at
Úsov Château,
Czech Republic. Very famous collections that are now dispersed include the
Borghese Collection and
Farnese collection in Rome, and the
Orleans Collection in Paris, mostly sold in London. When this happens, it can be a large loss to those interested in art as the initial vision of the collector is lost. The
Princely Family of Liechtenstein have works by such artists as
Hals,
Raphael,
Rembrandt and
Van Dyck, a collection containing some 1,600 works of art, but were unable to show them since 1945 when they were smuggled out of
Nazi Germany. The works were finally displayed in the
Liechtenstein Museum after nearly 60 years with most in storage. The important collection of the
Thyssen family, mostly kept in the
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, which settled in
Madrid in 1992, was bought by the Spanish state. Only an exhibited part, the collection of
Carmen Cervera, widow of the late Baron Thyssen, remains private but exhibited separately in the museum. Many collections were left to the public in some form, and are now museums, or the nucleus of a museum's collection. Most museums are formed around one or more formerly private collection acquired as a whole. Major examples where few or no additions have been made include the
Wallace Collection and
Sir John Soane's Museum in London, the
Frick Collection and
Morgan Library in New York,
The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., and the
Museu Calouste Gulbenkian in
Lisbon. Other collections remain complete but are merged into larger collections in museums. Some important 19th/20th examples are: • The
Waddesdon Bequest of Renaissance objects was bequeathed to the
British Museum, where it is displayed in its own room (a condition of the bequest), as is the
Percival David Collection of Chinese porcelain. Many other bequests or purchased collections are split up within the museum's collection. •
Sergei Shchukin, was an important
Russian art collector, mainly of French
Impressionist and
Post-Impressionist art. His collection is now divided between the
Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow and the State
Hermitage Museum in
St. Petersburg. • The
Charles Lang Freer collection became an important part of the Smithsonian—the
Freer Gallery of Art. • Count
Antoine Seilern bequeathed the bulk of his art collection to the
Courtauld Institute of Art in 1978 where it is known as the Princes Gate Collection, which was also the title of the catalogue of the collection. • When the banker
Robert Lehman died in 1969, his foundation donated 2,600 works of art to the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Housed in the "Robert Lehman Wing", the museum refers to the collection as "one of the most extraordinary private art collections ever assembled in the United States". To emphasize the personal nature of the Robert Lehman collection, the Met housed the collection in a special set of galleries which evoked the interior of Lehman's richly decorated
townhouse; this intentional separation of the collection as a "museum within the museum" met with mixed criticism and approval at the time, though the acquisition of the collection was seen as a coup for the Met. Unlike other departments at the Met, the Robert Lehman collection does not concentrate on a specific style or period of art; rather, it reflects Lehman's personal interests. ==References==