:Corning Museum of Glass officials are feeling as if they won the
lottery these days thanks to a hefty bequest of contemporary
studio glass valued at $9.5 million recently announced and that
will likely take place in stages over the next year.
American art collector Ben W. Heineman Sr and his wife Natalie
have long been discerning collectors of studio glass and have
assembled a remarkable collection over the last 30 years
featuring vessels and sculptures by such leading artists as
Howard Ben Tré, Dale Chihuly, Michael Glancy, David Huchthausen,
Stanislav Libensky, Klaus Moje, Joel Philip Myers and others.
After careful thought and considering several museums, the couple
announced that they would donate the collection to Corning,
making it the largest gift in the museum's history. The
collection of more than 200 works will be introduced to the
public in a special exhibition in the summer of 2009.
"Mr and Mrs Heineman have collected in depth, following important
artists over the course of their careers from the 1960s to
today," said Dr David Whitehouse, the museum's executive
director. "This collection of contemporary glass, which is of
extraordinarily high quality, will significantly augment the
museum's holdings. It includes what will be some of the finest
pieces in the permanent collection."
The museum, which opened in 1951, holds one of the largest and
most inclusive collections of modern and contemporary glass in
the world and was the first museum to showcase international
contemporary studio glass in the groundbreaking exhibition, "New
Glass: A Worldwide Survey," which toured the United States and
Japan from 1979 to 1982.
Red/amber sliced descending form, blown glass, cased, cut by
Harvey K. Littleton (American, b 1922), 1981-1984. The Corning
Museum of Glass, promised gift of the Ben W. Heineman Sr
Family.
Though the museum has a comprehensive collection, financial
and resources constraints would make it illogical and impossible
for a museum to buy a particular artist in any great depth, as the
Heinemans were able to do as private collectors.
Tina Oldknow, the museum's curator of modern glass, said the gift
fills in holes in the museum's current contemporary collection
and allows it to expand its representation of important works in
glass.
"We really deepened and broadened our collections in a way that
would have taken us years to do if we decided to go out and buy
them," she said, noting several of the artists included in the
Heineman collection have been working for more than 25 years. "It
enables us to have a wonderful representation of an artist's work
in depth."
The Heinemans had a discerning eye in selecting beautifully
executed pieces, she said, saying each piece is of the finest
quality and the collection features a great variation among the
artists' works. Pieces were chosen for their execution, their
rarity, the ambition of a work and in context to other works by
the artist.
Examples of the collection's breadth include nearly a dozen peach
blown cylinders created in the 1970s by Chihuly and a grouping of
hutform sculptures by Tom Patti.
"This kind of collecting would almost be irresponsible as a
museum curator but when you are able to see them together, it
changes your attitude toward the artist's work," Oldknow said.
"What [the Heinemans] have done is something I couldn't have done
and that needs to be done. It might not be right for other
museums but for us, it's just perfect."
Heineman, former chairman and CEO of Northwest Industries and
trustee emeritus of the museum, said he and his wife chose
Corning as the recipient of their collection, now housed in their
Chicago home, because of the museum's outstanding reputation, the
high caliber of its special exhibitions and permanent
collections, its educational programs and the international
audience it attracts.

#17, kiln-formed glass by Klaus Moje (German, b 1936), 1988.
The Corning Museum of Glass, promised gift of the Ben W.
Heineman Sr Family.
"After several years of investigation and thought, there is
no disposition that we would rather have made," he said. "Natalie
and I are both happy that our beloved collection will be in such
good hands. We have great confidence in the personnel of the museum
and in the presentation and care that the collection will receive."
Whitehouse said that what the Heinemans did in their collecting
matches what the Corning has tried to do in focusing on a number
of glass artists that were interesting or important although the
couple was able to collect in greater depth than the museum.
"You can put together a collection of contemporary art... and you
can amass some examples of very big names but that doesn't tell
you much about the artist and the spiritual journey of that big
name," he said. "But if you have 5, 10 works that represent the
20, 25 years of their development, then you have a really
wonderful document of that particular artist's journey."
The museum, which receives 300,000 visitors annually, will spend
the next year and half cataloging the collection, which is so
large it will be delivered in stages, and preparing to unveil it
to the public in 2009 in its newly renamed contemporary glass
gallery, The Ben W. Heineman Sr Family Gallery." A smaller named
gallery will present unprecedented solo exhibitions focusing on
individual artists' careers as represented in works drawn from
the museum's permanent collections. A fully illustrated catalog
will accompany the major exhibition.
For more information, visit www.cmog.org.