As much as we'd like to think so; as much as
we'd like others to think so; art is not just about artists. Art is also about
collectors. Without them, artists would quickly run out of room to create, not
to mention the will and the wherewithal. The truth is, there are far more
collectors of art than creators of it...thanks be to God. And insofar as history
is concerned, most of them are about as anonymous as the artists they collect.
In terms of numbers, I suppose there are about as many famous collectors as
famous artists, which perhaps would explain why there are so few famous artists.
Some, the legends of art collecting, I've written about...the Guggenheims, the
Vanderbilts, the Rockefellers, the Fricks, Marjorie Merriweather Post, Isabella
Gardner, the Cone sisters, Paul Durand-Ruel, and most recently, Gustave
Caillebotte, an artist himself. However, one of the biggest, and perhaps the
richest, was not your typical Rockefeller or Guggenheim.
One of THREE Gutenberg Bibles on display at the J.P. Morgan Library |
His name was John Pierpont Morgan. He was born in 1837 to an already wealthy
financier and his wife. His father was Junius Spencer Morgan. J. Pierpont came
of age in the business world shortly after the Civil War, working as an
accountant in a New York banking firm. Ten years later, he joined his father's
firm as a full partner in Drexel, Morgan and Company. When his father died in
1890, Morgan reorganized the business as J.P. Morgan and Company (later Morgan
Guaranty Trust, now JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A.). He was instrumental in the founding of U.S. Steel, General
Electric, Equitable Life Insurance, and International Harvester. He owned banks,
several insurance companies, 5,000 miles of railroad, mining and manufacturing
concerns; and in 1895, he single-handedly raised $25 million in fifteen minutes
to keep the US Government afloat and stabilize the currency, thus avoiding a
major financial collapse. (The syndicate he formed eventually loaned the
government a total of $62 million in gold--a kind of reverse bailout.)
The J.P. Morgan mansion on Madison Ave. and 36th Street in New York, torn down to make room for the library's first annex, 1924. |
Morgan was first and foremost a businessman; and a far cry from the "culture
vulture" art collector we might normally associate with those of his ilk. With the death of his father, Morgan suddenly had more money
than he could ever hope to spend and already owned every creature comfort he
might ever want or need. He lived rather modestly (for a multi-millionaire) in a
New York City brownstone (left). His collecting urge started not with art but ancient books
and manuscripts, eventually to include prints and drawings and a few paintings,
but it was primarily history he collected in any case, and in whatever form. He
owned a Gutenberg Bible (above right), Henry David Thoreau's journal, art from Babylon,
Mozart's Symphony in D Major, a Book of Hours of Catherine of Cleves, as well as
drawings by Rembrandt and Rubens. It's typical and trite to conclude by saying,
"the list is endless," but in Morgan's case, that's very nearly true.
McKim's 1906 architectural drawing for Morgan's library. |
As years progressed, the collecting urge got out of hand. In 1906, he had
Charles McKim of McKim, Mead, and White build him a Renaissance style palazzo
library to hold it all--which it very shortly did not. When he died in 1913,
Morgan's fortune amounted to about $113 million (around $30 billion in today's
terms). Most of the art went to the Metropolitan Museum (housed in the Pierpont
Morgan wing). In 1924, his son, J.P. Morgan Jr. opened the library to the public
and had his father's home beside it torn down to construct a much-needed annex.
When J. P. himself died in 1943, he left his own next door townhouse to the
library/museum. It was annexed in 1987 with the addition of a cloister gallery
and garden court, effectively doubling the size of the place. Today, the
three-building complex is the home of a wide array of research facilities,
lecture and exhibition halls, and various educational programs; as well as the
museum and library.
The Pierpont Morgan Museum and Library today with its various wings and additions, the latest by famed architect, Renzo Piano (central area). The original library is at lower right. |
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