The Joys of
Buying Art with 'Other People's Money':
By Daniel Grant
Up to their eyebrows in artwork already, regularly building new
wings to accommodate it all, museums can't stop acquiring more.
"[T]here is no doubt that one of the principal joys of a museum
director is finding works of art to buy with Other People's
Money," John Walker, former director of the National Gallery of
Art in Washington, D.C., wrote in his memoirs. Clearly, there was
much joy in museum land last year, as museums throughout the
United States solicited donations, received bequests and
purchased artwork and other objects in large quantity.
"Acquisitions tend to come in waves," said Peter Marzio, director
of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the last five years have
been particularly productive for the museum in terms of
accessions. During that period, "one year has been better than
the last." If 2001 did not set a record for acquisitions for the
101 year-old institution, "it would certainly be in the top
five."
A number of these new accessions, including six major paintings
by Seventeenth Century Dutch artists, are already on view in the
museum's new extension, the Audrey Jones Beck building, which
opened in 2000 and houses European and American art, as well as a
cafe and bookstore.
New building frequently means new acquisitions to fill the
structure. The New York City-based Association of Art Museum
Directors recently completed a survey of 135 art museums in the
United States, finding that more than 100 were currently in the
processing of building new, or renovating older, spaces for
artwork. "Collections are growing, they need more space," said
Mimi Gaudieri, executive director of the association. "Attendance
is growing, they need more space. Programs are growing, they need
more space."
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston hasn't added any new space but
has been picking up, through purchases, more contemporary art,
which had dropped off almost entirely during the MFA's mid-1990s
restructuring, which saw the departure of contemporary curator
Trevor Fairbrother in 1996. His replacement, Cheryl Brutzen, who
was hired in 1998, has begun to make her mark and to reengage the
institution with the contemporary art world.
The museum's "Millennium Project," which aims to strengthen the
Twentieth Century and contemporary collections, made a number of
purchases in 2001, including German postwar artist Joseph Beuys'
"Untitled (Blackboard)", the English Op artist Bridget Riley's
"The Song of Orpheus 5," as well as works by Americans Robert
Mangold and Jim Dine. The cash to pay for these works came from a
$1 million endowment for the purchase of contemporary art given
in 2000 by Catherine and Paul Buttenweiser, who live in nearby
Cambridge.
Another of the museum's new projects, "RSVPmfa," which brings in
artists to create site-specific works based on their
interpretation of the institution's collections, led to the
purchase of two installations created by Boston native Jonathan
Borofsky, "Walking Man" and "I Dreamed I Could Fly."
If Boston is endeavoring to catch up to last third of the
Twentieth Century, the Guggenheim Museum in New York City is
vying to stay current with the present day. To this end, the
museum has made purchases of works by artists shown at the
institution, as well as pieces by artists who are chosen as
finalists for the Hugo Boss Award, which provides a cash grant to
emerging artists around the world. In addition, the Guggenheim
has made considerable gains within the past 10 years to develop
and strengthen its holdings in photography and film and video.
Two foundations have been helpful to the museum in this: The
Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation has provided substantial grants to
the museum for the purchase and presentation of photographs. On
the film and video side, the Bohen Foundation, which commissions
works by and otherwise supports media artists, gave the
Guggenheim last year a treasure trove of 245 works by 40 artists.
"We can now focus on these artists in depth, because we now have
some of the most essential works by these artists," said Lisa
Dennison, deputy director and chief curator. "This gift really
puts us on the map."
The overall slowdown in the US economy and the shock caused by
the September 11 terrorist attack on New York's World Trade
Center did not appear to lessen the enthusiasm of collectors to
make donations of objects or to contribute to museum purchase
funds.
"I sat in on meetings of our three acquisition groups" - the
Photography Committee, the Young Collectors' Council and the
International Directors' Council - "that took place in November,
two months after September 11, and no one didn't show up, and no
one said that we should hold off on buying what the museum
needed," Dennison said. "Everyone seemed pretty gung-ho."
