The collector Ysabel Sureth
The Ysabel Sureth Collection (YSC) developed over a period of more than three decades. The point of departure was an immediate encounter: in 1992, Ysabel Sureth discovered the small female portrait Portrait of a Woman by Josef Floch from 1960 at an auction in Vienna – and acquired it. Out of this early moment of fascination emerged a passion for collecting that is consistently devoted to Floch’s portraits of women and images of female figures, which she understood as a central mode of expression within his oeuvre. No fewer than fifty works in the YSC offer insight into this subject, which was so significant for Josef Floch. Ysabel Sureth combines iconic individual works with a multifaceted cross-section of Floch’s artistic development – from his early years in Vienna, through Paris, to the paintings created in New York, along with a number of drawings. Serving as her internal guide when it comes to acquisitions was Ysabel Sureth’s precise perception of mood, the tonal harmony of colour, and the inner disposition of the figures portrayed:
‘I was repeatedly moved by these women who appear enigmatic and introverted, seemingly drifting into reverie, untouched by the reality around them,’ Ysabel Sureth writes in the YSC collection catalogue.`
The collection is private; wherever Josef Floch’s paintings are displayed, they create a space of focused and quiet perception. The works naturally resist rapid consumption, and it is precisely for this reason that they retain their continuing relevance. At the same time, the collection is designed to be both communicative and research-oriented: the works are preserved, systematically documented, and studied – and deliberately brought into dialogue with curators, museums, other Floch enthusiasts, and the public. In this way, the collector, Ysabel Sureth, makes visible a body of work that, in its coherence and quality, forms an independent ensemble within the reception of Josef Floch.
The collector Ysabel Sureth
The Ysabel Sureth Collection (YSC) developed over a period of more than three decades. The point of departure was an immediate encounter: in 1992, Ysabel Sureth discovered the small female portrait Portrait of a Woman by Josef Floch from 1960 at an auction in Vienna – and acquired it. Out of this early moment of fascination emerged a passion for collecting that is consistently devoted to Floch’s portraits of women and images of female figures, which she understood as a central mode of expression within his oeuvre. No fewer than fifty works in the YSC offer insight into this subject, which was so significant for Josef Floch. Ysabel Sureth combines iconic individual works with a multifaceted cross-section of Floch’s artistic development – from his early years in Vienna, through Paris, to the paintings created in New York, along with a number of drawings. Serving as her internal guide when it comes to acquisitions was Ysabel Sureth’s precise perception of mood, the tonal harmony of colour, and the inner disposition of the figures portrayed:
‘I was repeatedly moved by these women who appear enigmatic and introverted, seemingly drifting into reverie, untouched by the reality around them,’ Ysabel Sureth writes in the YSC collection catalogue.`
The collection is private; wherever Josef Floch’s paintings are displayed, they create a space of focused and quiet perception. The works naturally resist rapid consumption, and it is precisely for this reason that they retain their continuing relevance. At the same time, the collection is designed to be both communicative and research-oriented: the works are preserved, systematically documented, and studied – and deliberately brought into dialogue with curators, museums, other Floch enthusiasts, and the public. In this way, the collector, Ysabel Sureth, makes visible a body of work that, in its coherence and quality, forms an independent ensemble within the reception of Josef Floch.