:Pioneering folk art collectors Ellin and Baron Gordon have
donated an unparalleled collection of Twentieth and Twenty-First
Century, self-taught American folk art to Old Dominion
University.
The largest art donation ever received by the university, the
collection comprises 300 pieces, including paintings, sculptures,
jugs, canes and carvings. The impressive assemblage will be the
centerpiece of the new Old Dominion University Gallery, which is
currently under construction in the University Village. The
gallery and the Baron and Ellin Gordon collection of contemporary
self-taught art are expected to be open to the public in spring
2007.
"Thanks to the generosity and vision of Ellin and Baron Gordon,
Old Dominion University students and staff and the Hampton Roads
community will have the opportunity to learn from and enjoy this
unique and diverse genre of art," said President Roseann Runte.
When the Gordons began collecting American folk art as a young
couple in the 1960s, it was for the love of the art, the
wonderful relationships they built with the artists and the
stories each piece told. It is a passion that has enriched their
lives for nearly five decades.
"We buy what we like," explained Baron Gordon, a member of the
New York Stock Exchange. "I don't buy art for investment. I don't
buy it to turn it over."
While the pair always shared a love of art, their interest in
collecting American folk art began simply enough on a drive
through Maine. They spotted a variety of Nineteenth Century
decorated stoneware on a lawn, and within an hour they had
purchased their first pieces.
The Gordons have been collecting Twentieth and Twenty-First
Century self-taught American art since the mid-1980s.
"We feel it is a natural continuation of the Nineteenth Century
folk art tradition and it has the added attraction of the
opportunity to meet many of the artists," Ellin Gordon said. "The
art has great emotional appeal for us and it is strong and
unpretentious."
One piece led to another and soon the Gordons were making special
trips around the country to see the artists firsthand in their
environments.
These visits often resulted in friendships, which in turn
enhanced their collection.
Artist Tim Lewis is one such example. Lewis found an unusually
long piece of stone that made him think immediately of the
Gordons. He called and said he wanted to create something special
for them. What he sculpted, at their request, was a unique
rendering of Abraham Lincoln, complete with topcoat and tall hat,
which now greets visitors in the foyer of their Williamsburg
home.
"Getting to know a lot of people - artists, collectors, dealers
and museum professionals - has been a wonderful experience for
us," Ellin Gordon said.
The pieces they collect are all by self-taught artists who come
from diverse backgrounds. Many are elderly. Several have been in
and out of prison. Some are mentally disabled. One was a coal
miner. Another is a street preacher.
"Self-taught artists seldom think of themselves as 'artists' and
even after success, many are still surprised that their work has
received recognition as 'art,'" Ellin Gordon said.
Parts of the Gordons' collection, which contains about 1,000
pieces by more than 150 artists displayed dynamically on
virtually every surface in their home, have been loaned over the
years to such prestigious institutions as the Museum of American
Folk Art in New York, American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore
and High Museum of Art in Atlanta. The Gordons have also donated
pieces to the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
While neither is a graduate of Old Dominion, Baron Gordon, who
grew up in Norfolk, and his wife agreed that the university would
be a great home for this collection. When President Runte
approached them and offered the new University Gallery as a
backdrop and the opportunity for the collection to be used as
part of the art department's curriculum, they were delighted.
Since then, Ellin Gordon has worked with University Gallery
director Katherine Huntoon to choose which pieces will go in the
new space on campus. The task has been difficult because, as
Ellin Gordon noted, "There is a story about all of them."
And that may be the most valuable aspect of the Gordons' gift;
this scholarly collection of folk art is in many respects the
story of America.
The Old Dominion University Gallery is at 350 West 21st Street.
For information, 757-683-3685 or www.odu.edu.