Arne Glimcher | |
---|---|
Born | Duluth, Minnesota, U.S. | March 2, 1938
Education | Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Boston University |
Occupation(s) | Art dealer, film director, film producer |
Spouse | Milly Cooper |
Children | 2, Paul Glimcher, Marc Glimcher |
Arnold "Arne" Glimcher (born March 2, 1938) is an American art dealer, gallerist, film producer, and film director. He is the founder of Pace Gallery, [1] which by 2011 sold more than $400 million in art annually. [2] He is the father of Marc Glimcher, who succeeded him as chairman of Pace, and American scientist Paul Glimcher. From 2013 to 2017, Arne and Marc Glimcher were included each year in the ArtReview annual list of the 100 most influential people in contemporary art. [3]
Arne Glimcher also produced and directed several films, including The Mambo Kings (1990) and Just Cause (1995).
Glimcher was born on March 12, 1938, in Duluth, Minnesota, and raised in Boston. [4] His father was a cattle rancher who owned a ranch in Minnesota. [4] Arne was the youngest of four and was interested in art from an early age, which he developed by taking Saturday classes at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. [4] [2]
He later graduated from Massachusetts College of Art and Design and pursued an MFA at Boston University, where he took classes with sculptor Harold Tovish. Dissatisfied with the quality of his own art, Glimcher decided to pursue art history, hoping someday to be the director of the Museum of Modern Art. [4]
In 1960, at age 21, Glimcher founded Pace Gallery in Boston. [5] He named the gallery after his father, who had recently died. [5] In the Pace's first year, Glimcher primarily showed the work of professors from his MFA program--including Lawrence Kupferman, David Berger, and Albert Alcalay--and the gallery lost money. [4] [6] Its first success was a show by sculptor Louise Nevelson. [4] [6]
In 1963, Glimcher opened a second location for the gallery in New York City. Unable to compete at first with the established dealers of Pop Art, Glimcher initially represented Western sculptors such as James Turrell and Robert Irwin. [5] He moved himself and his family to New York in 1965, closing the Boston location. [6] Glimcher began a publishing division of the company, Pace Editions, in 1968. [6]
In New York, Glimcher became friends with the painter Mark Rothko, who lived nearby. After the artist's death, his heirs and executors fought a decade-long legal battle known as the Rothko case with his former gallery, Marlborough Fine Art. At the case's conclusion, Rothko's heirs chose Glimcher as the new dealer for the estate. [5]
In 1980, Glimcher sold Jasper Johns's Three Flags to the Whitney Museum of American Art for $1 million, the first time a work by a living artist had ever commanded seven figures. [7] Glimcher also represented his former MassArt classmate Brice Marden before Marden moved to another dealer, Mary Boone. [5] Glimcher's son Marc, who would later succeed Arne as the chairman, joined the Pace Gallery in 1985. [6] The company bought a new large space in SoHo in 1990. [6]
The Pace Gallery merged with another gallery, Wildenstein & Company, in 1993, combining Pace's emphasis on contemporary art with Wildenstein's emphasis on Old Master and impressionist paintings. The merged gallery was titled PaceWildenstein. However, as collecting became more specialized, the concept of "one-stop shopping" for high-end art buyers became less sustainable. The two galleries separated back to their original names in 2010. Glimcher and Wildenstein both stated that the split was "amicable". [8]
The Pace Gallery has represented contemporary artists including Julian Schnabel, [9] Tara Donovan, [10] David Hockney, [8] Maya Lin [11] and Kiki Smith. [12] As of 2010, Pace also represented the estates of artists including Rothko, Willem de Kooning, Agnes Martin, Jean Dubuffet, Zhang Xiaogang, Robert Ryman, and Chuck Close. [2] During Glimcher's career, he has worked with artists including Jean Dubuffet, [6] Robert Rauschenberg, [13] Louise Nevelson, [14] and Lucas Samaras. [14]
In 2022, at age 83, Glimcher opened an exhibition space in TriBeCa called Gallery 125 Newbury, named for the Pace Gallery's original address. [14] It opened with a show featuring the work of Smith, Samaras, Alex Da Corte, Robert Gober, and Zhang Huan. [5]
