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Feature
The Inner Circles
Suzanne McGee
11/01/2004

When fledgling collectors Davis and Carol Noble bought a painting by Gerhard Richter more than a decade ago, they gasped at the $140,000 price tag. Today, they have matured into established art-world patrons, and have assembled such a notable compilation that museums now seek them out. Last year, the Nobles sealed a pact with the Museum of Fine Arts Boston (MFA) by making a fractional gift of two Richter works, including the one that launched their collecting career, which is now worth approximately $500,000.

MEMBERS OF collectors circles receive special viewings of works. Artist Fred Tomaselli’s art
on display at the James Cohan Gallery in
New York.
Davis, a retired bond specialist, and Carol, an accountant, live near Boston in the north shore town of Marblehead, Mass. But more than proximity, the catalyst for their generosity to the MFA was the arrival of Cheryl Brutvan in 1998 as the museum’s Beal Curator of Contemporary Art, a high-profile position named in honor of three major donors, Robert L., Enid L. and Bruce A. Beal. Before Brutvan joined the MFA, the museum’s contemporary collection was meager relative to the overall institution’s history and reputation. Worse still, the museum was falling short in its ability to reach out to Boston’s contemporary art collectors, who, it hoped, would comprise its next generation of trustees and donors.

From the start, Brutvan’s aim was to show the city’s large community of affluent collectors that the institution’s commitment to contemporary art was firm, and in strong hands. Drawing on her 15 years of experience at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, a strong regional museum, Brutvan sought to rejuvenate the MFA’s visiting committee—a group formed to bring curators and trustees together with newer collectors and potential patrons, known at other institutions as a collectors circle.

Brutvan set about wooing collectors who remained unaffiliated with the museum, including the Nobles, who met her through their dealer. She invited the Nobles and other new collectors to private viewings, dinners with cutting-edge artists and educational events. “It was all part of demonstrating our commitment to them and to the field of contemporary art,” the curator explains.

Looking at a vast amount of the art that is being produced today can make you feel insignificant, silly, stupid, inadequate. A good curator can translate or interpret what it is that you’re looking at.
Brutvan’s efforts have paid off. The number of collectors serving on the visiting committee has doubled over the last five years. Its 43 members have been instrumental in creating seven new acquisition funds to boost the institution’s relatively slim holdings of contemporary art.

“The idea is that this group’s members become our strongest advocates,” Brutvan explains. “They are collectors who are learning about the art; they are seasoned collectors who will support major acquisitions for us.”

For their part, the Nobles found that joining the visiting committee has enhanced both their social life and their clout as collectors. “We had sort of slugged it out on our own in the art world, for better or worse, and developed relationships with a couple of dealers, but being part of the visiting committee took our knowledge to new levels,” Davis notes.

“It has introduced us to other collectors, a whole new circle of friends involved in this world, and allowed us to travel with them to art fairs in New York and Miami, to encounter new artists,” Carol adds.
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Related Articles
» Aesthetic Aspirations
» To Collect and Serve
» Artful Beginnings
» Exposed to Brilliance
» Framing the Future
 
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