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Vizcaya

Designed by F. Burrall Hoffman
Vizcaya, 1916
The winter residence of James Deering on Biscayne Bay in Miami

Charles Deering

John Singer Sargent
American, 1856–1925
Portrait of Charles Deering, 1917
Oil on canvas
21 1/2 x 21 in.
Anonymous loan
8.2002

Charles Deering,
Mrs. Chauncey McCormick, and Mrs. Richard E. Danielson

One of the most important benefactors of the Art Institute’s collection was the industrialist and amateur artist Charles Deering (1852–1927), whose family business produced farm equipment. A merger with McCormick Harvester Company in 1902 created the International Harvester Company, still in operation today. Both Charles and his younger brother James (1859–1925) passionately amassed works by the Old Masters as well as painters of their own day. James collected 15th- to 19th- century art for his mansion, Vizcaya, in Miami, Florida. Charles preferred to fill Marycel, his mansion in Stiges, Spain, with works of Spanish masters, such as El Greco, who were largely ignored by collectors and art historians at the turn of the century. In 1910, Charles contributed funds that helped make it possible for the Art Institute to acquire El Greco’s Assumption of the Virgin. Trustees, including Martin A. Ryerson, had obtained this extremely important painting by subscription for the museum four years earlier on the advice of American artist Mary Cassatt. Later, additional funds from Nancy Atwood Sprague completed the acquisition.

In 1924, Charles Deering gave his collection to his two daughters, Marion Deering McCormick (Mrs. Chauncey, 1886–1965) and Barbara Deering Danielson (Mrs. Richard, 1888–1987). The women donated many works to the Art Institute in the decades following their father’s death, including one of the most beloved of the Art Institute’s paintings, Spanish artist Bernat Martorell’s Saint George Killing the Dragon, in addition to paintings by Francisco de Zurbarán and El Greco. Upon his death, James Deering also left his collection to Charles’s daughters, his nieces, who donated several of these works to the Art Institute. Gifts from Deering and McCormick family descendants continue to enhance the museum’s collection. The Freedman by John Quincy Adams Ward was purchased with funds from the Roger McCormick Endowment in 1998.



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