100 Top Collectors Who Are Making a Difference
March 2007
NEW YORK CITY
JAPANESE ART
St. Paul native Mary Griggs Burke made her first visit to Japan in 1955 and fell in love with the country. In more than 30 subsequent trips she assembled what’s been described by the Metropolitan Museum as “the largest and most encompassing private collection of Japanese art outside Japan”— more than 900 exceptional examples of Japanese pottery, statuary, folding screens, paintings, scrolls, lacquerware and ceramics spanning 4,000 years. Her collection has been exhibited at the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Hiroshima Prefectural Art and two other Japanese museums, and when “Masterpieces of Japanese Art from the Mary Griggs Burke Collection” opened at the Metropolitan Museum, director Philippe de Montebello said, “It is the only American collection ever to be shown at the Tokyo National Museum, a testament to Mrs. Burke’s sensitivity to and appreciation of Japanese aesthetics.” Last year, the Mary and Jackson Burke Foundation announced plans to bequeath the remarkable collection to both the Metropolitan and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. “The importance of this gift cannot be overstated,” says Matthew Welch, the MIA’s curator of Japanese and Korean art.
BLAKE BYRNE
LOS ANGELES
CONTEMPORARY ART
Blake Byrne’s gift of 124 works stands as one of the most significant donations in the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles’ history, adding key masterworks to our holdings, and creating new areas of strength for our collection,” says director Jeremy Strick. “Blake’s collecting is driven by relentless curiosity and a remarkable openness to new ideas. Maintaining residences in Los Angeles and Paris gives Blake an international perspective manifested in his strong and early commitment to such artists as Juan Muñoz and Marlene Dumas, and his engagement with European and American emerging talents.” Byrne’s gift to MOCA ranges from established artists to cutting-edge talents, here and abroad, and includes works by Gordon Matta- Clark, John Baldessari, Claes Oldenburg, Sigmar Polke, Tony Cragg, Cosima von Bonin, Kai Althoff, Annette Messager, Beat Streuli, Jan Vercruysse and Jacques Villegle. A retired broadcasting executive who headed Hearst Argyle Television, Byrne has been a MOCA trustee since 1999. In addition, at Duke University, his alma mater, he chairs the board of advisors of the new Raymond D. Nasher Museum of Art and, indeed, helped recruit the topflight group whose charge is to help build an endowment and advise on exhibition planning and acquisitions for the museum’s permanent collection.
JEROME and SIMONA CHAZEN
NEW YORK CITY
GLASS, CERAMICS, PAINTINGS
Jerome and Simona Chazen have been
guiding forces at New York’s Museum
of Arts & Design (formerly known as the
American Craft Museum) for more than
25 years. Bearing witness to their deep
involvement is their recent gift of 40 pieces
of outstanding 20th-century glass and ceramics.
In celebration of the gift, the museum
mounted an exhibition, “Dual Vision: The
Simona and Jerome Chazen Collection,”
that featured 98 pieces—the glass gift along
with works lent from the excellent holdings
of contemporary painting, sculpture and the
decorative arts that the couple has amassed
over three decades. That personal collection
includes 500 paintings, drawings and sculpture
in glass, clay and metal by more than
200 modern and contemporary artists, from
glass innovator Harvey Littleton to painters
Arshile Gorky and David Hockney. “We
love art, whether a painting or a glass or
ceramic object worth less money but equally
beautiful,” he says. Jerome, formerly CEO
of Liz Claiborne Inc. and now head of a private
investment partnership, chaired the capital
campaign that raised the funds for the
museum’s new building, which more than
triples its size. He is chairman emeritus of
the museum’s board; Simona is a current
board member and co-chair of the museum’s
Collections Committee. In 2005 the Chazens
gave $20 million to the University of Wisconsin,
their alma mater, to build a new art
museum, the Chazen Museum of Art, scheduled
to open in 2009.
MAYME AGNEW CLAYTON and AVERY CLAYTON
LOS ANGELES
AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORICAL ARCHIVE
A black university librarian with a passion
for the history of her people—and
for the minutiae that document it—amassed
an enormous trove of materials chronicling
235 years of African-American life. As first
reported in The New York Times, the cache
includes roughly 30,000 rare and out-ofprint
books; 75,000 photographs; 9,500
sound recordings and tens of thousands of
documents, manuscripts, letters and 16-
millimeter films. The collection, amassed
over a lifetime, is said to have cost Mayme
Agnew Clayton hundreds of thousands of
dollars and filled a garage behind her home.