Of course, there may be effects of the weakening economy down the
road, affecting overall giving to arts institutions and the
investment-based endowments that support museum purchases. Jim
Ballinger, director of the Phoenix Art Museum, noted that while
"our core giving is pretty much on beam, we've seen some
softening in corporate support. There have been a lot of mergers
and acquisitions around here, and some branch offices have
closed." The Phoenix Art Museum, however, is in the midst of
building a new wing to house modern and contemporary art of the
American West and recently hired a new curator in that area,
Brady Roberts, who is expected to begin a process of aggressively
seeking new works to buy.
Another institution that has had its eye on the recent and the
new is the Dallas Museum of Art, an encyclopedic collection,
which has a strong focus on modern and contemporary art, a result
of its merger in 1963 with the Dallas Museum for Contemporary
Arts and the fact that it plans to present complementary displays
to that of the Nasher Sculpture Center, which is located directly
across the street.
Among its acquisitions in 2001 are a 1955 collage by Willem de
Kooning, a 1996 abstract painting by Anselm Kiefer ("This Dark
Brightness Which Falls from the Stars") and a 1969-70
installation by Robert Smithson ("Mirrors and Shelly Sand"). A
little less encyclopedic than the Dallas Museum, the Wadsworth
Atheneum in Hartford, Conn. similarly has substantial collections
in a variety of areas, although modern and contemporary are its
strongest holdings.
In 2001, the museum acquired painter Rene Magritte's 1950 "The
Fickleness of the Heart," as well as Charles Dray's 1999-2000
human bone sculpture "Untitled (Tower)," Andreas Gursky's color
photograph "Tote Hosen" (2000) and a collection of drawings,
printed matter and sculptures by Sol Lewitt, entitled "Variations
of Incomplete Open Cubes" (1974-81). The Lewitts were donated by
the artist, who has given a significant number of his own works
and pieces by other artists whom he has collected over the years.
Modern and contemporary works on an international scale have also
been an interest of the Art Institute of Chicago, which is in the
process of physically expanding its museum - the new wing is
expected to open in 2005 or 2006 - and shifting around its
galleries in the main building. Among the pieces acquired by the
Art Institute's Department of Modern and Contemporary Art are a
1953 Ellsworth Kelly oil on canvas, "Red Yellow Blue White and
Black," which consists of seven joined panels, a 1996-99 Brice
Marden painting "Attendant 2," a 1955 oil still-life by Giorgio
Morandi, an untitled 2000 plaster, polystyrene and steel
sculpture by Rachel Whitehead and a 1984 iron sculpture entitled
"Staircase" by Juan Munoz.
Keeping up with the art of the present day is increasingly an
important job for almost every museum, although doing so has its
benefits and drawbacks. New art attracts new audiences, and new
art may also be far less expensive now than down the road after
it has passed the test of time. The present-day is unsettled in
terms of establishing merit and long-term value yet, according to
a spokesman for the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Washington, D.C., "more works are available. Older works by
established artists just don't come up as often and, of course,
they are often more expensive."
However, buying and exhibiting the new challenges the traditional
concept of what is expected of a museum, as opposed to an art
gallery or nonprofit art space. Certainly, the Museum of Modern
Art in New York City, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the
Guggenheim Museum, the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art,
the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and the Hirshhorn are all
heavily focused on contemporary art and their collecting reflects
an interest in the new and upcoming.
The Hirshhorn, for instance, purchased four older pieces -
Alexander Calder's 1962 steel "Sky Hooks," Joseph Cornell's 1931
collage "Untitled (Schooner)," an untitled and undated drawing by
Robert Gwathmey and an untitled 1935-38 oil on canvas by Clyfford
Still - and 16 that were completed within the past four years.
(Seven of the remaining eight works acquired in 2001 were created
in the 1980s or early 1990s.)
Among the newest objects are an untitled polyester and graphic on
canvas by Agnes Martin from 1998, a 2001 oil painting by Cecily
Brown entitled "Hoodlum," a 2001 William Christenberry sculpture
("Dream Building in Landscape"), a 2001 color photograph titled
"Waimea" by Dana Hoey, and a sculpture called "Untitled (Big
Man)" by Ron Mueck from 2000. Two other pieces that the Hirshhorn
acquired last year are installations, a 2001 piece entitled "New
Fungus Crop" by Roxy Paine and a 1998-2000 work called "Pollen
from Hazelnut" by Wolfgang Laib.
