Anne Marion on her Four Sixes Ranch in Texas Anne Marion on her Four Sixes Ranch in Texas - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com

Wer: sothebys.com

Was: Ausstellung

Wann: 10.03.2021 - 19.04.2021

$150 million Art Collection of Legendary Texan & Visionary Philanthropist Mrs. John L. Marion Comes to Sotheby's this Spring in New York

 

Highlights from Collection of An American Visionary will be exhibited in Palm Beach (10 – 14 March), Fort Worth (18 – 21 March), Los Angeles (25 – 28 March), Taipei (3 – 4 April), (Hong Kong 16 – 21 April), London (14 – 19…

$150 million Art Collection of Legendary Texan & Visionary Philanthropist Mrs. John L. Marion Comes to Sotheby's this Spring in New York

 

Highlights from Collection of An American Visionary will be exhibited in Palm Beach (10 – 14 March), Fort Worth (18 – 21 March), Los Angeles (25 – 28 March), Taipei (3 – 4 April), (Hong Kong 16 – 21 April), London (14 – 19 April), and East Hampton later this spring before returning to Sotheby’s York Avenue galleries for a pre-sale exhibition.  

NEW YORK, 24 February 2021 –The private collection of visionary philanthropist, renowned art collector, and legendary Texan Anne Marion (1938-2020) will be unveiled for the first time at Sotheby’s this spring. Widely celebrated throughout her lifetime, both for her generous support of cultural institutions, critical contributions to education and healthcare, and for her passion for the life and traditions of the American Southwest where her family had been rooted for generations, Anne Marion held a fabled status among art lovers and ranchers alike. And yet, despite the public-facing nature of her support for so many leading American museums, the treasures of Anne Marion’s own private collection have remained – until now – largely unknown. Sotheby’s forthcoming exhibition and sale of that collection will therefore represent, for many, the first opportunity to appreciate the exceptional caliber and scope of the collection of a woman who – whether for art, horses or business – had ‘a keen eye and a sense for picking winners.’

Centered on an exceptional group of works by leading names of American post-war art that together represent some of the most significant art historical innovations of the Twentieth Century, Anne Marion’s collection is estimated in the region of $150 million, making it the most significant collection to come to auction for years. At its heart are masterworks by three of the greatest American artists of the post-War period, each executed at the apex of their respective careers: Andy Warhol’s iconic Elvis 2 Times, Richard Diebenkorn’s sublime Ocean Park No. 40; and Clyfford Still’s staggering PH-125 (1948-No. 1). All three works are estimated to achieve in excess of $20 million.

Amy Cappellazzo, Chairman of Sotheby’s Global Fine Arts Division, said: “Anne Marion was a true art collector and had an eye for quality. She was brave in everything she did, from her choice in artwork to her sense of design and color. Unpretentious and proud of her rancher legacy and lifestyle, Anne was a boldhearted Texan through-and-through.”

Michael Macaulay, Sotheby’s Senior Vice President and Senior International Specialist for Contemporary Art, said: “Mrs. Marion’s extraordinary collection not only embodies critical innovations of twentieth-century American Art History, notably uniting paragons of Abstract Expressionism with original icons of Pop Art, but it also singularly reflects a simply remarkable life. While Still and Diebenkorn’s soaring canvases evoke the enduring landscapes of her family’s storied ranches; Warhol’s legendary depiction of Elvis as cowboy alludes to a lifetime devoted to the stewardship of Southwestern traditions. She was a true visionary, and her collection is testament to an extraordinary eye, boundless energy and limitless spirit of inquiry.”

Hugh Hildesley, who joined Sotheby’s in 1961 and played an integral role in the company’s formative years in the US, was a longstanding colleague of Sotheby’s eminent Chairman and auctioneer John L. Marion, Anne’s husband for the last 32 years of her life. In fact, it was Hugh – the only ordained fine art auctioneer in the world – who presided over their marriage. He remembers: “The sheer scope of Anne’s astounding achievements will prove influential and transformative for generations to come: from her role as President of the Burnett Foundation to founding the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum; donor of the Marion Emergency Care Center in Fort Worth, to tireless Trustee of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Kimbell Art Museum and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Anne knew quality when she saw it, and that was never truer than when she first met John. For more than three decades they together forged a legendary partnership, which was to the art world’s supreme advantage. That legend represents one of the great treasures in my 60 years of Sotheby’s history.”

Anne Marion: Rancher & BusinesswomanAnne’s story was as remarkable as the art she collected. Born into a legendary Texas ranching family, she was the great-granddaughter of Captain Samuel Burk Burnett (1849-1922) and heiress to the historic, world-renowned Four Sixes Ranch in King County, Texas.

