100 Top Collectors Who Are Making a Difference
March 2007
NEW YORK CITY
CONTEMPORARY ART
Leonard Riggio, founder and chairman of the Barnes & Noble chain, was the guiding hand and fount of resources at the Dia Art Foundation, one of the country’s most contemporary of contemporary museums, until 2006, when he stepped down after nearly 10 years. Under his leadership, Dia made the gutsy move from modest though trail-blazing quarters in New York’s Chelsea to a cavernous space in the formerly sleepy hamlet of Beacon, New York. It’s certain that Riggio’s name will long be connected to the institution: the new Dia galleries are called Dia:Beacon, Riggio Galleries, in honor of the more than $30 million he has given the museum. For himself, Riggio continues to collect what he refers to as “the art of the Dia generation”— from Abstract Expressionism to art of the moment, and his Long Island home boasts a garden full of Noguchi sculptures. Riggio says that at the moment he has no plans to involve himself with other arts institutions: “It was a wonderful, exciting 10 years, very intense and time-consuming. Right now I’m happy to just relax a bit—and probably I’m overdue to study a little more art.” But, he adds, “My biggest passion is public art, and I’m always open to any ideas.”
ELIZABETH SACKLER
NEW YORK CITY
JUDY CHICAGO WORKS
Having grown up in a family of renowned
collectors and benefactors—there are
Sackler museums, galleries and wings at Harvard,
the Metropolitan, the Smithsonian—
Elizabeth Sackler continues the tradition,
serving as CEO of the Arthur M. Sackler
Foundation, which was founded by her
father in 1965 to collect, study and loan
Asian artworks. But perhaps more self-defining
is her role as founder of the American
Indian Ritual Object Repatriation Foundation,
which works to return ceremonial
pieces to the Indian nations and has so far
returned more than 30 objects. A leading
collector of art that is concerned with
women’s role in society and history, Sackler
has the definitive collection of works by Judy
Chicago. Her Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation
recently gave “The Dinner Party,”
Chicago’s iconoclastic 48-foot-long installation,
to the Brooklyn Museum, where
Sackler is a trustee. The Chicago work
anchors a new wing, the Elizabeth A. Sackler
Center for Feminist Art, whose opening
exhibition, “Global Feminism,” begins this
month. “‘The Dinner Party’ is a launching
pad to teach all of us about the important
women in history,” she says. “We stand on
the shoulders of our foremothers.”
MARVIN and
RUTH SACKNER
MIAMI
LANGUAGE AS ART
Marvin and Ruth Sackner founded the
Sackner Archive of Concrete and
Visual Poetry in Miami in 1979. Forget the
recondite name, and think of text whose
appearance is both part of the creative
process and critical to the viewer’s experience—
language as art. The Sackners have
assembled what must be a record-setting
accumulation of rare books, manuscripts,
prints, drawings, collages, ephemera, ceramics—
any object that attracts them that utilizes
words. “I get to define the collection,”
Marvin says. “If it appeals to us, we acquire
it.” The result is everything from valuable
artists’ books to a set of Rosenthal china
vases bearing poems. Or a rubber stamp
with a poem on it by jwcurry [John Curry]
that Sackner paid 1 cent for (he did decide
to buy 400 of them, though). This vast and
unique accumulation of more than 65,000
items resides in the Sackner home and can
be seen only by invitation, but you can view
the collection at www.rediscov.com
sacknerarchives. See if you can find that
penny stamp.
VICTORIA P. and
ROGER SANT
WASHINGTON, D.C.
NABI PAINTERS
Victoria Sant plays a considerable and
very visible role in two of Washington’s
foremost arts institutions. She is the
current president of the board of trustees of
the National Gallery of Art where, with a
nod to their personal collecting tastes, she
and her husband, Roger, have established an
acquisition fund for 19th-century paintings.