Also in the hunt for the new, LA MOCA purchased works in 2001 by
artists Paul McCarthy ("Tokyo Santa, Santa's Trees,"1999) and
Joel Shapiro ("Untitled," 1981), as well as William Kentridge
("Medicine Chest," 2001), Gabriel Orozco ("Toilet Ventilators,"
1997-2000) and Barry LeVa ("Separates," 1974). James Welling, the
subject of a mid-career survey at the museum last year, donated
37 photographs to the institution, and painter Mike Kelley also
made a gift of three pictures. Most of these pieces were created
within the past few years.
The Walker Art Center made a considerable number of its
acquisitions at New York City galleries, including Siah
Armajani's sculpture "Glass Room" (2000) from Senior &
Shopmaker Gallery, Rineke Dijkstra's film "The Buzz Club"
(1996-97) from Marian Goodman Gallery, David Hammons' video "Phat
Free" (1995-99) from Lawrence Rubin/Greenberg Van Doren Fine Art,
Paul McCarthy's color photographs "Documents" (1995-99) from
Luhring Augustine and an untitled Cindy Sherman color photograph
(2000) from Metro Pictures.
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art accessioned a wide range
of post-abstract expressionist artworks, including walls drawings
by Sol Lewitt and a 1959 enamel on canvas by Frank Stella from
his Black Paintings period entitled "Zambezi," as well as pieces
by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Gilbert & George, Philip Guston,
Edward Ruscha, Gerhard Richter and Andy Warhol.
In keeping with its interest in new media, the museum
commissioned a number of works for its current exhibition, "Art
in Technological Times" (on view through July 8), and these have
entered its permanent collection. They include works by Rebecca
Bollinger, Janet Cardiff, Rineke Dijkstra, Karin Sander, John
Weber and Sarah Sze.
The Museum of Modern Art was less focused on the up-to-the-minute
than some other institutions, acquiring a 1931 sculpture by
Alberto Giacometti ("Disagreeable Object"), a 1962 painting by
Roy Lichtenstein ("Tire"), a series of drawings from 1951 by
Ellsworth Kelly ("Line Form Color"), a series of linoleum cut
prints by Pablo Picasso from 1962 ("Jacqueline with Headband I,
II, and III") and two silkscreen prints by Andy Warhol ("Double
Elvis," 1963, and "Ten Foot Flowers," 1967).
On the more contemporary side, the museum also acquired a number
of prints by Alighiero e Boetti, Vija Celmins, William Kentridge,
Brice Marden, Kiki Smith and Richard Tuttle. At the Whitney
Museum of American Art, acquisitions ranged from the quite recent
to the brand new. Among some of the accession highlights are five
photographs by Nan Goldin (dating from 1983 to 1994), five
digitally animated DVDs with sound by Jeremy Blake (2000-1) and a
wall drawing from 1974 by Sol Lewitt.
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo. has also been
busy in the modern and contemporary market, following up on its
receipt in 2000 of 83 modern and contemporary artworks from the
Hall Family (as in Hallmark cards).
In 2001, the museum purchased a 1965 acrylic by Bridget Riley
("Arrest 2"), a 1983 sculpture by Anish Kapoor ("Six Secret
Places"), a 1963 mixed media work by Marcel Duchamp ("Box in a
Valise"), a 1984 acrylic by Robert Mangold ("Four Color Frame
Painting #4") and a 1968 steel sculpture by George Rickey ("Two
Planes Vertical-Horizontal").
All but the Rickey were acquired through funds provided by
William T. Kemper Foundation--Commerce Bank, Trustee. The
museum's largest gift in 2001 was not traditional fine art at all
but 178 pieces of Native American art and artifacts, donated by
longtime Kansas City resident Donald D. Jones. At the end of last
year, the museum hired Gaylord Torrence as its new curator of
American Indian art.
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, N.Y., made the new its
focus of attention. A number of works acquired by Albright-Knox
were created in the past year or two, such as Ellen Gallagher's
oil "Bubbel" (2001), David Hammons sculptural "Basketball
Drawing" (2001), Robert Longo's untitled drawing (2000), Fred
Tomaselli's mixed media "Echo, Wow and Flutter" (2000) and Lorna
Simpson's photographic "Untitled (Take a Giant Step)"
(1999-2001). These purchases reflect the degree to which the
institution has been haunting Manhattan's galleries. The
September 11 attack did not affect Albright-Knox's acquisitions
budget so much as "slowed down the acquisition process," because
"we spent less time in New York City looking at art," according
to a spokeswoman.
