Clyfford
Still: News - Denver, Colorado Museum
Colorado
Public Radio: Denise Montgomery, director of the city’s
office of art, culture and film, talks about the 2000-piece collection.
(August 24th, 2004) >>
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Mayor
John Hickenlooper and the Mayor’s Office of Art, Culture
and Film announced Monday that Denver has been chosen to receive
the much desired 2,000+ piece private collection of works by the
late American artist Clyfford Still.
Most of Still’s
works have been locked away in storage for the past two decades,
bound by the terms of his will in which he bequeathed his works
to an American city that would create and maintain a museum devoted
exclusively to his art. Since Still’s death in 1980, numerous
cities have sought the collection by negotiating with his widow,
Mrs. Patricia A. Still, who is now in her eighties.
“Mrs.
Patricia A. Still confirmed today that the City and County of
Denver is to be the recipient of a gift of a collection of works
of art by her late husband, Clyfford Still. Also, Mrs. Still noted
with pleasure and gratitude that the City and County of Denver,
through the auspices of Mayor Hickenlooper and with the anticipated
cooperation of the City Council, had accepted the gift of the
collection in the spirit and letter of the provisions of the will
of her husband which created the gift,” said Frederick H.
Stalfort, attorney for Mrs. Patricia A. Still.
“We
are grateful for Mrs. Still’s generosity and are thrilled
to receive this incredible gift of Clyfford Still’s art,”
said Mayor John Hickenlooper. “The Still Collection is of
tremendous international importance, and its presence here will
make Denver a destination for all those interested in twentieth
century art. We look forward to caring for and exhibiting this
very significant, masterful collection, which will be treasured
by Denver residents and visitors for generations to come.”
This announcement
is the culmination of months of discussions between the City of
Denver and Patricia Still. In January 2004, Mayor Hickenlooper
traveled with Denverite Curt Freed, nephew of Patricia Still,
and Denise Montgomery, director of the Mayor’s Office of
Art, Culture and Film, to New Windsor, Maryland, to visit with
Mrs. Still about Denver as a possible home for the collection.
During the meeting, Mayor Hickenlooper was able to impress upon
Mrs. Still the dynamic, positive arts environment in Denver and
his own deep passion for the arts.
With the gift
of the collection secured and pending formal acceptance of the
gift by City Council, Denver will begin the work of fundraising
to support the museum and conservation of the collection. Private
support from individuals, foundations, and corporations will be
sought. City officials estimate they will need to raise approximately
$7 million for construction as well as funds to cover the estimated
$500,000 in annual operating costs.
“Clyfford
Still was one of the prime forces in the abstract expressionist
movement, and yet, because of his reclusive nature, only a limited
number of his paintings made it to the market or into public collections,
which has limited the public's knowledge of a truly great artist,”
said Lewis Sharp, director of the Denver Art Museum. “Still’s
works are among the most important bodies of material produced
by twentieth century American artists.”
Currently,
large groupings of Still’s works available for public viewing
exist at very few locations – the San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York,
and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. In addition,
there are isolated works in public and private collections around
the world.
Still’s
works rarely come up for public sale. At a recent Sotheby’s
auction held on May 12, 2004, Still’s 1960-F from a private
European collection sold for $3,144,000.
“Though
many historians ranked him with Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock,
and Barnett Newman among the founders of what is know as the Abstract
Expressionist school, he saw himself as a man set apart,”
wrote historian and critic John Russell in Still’s New York
Times obituary. “…he set to work to exemplify a specifically
American sublimity.”
The late art
critic Katharine Kuh wrote after Still’s death, “It’s
nothing less than tragic that this body of work remains unavailable
to a public long denied adequate contact with it.” Fortunately,
with Patricia Still’s gift to Denver and the City’s
commitment to this collection, that will no longer be the case.
Denver’s
acquisition of the Still collection marks another milestone in
the Mile High City’s growing cultural prominence. This year
marked the first season in the University of Denver’s Newman
Center for the Performing Arts. Next fall, the City will open
its completely renovated Quigg Newton Auditorium containing the
new Ellie Caulkins Opera House, part of the second largest performing
arts center in the nation. In 2006, the Denver Art Museum will
open its new Daniel Libeskind-designed wing, and a new Museum
of Contemporary Art, designed by David Adjaye, is on the horizon.
This is a
historic moment in the evolution of Denver as a cultural center
for our residents and visitors from throughout the region, country
and world,” Hickenlooper said
* * *
The Will of Clyfford Still provides for the bequest of the Clyfford
Still Collection “…to an American city that will agree
to build or assign and maintain permanent quarters exclusively
for …” the Collection. The Will also places strict
limitations on the sale and exchange of the works contained in
the Collection upon receipt by the designated city.
The Agreement
between the City of Denver and Patricia Still provides that the
Grantor agrees to donate the Collection to the City and County
of Denver only if the City is able to meet the following requirements
that are detailed in the Agreement:
• The
City must procure museum quarters for the Collection which meet
the requirements of the Will and the Agreement.
• The City must designate a City Agency to act as caretaker
for the Collection.
• The City must provide for governance of the museum and
Collection through the appointment of a standing trustee committee
and Collection curator.
• The City must maintain, exhibit and handle the Collection
in accordance requirements of the Will and Agreement.
• The City must raise or otherwise designate funding sufficient
to procure the museum and provide for a maintenance and operation
endowment.
Under the
terms of the Agreement, the City will have ten (10) years from
the date of execution of the Agreement to identify funding adequate
to meet its obligations. If the City fails to do so, the Agreement
may be declared null and void and the City will have no continuing
financial obligation with respect to the Collection.