Glimcher made his feature-film debut in a small role as an art dealer in Robert Benton's 1982 film Still of the Night . [15] He later served as an associate producer on Ivan Reitman's 1986 film art-theft comedy Legal Eagles , for which the writers consulted him to add verisimilitude to the script; [5] he also choreographed Daryl Hannah's performance scene in the film. [15] Glimcher further developed a close friendship with Hollywood power broker Michael Ovitz, one of his regular clients. [15] He went on to produce Gorillas in the Mist , and The Good Mother , both released in 1988. [15]
Determined to direct a film himself, Glimcher began buying the rights to novels to option to studios. [5] After a tip from a friend, he read and bought the rights to Oscar Hijuelos's novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love before its publication. After the novel won the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, Glimcher began to shop it around to studios, eventually winning the backing of Universal Pictures chairman Tom Pollock for a low-budget film. [15] It became Glimcher's directorial debut in 1992 under the shortened title The Mambo Kings [5] [16] and received mostly positive reviews. [17] [18] Glimcher received an Academy Award Best Original Song nomination for the film's original song, [5] Beautiful Maria of My Soul , [19] which was also nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song. [20]
Glimcher later directed the 1995 film Just Cause , an adaptation of a John Katzenbach novel with Sean Connery and Laurence Fishburne in the lead roles. The film received mostly negative reviews, with a "Rotten" 26% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 31 reviews. [21] In 1999, Glimcher directed The White River Kid which featured an ensemble cast, including Antonio Banderas from The Mambo Kings. [5] [22]
In 2008, following encouragement from director Martin Scorsese, Glimcher produced and directed the documentary film Picasso and Braque Go to the Movies. It explores the connection between early Cubist work by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque and the birth of motion pictures in Paris by directors such as Auguste and Louis Lumière. [23]
Glimcher is married to Milly Cooper. [24] They maintain residences in New York's Upper East Side and East Hampton, where their holiday home was designed by Ulrich Franzen in 1983. [7]
Jasper Johns is an American painter, sculptor, draftsman, and printmaker. Considered a central figure in the development of American postwar art, he has been variously associated with abstract expressionism, Neo-Dada, and pop art movements.
Mark Rothko, was an American abstract painter. He is best known for his color field paintings that depicted irregular and painterly rectangular regions of color, which he produced from 1949 to 1970. Although Rothko did not personally subscribe to any one school, he is associated with the American abstract expressionism movement of modern art.
Milton Ernest "Robert" Rauschenberg was an American painter and graphic artist whose early works anticipated the Pop art movement. Rauschenberg is well known for his Combines (1954–1964), a group of artworks which incorporated everyday objects as art materials and which blurred the distinctions between painting and sculpture. Rauschenberg was primarily a painter and a sculptor, but he also worked with photography, printmaking, papermaking and performance.
The Mambo Kings is a 1992 musical drama film based on the 1989 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love by Oscar Hijuelos. The film was directed and produced by Arne Glimcher, and stars Armand Assante, Antonio Banderas, Cathy Moriarty and Maruschka Detmers. Set in the early 1950s, the story follows Cesar (Assante) and Nestor Castillo (Banderas), brothers and aspiring musicians who find success and stardom after fleeing from Havana, Cuba to New York City to escape danger. The film marks Glimcher's directing debut, and features Banderas in his first English-language role.
Daniel Leopold Wildenstein was a French art dealer, historian and owner-breeder of thoroughbred and standardbred race horses. He was the third member of the family to preside over Wildenstein & Co., one of the most successful and influential art-dealerships of the 20th century. He was once described as "probably the richest and most powerful art dealer on earth."
Just Cause is a 1995 American crime thriller film directed by Arne Glimcher and starring Sean Connery and Laurence Fishburne. It is based on John Katzenbach's novel of the same name.
