A reconstruction of the expansion of the Spilliaert collection before 1940 may shed some light on the matter. An undated visitor guide, which can probably be dated to 1924, reveals that the museum had at least two watercolours by Spilliaert before the war: Beach (1905, 58 x 69 cm) and Fishermen’s Quarter (1914, 88 x 71 cm).
In all likelihood these works were lost in the wartime fire along with works by Emile Spilliaert and Louise Héger, as well as by James Ensor, Fernand Khnopff and many others. We cannot be certain of when they were added to the collection. At that time, the ‘museum’ only existed in the form of a collection and used the rooms in the Town Hall on Wapenplein, the library, the Kursaal on the dyke and the Hospital as exhibition space. In March 1924, the newspaper Le Carillon, which was sympathetic to Spilliaert, called on the City of Ostend to purchase the artist’s work. The time was right, collectors were showing an interest and prices would inevitably rise. It is possible that Beach and Fishermen’s Quarter were acquired shortly thereafter, because seven months later Georges Paquot described the museum in Le Carillon and saw two works by Spilliaert in the Town Hall, a ‘fisherman’s house’ and an ‘evening view of the palisade.’ It is unclear whether the latter work is in fact the previously mentioned Beach. Paquot may have been referring to Ostend Harbour. This large watercolour with gouache and pastels from 1910 is one of ten Spilliaert works with no provenance in the Mu.ZEE collection today. However, a truly evening-like atmosphere is not immediately noticeable.
In 1925, the City of Ostend purchased a work entitled La Lune de Miel (literally: Honey Moon or figuratively: Honeymoon) at the dual exhibition Spilliaert-Oscar Jespers in the Kursaal. It is unlikely that this is the 1905 work Beach, mentioned in the visitor’s guide and lost in 1940, since Spilliaert usually exhibited his recent work. During a Rotary visit in 1926, three unspecified works by Spilliaert were displayed in the Ostend library, which was located in the Town Hall.
We can assume that these were Beach, Fishermen’s Quarter and Lune de Miel - unless it concerned other Spilliaert works in addition to those displayed in the museum section of the Town Hall. In 1929, Le Carillon reported that librarian-curator Carlos (Carlo) Loontiens (1892-1969) had donated ‘ten Spilliaert works’ from his own collection to the city, along with works by (Jan) De Clerck and (Maurice) Seghers. No further details are known about this donation. Arriving at the total number seems simple, as ten Spilliaert works also currently have an inconclusive provenance. However: five of those works of inconclusive provenance are dated 1930 and one 1931. Was the newspaper misinformed (was this perhaps a long-term loan?), or were these Spilliaert works owned by Loontiens also (partially) lost in May 1940? The local newspaper Le Littoral reported in late December 1930 on the purchase of ‘a large watercolor: the famous house called ‘Perkstoel’ (sic), which is also rather strange. The purchase was reportedly made at the suggestion of the alderman for fine arts, Georges Verhaeghe. Shortly before, the work was on display at the Vieille Ostende exhibition at Ms Storck-Hertoge’s Studio gallery.
This is odd, since the museum did not purchase a work with the title The house named ‘De Preekstoel’ (the pulpit) from a local art gallery until 2003. A few days after this first article in 1930, several newspapers reported that the city had purchased ‘paintings’/’oeuvres’ by Spilliaert, Gerbosch and Ensor for the museum at that exhibition, but only the first article specified the titles of the works (one for each artist). It may have been a different version or different view of the famous Ostend house, and another work that was lost in the war fire.