Madison Wisconsin USA - A longtime collector of worldwide railroad art has announced the donation
of 250 pieces amassed over the last 40 years to the Center for Railroad Photography & Art
(CRP&Amp;A).
Peter Mosse, a CRP&A board member since 2016, and his wife Christine offered the collection to the center, which
announced its acceptance at its recent Conversations conference at Lake Forest College in suburban
Chicago.
Founded in 1997 by noted railroad photographer John E. Gruber, the Center gathers important collections, publishes
books and a periodical, and sponsors traveling exhibitions.
Until now, it has concentrated on archiving, conserving, and showcasing photographic images.
While it has collected art prints, this gift of original art broadens its scope exponentially.
"With the single addition of the Peter and Christine Mosse Art Collection, we will go from having a modest
representation of railroad paintings in our archive to a truly world-class collection," said CRP&A President
and Executive Director Scott Lothes.
"We are thrilled and humbled by their generosity and confidence. The transfer will be happening at a later date
(or dates) of Peter and Christine's choosing, which could be many years down the road," Lothes said.
"We still don't plan to open a gallery in Madison, but we're eagerly thinking of possible traveling exhibitions we
could assemble with selections from the collection. We'll be able to share digital images of many of these works, too,
subject to copyright and the artists' wishes."
Discarding the idea of parceling out individual pieces to mainstream and railroad museums, Mosse said he elected to
keep the collection intact because "its key attribute is its diversity across time, artistic styles, and countries
of origin, unified solely by the subject."
He chose CRP&A because "it was the only organization I could think of whose mission aligned perfectly with
what I had been doing."
CRP&A Chairman Bon French told News Wire, "It's beyond exciting. I think, clearly, it's going to open up
opportunities to work with mainstream galleries and art museums around the country, and beyond, that are not otherwise
necessarily railroad oriented."
The artwork portrays railroad scenes from 26 countries.
Subjects include not only trains but also stations, yards, shops, roundhouses, passengers, and railroad workers of all
crafts.
Artistic styles range from almost photographic realism, to soft, impressionistic scenes, to whimsical designs, to
images steeped in eclectic fantasy.
"The breadth of the collection is fantastic," said French.
"The global scope is fantastic."
Born in 1947, Mosse grew up in England, acquiring his first British trainspotter's locomotive guide in
1955.
As a teen, he worked during school breaks in the stationmaster's office of London's Paddington Station.
After graduating from Oxford University and obtaining an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania,
he entered a career in banking and commodities trading with the English Rothschild family, from which he retired a few
years ago.
His wife is a retired physician who maintained her own practice in New York City.
While Mosse spent most of his life and career in the United States, his personal and business travels have taken him
around the world, giving him a global perspective that is evident in the wide range of scenes he's
collected.
Most of the pieces are oil-on-canvas paintings, but other types include oil on board, watercolors on paper,
pen-and-ink, graphite on paper, and mixed media.
They range from the very small (3 x 7 inches, showing a railway in South London, by English artist John Parks) to the
wall-sized (a nearly 4 x 6 foot, mixed-media 1990 painting titled Yellow Caboose by Mexican artist Rafael
Cauduro).
About 160 pieces are displayed on the walls of the couple's Upper East Side high-rise apartment in
Manhattan.
Mosse emphasizes that he never intended to start collecting art, and when he did, it was for personal enjoyment, not as
an investment.
An aunt's gift of a watercolor provided the seed that prompted his first purchase from a New York gallery, about
1980.
That led to visits to Sotheby's and Christie's upscale auction houses, and to art magazines and searches across
internet listings.
Most of the art is original.
"I have very little in the way of reproduced art, though I do have some prints, probably six Currier & Ives
pieces," said Mosse.
Also in this category are "propaganda posters, from countries where I wasn't able to get original art, such as
Vietnam and the Soviet Union, and copies of posters which were in themselves original items, such as North
Korea."
The earliest piece is an Italian pencil-and-watercolor scene by German artist Georg Busse, Scene Near Castellammare
with Vesuvius in the Distance, dated 1843.
The most recent is a 20 x 20 inch oil painting by Charlie Hunter, Semaphore, from 2022.
Among widely known names represented in the collection are John Austin of the United Kingdom, Terence Cuneo
(1907-1996) the dean of railway artists in the U.K, Walter L. Greene known for New York Central calendar scenes, Phil
Hawkins of the U.K., industrial designer Otto Kuhler, Maurice Logan a California artist who did a poster for Southern
Pacific, Reginald Marsh best known for depictions of New York City life, watercolorist Ted Rose, Grif Teller known for
Pennsylvania Railroad calendar paintings, Craig Thorpe known for Pacific Northwest and Amtrak paintings, and David
Tutwiler known for work with the Disney Co. and "Star Wars" Producer George Lucas.
Mosse visited Tutwiler's gallery, then located in Rockport, Massachusetts, several times, and added to his collection
the artist's Symphony of the East Wind, which depicts the passenger train of that name at the Bar Harbor ferry landing
in Maine.
Mosse has commissioned work, including two pieces from Cuneo, whom he calls "the gold standard as far as U.K.
railway artists are concerned."
He noted that Cuneo is "one of the few that have moved into the mainstream" of art circles, one piece having
recently sold for US$55,876).
The most notable commission in Mosse's collection is Cuneo's Lostwithiel Crossing Signal Box (oil on canvas, 24 x 30
inches, 1990).
Having known Cuneo's work on a popular series of British Railways posters, he approached the artist with a concept of
combining a setting of Victorian-era technology (the signal box, or, in American terms, interlocking tower) contrasting
with a modern Inter-City 125 high-speed diesel trainset.
Cuneo, preferring the nostalgia of steam locomotives, talked his client into agreeing to that change, inserting a
steam hauled goods (freight) train instead of a sleek British Rail passenger train.
"I'm prepared to concede that visually it's more appealing, but slightly less interesting than it would have been
with a diesel train," Mosse said.
The most striking painting in the collection, he says, is Polishing, by Chinese artist Zhong Li Gong, (1984, oil on
canvas, 55 x 45 inches).
It depicts a worker next to a large steam-engine driving wheel, with part of the valve gear showing.
He spotted it in a Madison Avenue gallery in 1987.
"When I saw this painting it stopped me dead in my tracks," he said, but two obstacles presented
themselves.
Another collector had placed a hold on it, and "I was convinced that it was far too large for my apartment,"
Mosse said.
Through a series of circumstances, the other buyer withdrew, Mosse eventually realized that it would fit his quarters,
and he bought it.
"That turned out, without doubt, to be the most popular painting in the collection in terms of visitor
response," he said.
"Everybody who sees it remembers it."
Why?
"Size is part of it," he said.
"It's dramatic, the colors are wonderful, and it speaks to something about the relationship between man and
machine."
Dan Cupper.
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