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The Clarks of Cooperstown Book
Nicholas Fox Weber, author of the acclaimed Patron Saints (â??Exhilarating avant-garde entertainmentâ?â??Sam Hunter, The New York Times Book Review) and Balthus (â??The authoritative account of his life and workâ?â??Michael Ravitch, Newsday), gives us now the idiosyncratic lives of Sterling and Stephen Clarkâ??two of Americaâ??s greatest art collectors, heirs to the Singer sewing machine fortune, and for decades enemies of each other. He tells the story, as well, of the two generations that preceded theirs, giving us an intimate portrait of one of the least known of Americaâ??s richest families.He begins with Edward Clarkâ??the brothersâ?? grandfather, who amassed the Clark fortune in the late-nineteenth centuryâ??a man with nerves of steel; a Sunday school teacher who became the business partner of the wild inventor and genius Isaac Merritt Singer. And, by the turn of the twentieth century, was the major stockholder of the Singer Manufacturing Company.We follow Edwardâ??s rise as a real estate wizard making headlines in 1880 when he commissioned Manhattanâ??s first luxury apartment building. The house was called â??Clarkâ??s Follyâ?; today itâ??s known as the Dakota.We see Clarkâ??s sonâ??Alfredâ??enigmatic and famously reclusive; at thirty-eight he inherited $50 million and became one of the countryâ??s richest men. An image of proprietyâ??good husband, father of fourâ??in Europe, he led a secret homosexual life. Alfred was a man with a passion for art and charity, which he passed on to his four sons, in particular Sterling and Stephen Clark.Sterling, the second-oldest, buccaneering and controversial, loved impressionism, created his own museum in Williamstown, Massachusettsâ??and shocked his family by marrying an actress from the Comédie Française. Together the Sterling Clarks collected thousands of paintings and bred racehorses.In a highly public case, Sterling sued his three brothers over issues of inheritance, and then never spoke to them again.He was one of the central figures linked to a bizarre and little-known attempted coup against Franklin Delano Rooseveltâ??s presidency. We are told what really happened and whyâ??and who in American politics was implicated but never prosecuted.Sterlingâ??s brotherâ??Stephenâ??self-effacing and responsibleâ??became chairman and president of the Museum of Modern Art and gave that institution its first painting, Edward Hopperâ??s House by the Railroad. Thirteen years later, in an act that provoked intense controversy, Stephen dismissed the Museumâ??s visionary founding director, Alfred Barr, who for more than a decade had single-handedly established the collection and exhibition programs that determined how the art of the twentieth century was regarded.Stephen gave or bequeathed to museums many of the paintings that today are still their greatest attractions.With authority, insight, and a flair for evoking time and place, Weber examines the depths of the brothersâ?? passions, the vehemence of their lifelong feud, the great art they acquired, and the profound and lasting impact they had on artistic vision in America.Read More
from£N/A | RRP: * Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £N/A
- 0307263479
- 9780307263476
- Nicholas Fox Weber
- 8 May 2007
- Knopf Publishing Group
- Hardcover (Book)
- 448
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