Phyllis Kind was born Phyllis Barbara Cobin in The Bronx, New York City on 1 April 1933 to Harold Cobin, a dentist, and Dorothy (Weintraub) Cobin. She was their only child.[1] The family lived in Brooklyn as well as The Bronx. She and her mother also lived for about three years in St. Petersburg, Florida while her father performed military service.[2] She attended the Bronx High School of Science and the University of Pennsylvania, where she studied chemistry.[1] Her studies included chemistry at the graduate level.[2]
She married Joshua Kind, whom she met at university, in 1956. The couple moved to New York City; Phyllis taught elementary school while Joshua pursued a PhD in Renaissance art at Columbia University.[1] Phyllis also studied composition at the Mannes School of Music.[2] They moved to Chicago in 1959; Joshua Kind taught at Northwestern University and, from 1962, the University of Chicago.[1] Phyllis Kind received a master's degree in English literature from the University of Chicago.[3][4][2]
They had four children, Jonathan, Gabriel, Deborah, and Rachel. The couple divorced in the 1970s.[1]
Career
Encouraged by her husband, Phyllis Kind opened a gallery in Chicago in 1967. Called Pro Grafica Arte, the gallery dealt in master prints and drawings. In 1975, she opened a gallery on Spring Street in New York's SoHo district. The gallery moved to a larger, ground floor space on Greene Street in 1983.[1]
In 1998, Kind closed her Phyllis Kind Gallery in Chicago, located at 313 West Superior Street, in part as a result of the death of artist Roger Brown.[5]
For 25 years, Ron Jagger served as director of Phyllis Kind Gallery in New York.[6]
She also introduced the work of outsider artists. She was the first American gallerist to show contemporary and outsider work together. In 1972, Phyllis Kind presented her first group show of outsider art, "The Artless Artist: Contemporary 'Naive Works." Over the years, Kind showed Chicago custodian Henry Darger, Mexican artist Martín Ramírez (discovered by Nutt), and Europeans Adolf Wölfli, Augustin Lesage, Carlo Zinelli.[1] She promoted and marketed the work of Georgian Howard Finster.[10][11] She was an advisor to Sanford L. Smith & Associates' annual Outsider Art Fair since its inception in 1992,[12] and traditionally occupied the first booth on the show floor.[9]