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Press release

AXA Donates to The Met 29 Drawings and Studies Related to Thomas Hart Benton’s Mural America Today

America Today

Works Now on View in Special Installation at The Met

Exhibition Dates:  September 29, 2016–January 16, 2017 
Exhibition Location:  
The Met Fifth Avenue, Gallery 909 

(New York, October 11, 2016)—The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the global insurance company AXA announced today the recent gift to the Museum of 29 drawings and studies relating to Thomas Hart Benton’s epic mural America Today. This contribution follows AXA’s 2012 gift of the mural itself, America Today, which was a transformative addition to the Museum’s collection of American modernism. The works are on view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 909, adjacent to the installation of the mural. 

"We are grateful to AXA for their continuing partnership and generosity, which began in 2012 with the donation of America Today, and continued with their sponsorship of the 2014 exhibition Thomas Hart Benton’s America Today Mural Rediscovered,” stated Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.  “The gift of these rich and revelatory works enhances our understanding of this important American artist and his contribution to 20th-century art.”

“AXA is proud to partner with the MET as we continue to honor Benton’s legacy by sharing his drawings and studies related to his celebrated work, America Today,” said Mark Pearson, President and CEO of AXA Financial.  “We are happy to contribute to the global community that we serve and uphold our promise to preserve his works for future generations.”

Benton was a prolific and curious draftsman who recorded the world around him in drawings and sketches from an early age. After the death of his father in 1924, Benton was inspired to explore the United States and created hundreds of drawings of the people and places he saw in the South, the Midwest, and the West. These drawings became the basis for America Today.

In addition to the drawings, AXA’s gift includes Benton’s painted compositional studies for five of the mural’s 10 panels: Instruments of Power, Deep South, City Building, City Activities with Dance Hall, and City Activities with Subway. Notably, the painted studies for Instruments of Power and Deep South, which appear on opposite sides of the same Masonite support, were previously owned by Jackson Pollock, who was Benton’s student at the time at the Art Students League and assisted his teacher with America Today by modeling for male figures in the mural and mixing pigments.  

About America Today
America Today was Benton’s first commission for a mural, and it served to launch his career as one of the defining figures in American art of his generation. He received the opportunity in 1930 from The New School for Social Research to adorn the boardroom in a new building at 66th West 12th Street design by renowned architect Joseph Urban. Rejecting allegorical and historical subjects traditionally reserved for public murals, Benton audaciously filled the walls of the New School’s boardroom with images of modern life and industry.    

After more than 50 years in the boardroom of the New School, a space that was subsequently used as a classroom, America Today proved difficult for the school to maintain in perpetuity. In 1982, the school announced the sale of the mural cycle to the Manhattan art dealer Maurice Segoura, with the condition that it would not be re-sold outside the United States or as individual panels. But the work was a great challenge to sell as a whole, increasing the likelihood that the panels would be dispersed. 

America Today was acquired by AXA (then Equitable Life) in 1984, in support of efforts on the part of then-Mayor Edward I. Koch and others to keep it intact and in New York City. Two years later, after extensive cleaning and restoration, America Today was unveiled to critical acclaim in AXA’s new headquarters at 787 Seventh Avenue. When the company moved its corporate headquarters again in 1996, to 1290 Avenue of the Americas, America Today was put on display in the lobby. There it remained until January 2012, when the company was asked to remove it to make way for a renovation. The removal triggered AXA’s decision to place the historic work in a museum collection, and in December 2012, AXA donated the mural to The Metropolitan Museum of Art. This transformative gift was facilitated by H. Barbara Weinberg, Curator Emerita, The American Wing, and Pari Stave, Senior Administrator in the Museum’s Department of Modern and Contemporary Art. 

More information about the 2012 gift and the 2014 exhibition can be found in the Press Room on the Museum’s website. The MetCollects episode on the story of the mural’s journey to The Met is also available on the Museum’s website.

A related Bulletin published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art is available in the Museum's book shop and online ($14.95).  The essays and entries in the publication reveal new findings regarding the significance of the murals, as well as the results of an intensive technical examination, including infrared reflectography, exploring Benton’s working methods.

The publication is made possible by the William Cullen Bryant Fellows.

The Met's quarterly Bulletin program is supported in part by the Lila Acheson Wallace Fund for The Metropolitan Museum of Art, established by the cofounder of Reader's Digest.

About AXA
"AXA" is a brand name of AXA Equitable Financial Services, LLC and its family of companies, including AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company (NY, NY), MONY Life Insurance Company of America (AZ stock company, administrative office: Jersey City, NJ), AXA Advisors, LLC, and AXA Distributors, LLC. In business since 1859, AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company is a leading financial protection company and one of the nation’s premier providers of life insurance and annuity products distributed to individuals and business owners through its retail distribution channel, AXA Advisors, LLC (member FINRA, SIPC) and to the financial services market through its wholesale distribution channel, AXA Distributors, LLC (member FINRA, SIPC).

AXA is a part of the global AXA S.A. (also referred to as “AXA Group”), a Paris-headquartered holding company for a group of international insurance and financial services companies. The obligations of AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company and MONY Life Insurance Company of America are backed solely by their claims-paying ability. Find AXA on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. For more information, visit www.axa.com.

About The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy. The Museum lives in three iconic sites in New York City—The Met Fifth Avenue, The Met Breuer, and The Met Cloisters. Millions of people also take part in The Met experience online.

Since it was founded in 1870, The Met has always aspired to be more than a treasury of rare and beautiful objects. Every day, art comes alive in the Museum’s galleries and through its exhibitions and events, revealing both new ideas and unexpected connections across time and across cultures.

Through its website and social media accounts on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, The Met expands its visitor experience to people all over the world.

For additional information about the Museum, visit www.metmuseum.org.

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October 11, 2016


Contact:

For Museum inquiries:

Elyse Topalian or Alexandra Kozlakowski,
communications@metmuseum.org; 212-570-3951

For AXA inquiries:

Jennifer Recine
jennifer.recine@axa.us.com; 212-314-2009


Image: Thomas Hart Benton (1889-1975) City Activities with Dancehall from America Today, 1930–31. Mural cycle consisting of ten panels. Egg tempera with oil glazing over Permalba on a gesso ground on linen mounted to wood panels with a honeycomb interior. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of AXA Equitable, 2012

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