Leo Castelli was an Italian-American art dealer who originated the contemporary art gallery system. His gallery showcased contemporary art for five decades. Among the movements which Castelli showed were Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Neo-Dada, Pop Art, Op Art, Color field painting, Hard-edge painting, Lyrical Abstraction, Minimal Art, Conceptual Art, and Neo-expressionism.
Betty Parsons was an American artist, art dealer, and collector known for her early promotion of Abstract Expressionism. She is regarded as one of the most influential and dynamic figures of the American avant-garde.
Robert Whitman was an American artist best known for his seminal theater pieces of the early 1960s combining visual and sound images, actors, film, slides, and evocative props in environments of his own making. From the late 1960s on he worked with new technologies, and his latest work incorporated cellphones.
Ileana Sonnabend was a Romanian-American art dealer of 20th-century art. The Sonnabend Gallery opened in Paris in 1962 and was instrumental in making American art of the 1960s known in Europe, with an emphasis on American pop art. In 1970, Sonnabend Gallery opened in New York on Madison Avenue, and in 1971 relocated to 420 West Broadway in SoHo where it was one of the major protagonists that made SoHo the international art center it remained until the early 1990s. The gallery was instrumental in making European art of the 1970s known in America, with an emphasis on European conceptual art and Arte Povera. It also presented American conceptual and minimal art of the 1970s. In 1986, the so-called "Neo-Geo" show introduced, among others, the artist Jeff Koons. In the late 1990s, the gallery moved to Chelsea and continues to be active after Sonnabend's death. The gallery goes on showing the work of artists who rose to prominence in the 1960s and 1970s including Robert Morris, Bernd and Hilla Becher and Gilbert & George as well as more recent artists including Jeff Koons, Rona Pondick, Candida Höfer, Elger Esser, and Clifford Ross.
Michael Beahan Shnayerson is an American journalist and contributing editor for Vanity Fair magazine. He is the author of several books and over 75 Vanity Fair stories since 1986. Two of his pieces for the magazine have been developed into films.
The Ferus Gallery was a contemporary art gallery which operated from 1957 to 1966. In 1957, the gallery was located at 736-A North La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles in the U.S. state of California. In 1958, it was relocated across the street to 723 North La Cienega Boulevard where it remained until its closing in 1966.
The Pace Gallery is an American contemporary and modern art gallery with 9 locations worldwide. It was founded in Boston by Arne Glimcher in 1960. His son, Marc Glimcher, is now president and CEO. Pace Gallery operates in New York, London, Hong Kong, Los Angeles, Geneva, Seoul, East Hampton, and Palm Beach.
Robert Scull was an American art collector, best known for his "world-famous collection of Pop and Minimal art". Born in New York to Russian immigrant parents, Scull dropped out of high school and had various jobs until his wife inherited a share of a taxi business. When this thrived, the couple started buying abstract art and later pop art.
Robert E. Mnuchin is an American art dealer and former banker. After a 33-year career with Goldman Sachs, he retired to fund the Mnuchin Gallery in New York City.
Marc Glimcher is an American art dealer who is the President and CEO of Pace Gallery, a modern and contemporary art gallery founded by his father, Arne Glimcher, in Boston in 1960. He and his father were cited among the top 100 most powerful people in the international art world, according to the annual "Power 100" list published by ArtReview. In 2012, Glimcher sold a Gerhard Richter painting for more than $20 million at Art Basel in Basel, Switzerland.
The Field Next to the Other Road is a 1981 painting created by American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1981. It sold for $37.1 million at Christie's in May 2015.
Wildenstein & Company, a private art dealership, was founded in Paris by Nathan Wildenstein in the mid-19th century and run by his family ever since. The Wildenstein Institute, established by Nathan's son Georges, maintains one of the largest art history reference libraries in the world.
Arne Glimcher, chairman of PaceWildenstein, the Manhattan gallery that represents Mr. Rauschenberg.