On his death, Samuel took the unusual step of willing the bulk of his estate to his 22-year-old granddaughter, 'Big Anne', to be held in trust for her unborn child (the future 'Little Anne' Marion), thereby launching the tradition of female leadership of one of Texas’ greatest family businesses. Following her mother’s death in 1980, ‘Little Anne’ took over management of the business and would run it for the next forty years.

The ranch was celebrated for its Black Angus cattle and winning quarter horses, and thanks to oil strikes there, the family’s wealth grew. President Theodore Roosevelt, famous Western actors, and many other illustrious figures were regular visitors to Four Sixes. Yet, like her great-grandfather – who, in spite of having built himself ‘the finest ranch house in Texas’, always chose to sleep in the backroom of the supply house – Anne remained firmly rooted in the realities of her family ranch and their businesses.

She herself learned from the cowboys on her ranch how to ride and work cattle and was a fierce pioneering advocate of cowboys’ employment rights, being one of the first in the ranching industry to provide her staff with health insurance and retirement plans. Anne Marion never forgot the impact of her upbringing, her time with cowboys, and her love of ranch-life, recalling “The most important thing that ever happened to me was growing up on that ranch. It kept my feet on the ground more than anything else.”

Mrs. Marion was not only inducted into the Texas Business Hall of Fame, but also the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame (2005), the Great Hall of Westerners (2009) and the Great Women of Texas (2003); following her death, she was honored with an extended cattle drive in Fort Worth - attended by cowboys from all the region’s leading ranches. In the words of President George W. Bush following her passing: “She was a true Texan, a great patron of the arts, a generous member of our community, and a person of elegance and strength. Texans have lost a patriot, and Laura and I have lost a friend.”

PhilanthropistOver the course of her life, Anne Marion donated many works to museums, and oversaw, through her charitable foundation, the distribution of more than $600 million worth of grants to a variety of institutions and causes, many of them in her native Texas. She was a trusted board director and benefactor of the Kimbell Art Museum for four decades, and a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. She was also a principal benefactor of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth and the driving force behind its $65 million expansion, selecting Tadao Ando as architect for its new home, which opened to high acclaim in 2002. Very fittingly for such a dynamic and successful woman in her own right, Anne Marion founded, together with her husband John, America’s first museum dedicated to a female artist - Georgia O'Keeffe - in Santa Fe.

Continuing Anne Marion’s unwavering lifelong dedication to philanthropy and decades-long commitment to cultural patronage, a number of major additional works from her collection will be gifted to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, and to the Kimbell Art Museum, further details of which will be announced at a later date.

The CollectionWhile the heart of the Collection is devoted to giants of twentieth-century American art – Warhol, Still, Diebenkorn, Kline, Motherwell, Lichtenstein, Hofmann, Francis, Noland, Louis and many more – it also spans Old Masters (all of which were displayed in Mrs. Marion’s palazzo-like home in In Indian Wells), Jewelry, and a sensational abstract by Gerhard Richter. The sale of the Collection of Mrs. John L. Marion will launch with an 18-lot dedicated evening auction in New York in May.

AMERICAN VISIONARY: THE COLLECTION OF MRS. JOHN L MARION MAY 2021

The masterworks that formed Anne Marion’s Collection took pride of place within the Marions’ Fort Worth, Texas home. Commissioned by her mother (Anne Burnett Tandy), their home was the first of only three private houses ever designed by I.M. Pei, the architect of the Louvre Pyramid, the East Wing of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., the Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, and many other major public buildings.

Roy Lichtenstein, Girl with Beach Ball II 1977, Oil and Magna on canvas Estimate $12-18 million Roy Lichtenstein, Girl with Beach Ball II 1977, Oil and Magna on canvas Estimate $12-18 million - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com Franz Kline, Mister  1959, Oil on canvas  Estimate $15-20 million Franz Kline, Mister 1959, Oil on canvas Estimate $15-20 million - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com N16666, Marino Marini, Cavaliere (Rider) N16666, Marino Marini, Cavaliere (Rider) - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com Diamond Clip-Brooch, David Webb Diamond Clip-Brooch, David Webb - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com Turquoise, Enamel and Diamond ‘Bastille’ Cuff-Bracelet, David Webb Turquoise, Enamel and Diamond ‘Bastille’ Cuff-Bracelet, David Webb - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com
Tags: Andy Warhol, Clyfford Still, David Webb, Diamanten, Franz Kline, Malerei, Marino Marini, Richard Diebenkorn, Roy Lichtenstein, Sammlung Anne Marion, Schmuck

Highlights from Collection of An American Visionary will be exhibited in Palm Beach (10 – 14 March), Fort Worth (18 – 21 March), Los Angeles (25 – 28 March), Taipei (3 – 4 April), (Hong Kong 16 – 21 April), London (14 – 19 April), and East Hampton later this spring before returning to Sotheby’s York Avenue galleries for a pre-sale exhibition.

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