Research on Museum Collection Provenance



Overview

The J. Paul Getty Museum is committed to sharing its research on the provenance of works in its collection. "Provenance" is the history of an artwork, encompassing the details of its origin, past ownership, sale timelines and previous locations. To compile this information, researchers study sale catalogues, personal papers, inventories and other archival documents, as well as physical marks, stickers, inscriptions, and stamps on the artwork itself. We regularly update our website and collection catalogues with new findings.

Our ongoing research is incorporated into object records in the Museum’s collection pages. Users of this site can search collection records with several keywords, including the names of people found in the artwork’s provenance.

Provenance research is, and has always been, a central and time-intensive activity of the Museum’s staff. It serves many purposes, from helping to substantiate a work’s origins to acting as an essential aid for curators, educators, and scholars investigating the history of a particular artwork or collection. It can lead to discoveries about the dynamics of the art market as well as important contributions to the field of art history.

Reconstructing a complete history of ownership for a given work presents many challenges. Much archival information remains undiscovered or difficult to access, and many records of ownership have been lost due to natural disasters, conflict, or neglect. Information is sometimes withheld by dealers and auction houses at the request of previous owners who wish to maintain their anonymity. Tracing provenance sheds light not only on collecting practices but also on the international political forces that impact the movement of objects. Although the current owner is accountable for ascertaining a thorough provenance, many objects will continue to have gaps in their histories, which may be filled by further research and future revelations.

composite image of a bronze statue of a nude young man and its provenance data to the right
Left: Attributed to Pietro Tacca (Italian, 1577 - 1640), Belvedere Antinous, about 1630. Bronze, 25 7/16 × 11 3/16 × 8 in. Getty Museum, 2014.40
Right: Provenance data for Belvedere Antinous

Understanding Provenance Data

Each artwork’s collection page includes provenance-related details such as marks, stickers, inscriptions, bibliography, and exhibition history. In the Provenance category of the History of this Artwork section, we summarize most of this into a narrative of dates, owners, and research notes.

Each entry in the Provenance section is in the following format, with information included when known:

year range name of owner or seller, life dates of owner or seller (location of owner or seller in parentheses)
followed by details of the transaction by which the object passed to its next owner and/or [information about a related public sale, e.g., auction date, place, lot number, sale price; in brackets]
The left column shows the range of ownership in years. Common date formats include:

1955 - 1970The work entered this collection in 1955 and left it in 1970
1955 - The work entered this collection in 1955, but we do not know when it left.
- 1955 We do not know when the work entered this collection, but it left in 1955.
by 1955 - The work was in this collection by 1955 but may have entered it earlier.
- still in 1955The work was still in this collection in 1955, and may have left it at a later date.

An owner name with no date(s) in the left column indicates that we know the work was in a particular collection, but not precisely when. We can conclude the work was in the collection between the owners listed above and below it, though there may be other unknown owners in the chain of ownership.

"Private collection" indicates that we know the work was not owned by a dealer and can mean: 1) we do not know the name of the owner or seller of that work, or 2) we know the name of the owner or seller, but they made it a condition of sale that their identity not be revealed. "Private Dealer" means that we know the seller was a dealer but we do not know their name.

Where information is linked to related pages, these entries appear as blue hyperlinks.

Here is an example of a full history, the provenance for Belvedere Antinous, Pietro Tacca, pictured above and available here in the collection pages.

Possibly 1633
or 1637-1662
Louis Hesselin French, 1600 - 1662 (Paris, France)
by inheritance to his heirs, 1662.
1662-1663
Husselin Family French (Paris, France)
sold to the French Crown, Garde-Meuble de la Couronne, for Louis XIV, 1663.
1663-1792
French government, Convention Nationale, Garde-Meuble National (Hôtel de la Marine, Garde-Meuble, Paris, France)
sold to Gabriel-Aimé Jourdan, 1796.
1796-1803
Gabriel-Aimé Jourdan French (Paris, France)
[sold, Collection de tableaux et bronzes appartenant a M. Jourdan, Paillet, Paris, April 4, 1803, lot 99.]
by 1973
Jean-Jacques Edrei French (Paris, France)
Source: Jean-Jacques Edrei, "Les bronzes Louis XIV." Plaisirs de France, November 1973, p. 29, ill. 16-17 indicates the bronze in his collection
late 1970s-2014
Private Collection (Paris, France)
on consignment to Sotheby's (Paris), sold to the J. Paul Getty Museum by private treaty sale, 2014.

For some works, the first line of provenance includes the place of discovery or excavation. If known, the year is located on the left, followed by the word “Found”; the excavation or discovery details; and a citation for the first known publication of this information. The example below is pulled from Mosaic Floor with Orpheus and the Animals, with Four Seasons in the Corners:

1899
Found: Property of C. Grange, Saint-Romain-en-Gal, France (first recorded in Bizot 1899)
by 1899–1911
C.Grange French
found in 1899 but immediately reburied. C. Grange sold the right to excavate and lift the mosaics to Albert Vassy and Claudius Guy, 1911.


Composite image of a cameo gem with two figures to the left, and a provenance index card to the right
Object and identifying document with World War II-era provenance
Left: Unknown, Gem with Venus and Anchises, about 25 B.C. Gem: cornelian; modern frame: gold and enamel. Getty Museum, 2017.2
Right: Central Collecting Point Property card for the gem, Linz Museum number 3877, Bundesarchive, B323/652.

Special Project: Provenance Research Related to World War II

The Museum continues to identify works in the collection with World War II-era provenance concerns. The two areas of research include:

Additional Resources

Explore Museum Collection Provenance

Provenance research in the Museum is ongoing, with new content published regularly to the online collection pages. Works with researched and catalogued provenance information include a Provenance tab on their collection page.

Contact Us

If you have information or questions about the provenance of any of the works in our collection, please contact us: museumprovenance@getty.edu