Gabriel Metsu
Dutch, 1629–1667
A Lady at Her Toilet, 1648–67
Rembrandt van Rijn
Dutch, 1606–1669
Self-Portrait, 1658
Anthony van Dyck
Flemish, 1599–1641
Genoese Noblewoman, 1622–27
Frans Hals
Dutch, ca. 1581–1666
Portrait of a Man, ca. 1660