The Sants also are long-standing patrons of
the Phillips Collection, where Victoria has
served as president and is now honorary
chair. The couple spearheaded the museum’s
fund-raising campaign with a challenge gift
of $9 million given between 2001 and 2005,
and in 2006 the Phillips opened the Sant
Building, which effectively doubles the size
of the museum—and recognizes the enormous
contributions made by the Sants. The
couple’s personal art collection focuses on
the French Nabi painters of the late 19th century—
Vuillard, Bonnard and Denis.
DONNA SCHNEIER
NEW YORK CITY
CONTEMPORARY ART JEWELRY
When I realized that fine art was being
done in ceramics—when I looked at
Peter Voulkos’s Abstract Expressionist
work—I had an ‘Aha!’ moment,” says
Donna Schneier, a long-time dealer in the
secondary market for post–World War II
ceramics, glass, fiber, metal and wood (she
emphatically does not use the word “crafts”).
Then, faced with “a passion to collect and
an unwillingness to argue with clients over
who gets a particular piece,” she hit upon a
different segment of this field, contemporary
jewelry by artists—art to wear—as an area
in which she could happily collect. “My criterion
is that the artist has to conceive of it,
design it and make it,” she says. Schneier
assembled a personal collection of jewelry
made of non-precious, alternative materials,
such as aluminum and stainless steel, which
she gave to the Museum of Arts & Design.
In 2002 the museum exhibited 80 pieces in
“Zero Karat: The Donna Schneier Gift to
the Museum of Arts & Design” (which traveled
to the Tacoma Art Museum in 2004),
and honored her with one of the its annual
“Visionary!” awards. On the occasion of the
exhibition, Holly Hotchner, the museum’s
director, said, “Donna is one of those rare
collectors whose prescience and connoisseurship
crucially influence the directions in
which jewelry develops.”
WALTER C. SEDGWICK
WOODSIDE, CALIF.
EARLY CHINESE CERAMICS
For a decade Walter C. Sedgwick assembled
“what is unquestionably the
largest, finest and most comprehensive
museum collection of early Chinese ceramics
in the West, and one of the best in the
world,” says Robert D. Mowry, curator of
Chinese art (and head of the department of
Asian art) at Harvard’s Arthur M. Sackler
Museum. “The works are exceptional in
their beauty, historical significance and cultural
value.” Through The Walter C. Sedgwick
Foundation, Sedgwick purchased
works expressly to strengthen Harvard’s
holdings and then enabled the museum to
acquire that collection as well as works from
his personal holdings of early Asian art. “At
Harvard, a catalog of medieval Japanese
manuscripts particularly inspired me, the
idea that some collector’s scholarship could
teach me about that period,” he says. “My
hope is to be able to inspire someone else.”
The Sedgwick collection at Harvard comprises
more than 300 Chinese works dating
from 6000 B.C. through the Tang dynasty
(618–907 A.D.) and three rare and early
Japanese Buddhist sculptures.
MELVIN R. SEIDEN
NEW YORK CITY AND CONN.
OLD MASTER DRAWINGS,
THEATRICAL MEMORABILIA
Wide-ranging seems an apt description
for Melvin Seiden’s interests.
He collects Old Master drawings and for
more than 25 years has been an active supporter
and fund-raiser for The Frick Collection
in New York, where he has served
as a trustee since 2000. Seiden has given
to Harvard 17th-, 18th- and 19th-century
European paintings and drawings, and Italian
Renaissance drawings, and is considered
a leading benefactor of the drawings
department. He co-chaired the Harvard
University Art Museums’ capital campaign,
is chairman emeritus of the Villa I Tatti
Council, Harvard’s Center for Italian
Renaissance Studies in Florence, Italy, and
also is a Life Fellow of the Morgan Library.
In a lighter vein, Seiden collected works by
artist/caricaturist Al Hirschfeld (whose artwork
appeared weekly in the Sunday New
York Times), and then gave more than 100
original drawings and 150 prints by the
artist to the Harvard Theatre Collection,
creating in a swoop the largest public collection
of Hirschfeld’s work in the world.
He also has an extensive collection of original
drawings for New Yorker cartoons,
which were exhibited at the Bruce
Museum of Arts and Science in Greenwich,
Connecticut.


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