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For the first day of #MuseumWeek, we are highlighting what happens #BehindTheScenesMW at the museum! One key aspect of behind-the-scenes curatorial research at SAMA is provenance research, which focuses on the history of an artwork’s acquisition by various collectors, auction houses, and museums. Provenance research can reveal the previously unknown context of artworks. “The Suspension Bridge” was first purchased by Dr. Paul Gachet, who is famous for providing care to and encouraging the work of Vincent van Gogh at the end of his life. Dr. Gachet developed close relationships with many impressionist artists at this same time, including Pissarro, Cézanne, and Guillamin, from whom he purchased the painting. After Dr. Gachet’s death, his children auctioned the painting to Wildenstein & Co., Inc., where it was purchased by Gilbert Denman, longtime friend of the museum, in 1959. Finally, in 2005, the work was given to SAMA in Denman’s will. Does added context to a painting’s history make you experience it differently? Armand Guillamin, French, 1841-1927, “The Suspension Bridge,” ca. 1873, Oil on canvas, 12 1/2 x 18 1/4 in., San Antonio Museum of Art, Bequest of Gilbert M. Denman, Jr., 2005.1.174.

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