American gallery owner (1930–2021)
Richard L. Feigen
Born (1930-08-08 ) August 8, 1930Died January 29, 2021(2021-01-29) (aged 90) Nationality American Occupation Gallerist Spouse Sandra Elizabeth Canning Walker
Margaret (Peggy) Langan-Culver
Isabelle Harnoncourt Wisowaty
Richard Lee Feigen (August 8, 1930 – January 29, 2021) was an American gallery owner.[ 1]
Early life and education
A native of Chicago, he was the son of a lawyer and a homemaker who, while not themselves collectors, encouraged their son's early acquisitive interests. He purchased his first artwork in 1942, at the age of 11.[ 2]
Feigen earned a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 1952[ 3] and a Master of Business Administration from Harvard University in 1954.
Career
He opened his first gallery on Astor Street in Chicago in 1957,[ 4] and displayed impressionist and surrealist artists from the 20th Century, such as George Grosz , Francis Bacon , Jean Dubuffet , Claes Oldenburg , Joseph Cornell , James Rosenquist , and Ray Johnson . He opened a second gallery in New York City in 1962 and displayed works from Vincent van Gogh , Claude Monet , Pablo Picasso , Max Beckmann , and Constantin Brâncuși . Throughout his career, Feigen sold paintings to the likes of the Louvre , the Metropolitan Museum of Art , the J. Paul Getty Museum , the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston , the National Gallery , and the National Gallery of Art .
Feigen was cast as a version of himself in Oliver Stone 's 1987 film Wall Street .[ 4]
Personal life
He was married three times: to Sandra Elizabeth Canning Walker in 1966,[ 5] to Margaret (Peggy) Langan-Culver in 1998,[ 6] and to Isabelle Harnoncourt Wisowaty in 2007.[ 4]
Feigen died from complications of COVID-19 in Mount Kisco, New York , on January 29, 2021, at the age of 90.[ 7]
Books
Dubuffet and the Anticulture . Exh. cat. 1969–1970 New York.
Tales from the Art Crypt: The Painters, the Museums, the Curators, the Collectors, the Auctions, the Art . New York: Knopf, 2000. ISBN 9780394571690
Notable exhibitions in New York
1996: A Century of Landscape Painting, England and France 1770–1870[ 8]
2011–2012: Late Medieval Panel Paintings[ 15]
References
^ "Feigen, Richard 1930- (Richard L. Feigen)" . encyclopedia.com .
^ McIlhenney, James. "Oral history interview with Richard L. Feigen, Jan 9-13, 2009" . Smithsonian: Archives of American Art . Retrieved November 20, 2015 .
^ "Richard Feigen (1930–2021)" . Artforum . January 31, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2021 .
^ a b c Genzlinger, Neil (February 7, 2021). "Richard Feigen, 90, Dealer and Gallerist Who Boosted Masters and Young Artists" . New York Times . Vol. 170, no. 58962. p. 23. Retrieved February 7, 2021 .
^ "Richard Feigen Weds Mrs. Sandra Walker (Published 1966)" . New York Times . February 24, 1966. p. 31. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved February 7, 2021 .
^ Jeromack, Paul (September 23, 1998). "Artnet News" . Artnet . Retrieved February 7, 2021 .
^ Kinsella, Eileen (February 1, 2021). "Art Luminaries Pay Tribute to Richard Feigen, the 'Collector in Dealer's Clothes' Revered for Championing Old and New Masters Alike" . Artnet News .
^ Carter, Holland (May 17, 1996). "Art in Review" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Esplund, Lance (January 6, 2005). "Sizing Up Two Masters, Side by Side" . New York Sun . Retrieved November 20, 2015 .
^ Panero, James (January 2005). "Gallery Chronicle" . New Criterion . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Kramer, Hilton (December 13, 2004). "Beckmann, Picasso: Painters Reunited For the First Time" . New York Observer . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Johnson, Ken (November 12, 2004). "Art in Review; 'Beckmann-Picasso/Picasso-Beckmann' " . The New York Times . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Melikian, Souren (June 4, 2010). "The Mystery of the British Landscape Master" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Karlins, N. F. (June 10, 2010). "The Dawn of the Romantic" . Artnet . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Jeromack, Paul (January 23, 2012). "Suffering of the Body" . Artnet . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
^ Kennedy, Randy (January 8, 2015). "Always On His Own Terms: Ray Johnson Defies Categories 20 Years After His Death" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 21, 2015 .
External links
International National Artists People Other