1954
24.3 x 31.9 cm (9 9/16 x 12 9/16 in.)
Lyonel Feininger (1955-56), bequest; to Julia Feininger (1956-by 1970), gift; to William S. Lieberman (by 1970-2005), bequest; to Busch-Reisinger Museum, 2006. Footnotes: According to Peter Nisbet's 11 Sept. 2008 memo to Frank Connors (in object file, along with other documentation), it is highly likely that Julia Feininger, the artist's widow, gave William Lieberman (1924-2005) the 590 drawings that compose the Lieberman Bequest. Neither the lawyers for Feininger's estate nor his two sons have been able to confirm whether, and at what time, Julia might have given Lieberman the drawings. However, their statements corroborate the friendship between Julia and Lieberman, and the likelihood of her giving him such a gift. Lieberman would have received the drawings between 1956, when Feininger died, and 1970, when Julia died. Beginning in the 1960s, nearly all of the drawings were, at some point, on loan to MoMA. Some of the loans came from Lieberman, while others came from Julia; of the loans given by Julia, many passed into Lieberman's ownership later, at which point he re-loaned some of them to MoMA. Lieberman's personal papers, which might contain more specific information about how he acquired the drawings, are not currently accessible. They are in the care of his executor, Anne Strauss of the Metropolitan Museum, who has yet to examine them.
Charcoal on cream laid paper
20th centuryGraphite on paper
20th centuryAmericanGraphite with orange and gold crayon on paper
20th centuryGerman?Leadpoint and white chalk on off-white modern wove paper, prepared with lead white, bone ash, bone black, and rabbit skin glue
20th centuryAmericanCharcoal, oil stick, acrylic, and Liquid Paper on white wove paper
20th centuryAmericanBlack ink and graphite traces on cream wove paper
20th centuryGermanGraphite on tan wove paper
20th centuryGermanCrayon on paper
20th centuryAmericanBlack ink, gray-blue watercolor, and spots of white gouache on cream wove paper; verso: graphite
20th centuryAmericanBlack ink on cream wove paper
20th centuryFrenchColored marker on paper
20th centuryGermanGraphite on paper
20th centuryAmerican