The collection has been described by Sara
S. Hodson, curator of manuscripts at the
Huntington Library in San Marino, California,
as “one of the most important collections
in the United States for African-
American materials.” Since Mayme’s death
in October 2006, her son, Avery, is trying
to put together an estimated $565,000 to
move the massive collection out of the garage
and into new quarters in a former Culver City
courthouse, which the Mayme A. Clayton
Library and Cultural Center will call home.
“She was an amazing, humble woman,”
Avery says. “My mother assembled it; that
was her part. My part is to bring it to the
world.”
RALPH T. COE
SANTA FE
AMERICAN INDIAN ART
In a lifetime of collecting, Ralph T. (“Ted”)
Coe has assembled a collection of American
Indian art that is perhaps the most important
in the country. In 2003, the Metropolitan
Museum of Art exhibited some 200 of his
objects in “The Responsive Eye: Ralph T. Coe
and the Collecting of American Indian Art,”
and the accompanying book of the same name
is a must-have for anyone interested in American
Indian culture. The collection is a promised
gift to the Metropolitan, and Coe has
already made an outright gift of several pieces.
“I’m promise-gifting my American Indian collection
to the Met because it lacks strength in
this area, which I believe should be an essential
part of the greatest general art museum
in this country,” he says. Coe was on the staff
of the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City
from 1959 until 1982, serving as director the
last five years. He is still actively collecting
ethnic art—Native American but also African,
Oceanic and even European art, the latter categories
being a promised gift to Oberlin College.
“I’ve collected eclectically,” he says of
his 2,000-work collection, “and my holdings
include such diverse objects as a 13thcentury
Limoges enamel cross, a pastel portrait
by Renoir, a Courbet landscape painting,
drawings by Pissarro and Charles Rennie
Mackintosh, plus a portrait of my grandfather
by George Luks.”
BETH RUDIN DeWOODY
WEST PALM BEACH, FLA., AND
NEW YORK CITY
CONTEMPORARY ART AND OBJECTS
Beth Rudin DeWoody is a collector of
wildly disparate things, from fun and
funky items to the contemporary art canon.
“I love beautiful drawings, minimalist art,
things with a sense of humor,” she says. “I’m always looking and learning, to develop my
eye and my own taste and style. Putting dissimilar
things together is part of this, and I’m
not afraid to seek advice.” DeWoody’s three
homes and her office are chock-a-block with
art. “I’m hoping I won’t find things that are
appealing,” she says. “I’m a hopeless art
addict, and it’s hard for me to resist fabulous
things I ‘have to have.’” Her well-known support
of young artists is compatible with her
role at the Whitney Museum of American
Art,whose Biennale showcases new and newnew
artists. She has been a trustee there since
1985. DeWoody spends time getting to know
these often unknown artists, visiting their
studios, observing their creative processes,
watching them change and grow, and introducing
them to dealers. “It’s important to
support young artists,” she says. “Just buying
a painting can change their life.”
CHARLES and VALERIE DIKER
NEW YORK CITY
AMERICAN INDIAN AND
CONTEMPORARY ART
After assembling a top-notch collection
of American and European Modern
and contemporary art by Joan Miró, Mark
Rothko, Louise Nevelson and the like,
Charles and Valerie Diker launched into the
markedly different field of American Indian
art—and art is how they esteem the quotidian
objects they’ve amassed. The couple
assembled hundreds of pieces—moccasins,
clothing, rattles, baskets, pottery and drawings—
that demonstrate the aesthetic similarities
among different North American
cultures and that are valued by the Dikers
for their inherent art, not their utilitarian
purposes. “These pieces were made anonymously
and stand on intrinsic merit,” says
Valerie. “The universality of form gives them
their beauty.” With confidence and a good
sense of design, the Dikers integrated the
American Indian objects with their sophisticated
paintings. “The geometric forms
complement each other, and we find that
they live together very happily,” she says of
the two collections. Last year, 200 highlights
of the American Indian collection were
exhibited in The Smithsonian National
Museum of the American Indian’s George
Gustav Heye Center. And in the fall, the
museum opened Lower Manhattan’s newest
art and performance space, The Diker Pavilion
for Native Arts and Cultures—6,000
square feet of additional public space. The
couple donated most of the funds for the
$5 million space.


email this article
print this article
digg this
del.icio.us
RSS