Beth Rudin DeWoody | |
---|---|
Born | 1952 (age 71–72) |
Nationality | American |
Education | University of California, Santa Barbara (BA) |
Occupation(s) | Arts patron and philanthropist |
Spouse(s) | James DeWoody (divorced) Stephen Bosniak (engaged, died 2007) Firooz Zahedi |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Gladyce Largever Rudin Lewis Rudin |
Relatives | Jack Rudin (uncle) Samuel Rudin (grandfather) |
Beth Rudin DeWoody (born 1952) is an American art patron, collector, curator, and philanthropist. [1] [2] [3]
DeWoody was born to a Jewish family which controls a $5.1 billion real estate empire. [4] She is the daughter of Gladyce (née Largever) [5] [6] and Lewis Rudin. [7] [8] She has one brother, William Rudin. [7] [9] Her parents later divorced and remarried: her father to Wilhelmina model Basha Szymanska, [10] and then Rachel (Weingarten) Rudin; and her mother to film executive David Begelman. [11]
DeWoody's interest in art started as child where she attended the Rudolf Steiner School after which she went on to earn a B.A. in anthropology and cinema studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara. [2] She then worked as a production assistant on such movies as Hair (film) and Annie Hall. [2] After marrying artist James DeWoody, she began to get deeply involved in the SoHo art scene where she began to nurture young contemporary artists such as E.V. Day and Tom Sachs. [1] In 1982, she went to work for Rudin Management Company, owned by her father, where she rose to the rank of vice president. [12] At the same time, she grew her art collection and sponsored new artists [13] and served as a curator of exhibitions. [14]
In 2001 comedian Ruby Wax portrayed a satirical menopausal maniac based on DeWoody in the BBC television comedy Absolutely Fabulous, season 4, episode 6. [15]
DeWoody serves as President of the Rudin Family Foundation, [2] and sits on the boards of the Whitney Museum of American Art since the mid-1980s, [1] Brooklyn Academy of Music, Creative Time, The New School University, Design Museum Holon in Israel, New Yorkers for Children, New York City Police Foundation, the Photography Steering Committee at the Norton Museum of Art located in West Palm Beach, Florida and the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles. [2]
DeWoody has been married twice. Her first husband was artist James DeWoody [16] with whom she had two children: Kyle DeWoody (cofounder of Grey Area which markets artist-made wares) [17] and artist and designer, Carlton. She was the fiancée to world renowned oculoplastic surgeon Stephen Bosniak, who died suddenly in 2007 of a leukemic crisis. [18] In 2012, she remarried to photographer Firooz Zahedi. [19] She has homes in West Palm Beach, Manhattan, [20] the Hamptons, [21] Los Angeles [21] and Montecito, California. [21]
The Bunker Artspace, [22] located in West Palm Beach, Florida, showcases contemporary art created by well-known and emerging artists currently in the DeWoody collection. Over 10,000 pieces are currently in the collection. Tom Sachs, [23] Kehinde Wiley, [24] Phillip Estland, [25] Laura Dvorkin, John Waters, [26] and Maynard Monrow [27] are a few artists whose works DeWoody collects and displays at the Bunker.
David Begelman was an American film producer, film executive and talent agent who was involved in a studio embezzlement scandal in the 1970s.
Henry Plumer McIlhenny was an American connoisseur of art and antiques, world traveler, socialite, philanthropist, curator, and chairman of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
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The Norton Museum of Art is an art museum in West Palm Beach, Florida. The museum has a collection that includes over 8,200 works, with a concentration in European, American, and Chinese art as well as in contemporary art and photography. In 2003, it overtook the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, in Sarasota, to become the largest museum in Florida.
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James DeWoody is an American painter, printmaker, and sculptor who has worked in New York City since 1972. He was born in Ft. Smith, Arkansas, but grew up in Texarkana, Texas. He received his BA degree in English and Studio Art from Tulane University in 1967. DeWoody received his MFA degree from Pratt Institute in 1975 in painting, new forms, and art history, studying under George McNeil.
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Lewis Rudin was an American real estate investor and developer. Along with his older brother Jack Rudin, he presided over a family empire of 40 buildings valued at $2 billion including more than 3,500 apartments in 22 buildings in New York City. Rudin was a founder of NADAP, a private nonprofit social services organization that serves residents in need of the New York City metropolitan area. Rudin also contributed to efforts to rescue New York City from imminent bankruptcy during the 1975 New York City fiscal crisis.
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Kyle DeWoody is an American gallery owner and curator. She is the cofounder of Grey Area, which operates "at the intersection of art and design", an organization which promotes art exhibitions as well as the sale of art. She is the daughter of philanthropist and arts patron, Beth Rudin DeWoody, and the painter, James DeWoody. She earned a degree in art history from Washington University in St. Louis in 2007, and subsequently worked in film production, costume design, and at the Whitney Museum of American Art. DeWoody has curated a group exhibition, "Post-Psychedelic Dreams", in East Hampton. She lives in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.
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