Monday, January 3, 2011

Herb and Dorothy Vogel

Nathan and I have started renting documentaries as a source of entertainment these days. I'm not sure if anyone has noticed, but the quality of films these days, well...sucks! Not to mention that there are hardly any new movies coming out.
Watching mostly Art and Music documentaries has really opened our eyes and started to awaken our artistic sides again. I think we have come to the realization that it is okay to struggle as long as we have each other and our freedom to do what we enjoy. It all comes together.
Last night we watched Herb and Dorothy. A documentary about a couple in New York City that has acquired an amazing collection of art despite living off a fixed income. It was brilliant! I was so inspired to see that there are people out there that still live for the sake of art and have such a beautiful appreciation. To know that they would never sell a piece of their collection for profit because it would not be fair to split it up was an amazing act. Even when times were tough they stood behind their pact to keep the collection.




HERB & DOROTHY tells the extraordinary story of Herbert Vogel, a postal clerk, and Dorothy Vogel, a librarian, who managed to build one of the most important contemporary art collections in history with very modest means. In the early 1960s, when very little attention was paid to Minimalist and Conceptual Art, Herb and Dorothy Vogel quietly began purchasing the works of unknown artists. Devoting all of Herb's salary to purchase art they liked, and living on Dorothy's paycheck alone, they continued collecting artworks guided by two rules: the piece had to be affordable, and it had to be small enough to fit in their one-bedroom Manhattan apartment. Within these limitations, they proved themselves curatorial visionaries; most of those they supported and befriended went on to become world-renowned artists including Sol LeWitt, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Richard Tuttle, Chuck Close, Robert Mangold, Sylvia Plimack Mangold, Lynda Benglis, Pat Steir, Robert Barry, Lucio Pozzi, and Lawrence Weiner. 

After thirty years of meticulous collecting and buying, the Vogels managed to accumulate over 2,000 pieces, filling every corner of their tiny one bedroom apartment. "Not even a toothpick could be squeezed into the apartment," recalls Dorothy. In 1992, the Vogels decided to move their entire collection to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. The vast majority of their collection was given as a gift to the institution. Many of the works they acquired appreciated so significantly over the years that their collection today is worth millions of dollars. Still, the Vogels never sold a single piece. Today Herb and Dorothy still live in the same apartment in New York with 19 turtles, lots of fish, and one cat. They've refilled it with piles of new art they've acquired. 




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