Sotheby’s Launches Museum Partnership Series, Starting with Exhibition by New York’s Hispanic Society Museum & Library
by Daniel Cassady · ARTnewsWhen Sotheby’s moved into the Breuer building last year, the auction house inherited more than just a famous slab of Marcel Breuer modernism on Madison Avenue. It also inherited the ghost of a museum.
Now, Sotheby’s is leaning into that history in earnest, and with more than its usual blockbuster, star-studded evening sales.
The auction house announced this week that it will launch a new exhibition initiative called “In Residence.” The first of these will be presentation of three paintings by Spanish master Joaquín Sorolla from the collection of the Hispanic Society Museum & Library. The show, titled “In Residence: The Hispanic Society Sorollas,” opened Monday and runs through June 1 at the Breuer building.
The collaboration marks the first partnership between Sotheby’s and the Hispanic Society and serves as the inaugural edition of a broader program that will invite museums to stage focused exhibitions inside the Breuer building, formerly home to the Whitney Museum and later an outpost of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, called the Met Breuer. (The Frick Collection took up a three-year residency, from 2021–24, in the Breuer building while its historic home underwent renovations.)
At the center of the presentation are three works by Sorolla, whose sun-drenched paintings have long occupied a special place in the Hispanic Society’s collection. Included in the exhibition are Sea Idyll (1909), a luminous beach scene; Louis Comfort Tiffany (1911), a portrait of the famed American designer in his Long Island garden; and Señora de Sorolla in a Spanish Mantilla (1902), an intimate portrait of the artist’s wife.
The arrangement offers benefits on both sides. For the Hispanic Society, the exhibition places key works from its collection before the stream of collectors, advisers, and visitors now cycling through Sotheby’s Madison Avenue headquarters. For Sotheby’s, the collaboration further positions the Breuer building as something closer to a hybrid cultural institution than a traditional auction house.
Auction houses have increasingly blurred the line between commercial and institutional space over the past decade, mounting scholarly exhibitions, publishing museum-quality catalogs, and courting curatorial prestige. Sotheby’s new initiative, in a way, formalizes that shift. Visitors arriving to view multimillion-dollar consignments or attend evening sales will now also encounter masterpieces on loan from museums.
“Building on the institutional legacy of the Breuer Building, In Residence highlights our commitment to presenting extraordinary collections to a public audience,” Christy Coombs, Sotheby’s head of museum and corporate art group, said in a statement.
The timing is significant for the Hispanic Society, as it marks the centenary of Sorolla’s Vision of Spain mural cycle, commissioned by founder Archer M. Huntington and installed in 1926. The museum is also preparing to launch a major initiative in Valencia, Sorolla’s native city, that will bring more than 200 of the artist’s works that it owns to the Spanish city in September. Meanwhile, the inclusion of Señora de Sorolla in a Spanish Mantilla previews another upcoming Hispanic Society exhibition, “The Mantilla: Interlacing Identities,” opening in November.
“This collaboration with Sotheby’s represents a meaningful opportunity for us to raise awareness about the Hispanic Society Museum & Library’s mission, collection, and activity in New York City and beyond,” Guillaume Kientz, the Hispanic Society’s director and CEO, said in a statement.