Most of the objects that museums acquire are donations, often the
result of solicitations and entreaties taking place over a period
of years. At times, however, the gifts come in a rush: The San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art acquired 994 artworks in 2001, 371
of which were year-end gifts - perhaps, the result of tax
considerations on the part of the donors.
A variety of factors determine the degree to which museums enter
the market to buy pieces themselves, including the size of their
endowments, the willingness of trustees and friends of the
institutions to provide the financing for these purchases, and
how determined curators and directors are to chart their own
course rather than solicit gifts.
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) bought 290 works and
received 543 as gifts in 2001 which, at 35 percent purchases, is
still relatively high for museums. Perhaps more customary is the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston which bought only six percent of the
more than 1,100 objects acquired last year, or the Dallas Museum
of Art, which purchased 11 percent of the 779 objects acquired in
2001.
The percentage of purchases to gifts at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art is between that of the Dallas Museum and LACMA, as it
bought roughly 25 percent of the 800 objects that entered its
collection in 2001. Some institutions, however, move more
aggressively into the market, purchasing works that they
specifically want. Of the 218 works acquired in 2001 by the
Walker Art Center, 111 of them, or just a little more than half,
were purchases, while the rest were gifts. The even better
endowed Getty Museum in Los Angeles made 350 purchases against
only 236 gifts of objects.
Encyclopedic museums - those collecting a wide range of new and
older Western and non-Western artworks and objects - are the most
expensive to run and usually have the largest wish list of
objects to obtain. "We have 11 very active departments here,"
said Nancy Thomas, deputy director for curatorial affairs at the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, "and our acquisitions have been
aggressive across the board." Still, institutions have their
priorities.
For instance, LACMA purchased a sizeable collections of Korean
art two years ago and has been working to supplement it ever
since; similarly, the museum has long been strong in
pre-Columbian Mexican art but has been seeking other
pre-Columbian material "elsewhere in Central and South America.
We're also looking to add to our collection of colonial art to
the present in Central and South America."
Some acquisitions are simply not planned and depend upon an
object's "opportunistic appearance on the market," Thomas said.
One such purchase is a 1734-45 oil painting by French artist
Charles-Joseph Natoire entitled "Proserpine Giving Psyche the
Water of Beauty," which a curator discovered was on sale, "and we
jumped." Jumping, however, is not a word often used to describe
the way in which museums make their purchases. Traditionally, the
process of seeking and obtaining approval to buy an object is
long and cumbersome, involving research, presentations to
department heads, the institution's director and the trustees.
The funding for a purchase must then be arranged, all of which
takes perhaps more time than the seller can spare. Some museums
have attempted to streamline the process, including the Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston, which has been "encouraging curators to make
quick purchases," according to Katie Getchell, deputy director of
curatorial administration. "We hope to be more active at
auction."
The J. Paul Getty Museum is always a major player in the market
for European artwork, starting in antiquity and going up to the
start of the Twentieth Century. Along with an ancient Roman
statuette of a bull, dating back between 100 BC and 75 AD, its
notable purchases in 2001 included paintings by Peter Paul Rubens
and Jan Brueghel the Elder ("The Return from War: Mars Disarmed
by Venus," about 1614), Claude Monet ("The Portal of Rouen
Cathedral in Morning Light," 1894), Edgar Degas ("After the
Bath," 1895) and Eugene Delacroix ("Moroccan Horsemen Crossing a
Ford," 1850), as well as a drawing by Vincent van Gogh ("Arles:
View from the Wheatfields," 1888).
Spending by the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Tex. made news
in 2001, but not so much for its acquisitions. It was reported
that the institution made payments of more than $2.5 million to
certain board members. Membership on a museum board is usually a
volunteer post, and a recently revamped code of conduct by the
American Association of Museums - to whom the Kimbell does not
belong - opposes payments to board members and recommends that
institutions avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest.
The museum also directed some money towards the purchase of
artworks, including two Chinese Tang Dynasty (618-907 AD) ceramic
figurines. One shows a court lady and the other an earth spirit.