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The  Collection  of  James  and  Marilynn  Alsdorf  represents  a  notable  you buy it,” Mrs. Alsdorf explained. “Find something, some period or some
          achievement in the history of  American connoisseurship. Steadily acquired   venue that you really like and do research on it. Find something that you’re
          throughout  the  latter  half  of  the  twentieth  century  by  two  of  Chicago’s   passionate about and then start collecting.”
          most  important  civic  and  cultural  patrons,  the  Collection  is  unparalleled  in
          its breadth and quality, illuminating the remarkable feats of human artistry   While  their  collection  included  masterful  pieces  by  unknown  artists  from
          across time and geography. For the Alsdorfs, collecting represented a unique   across history, the Alsdorfs were also keen to advance the work of Modern and
          opportunity for exploration, adventure, and the pursuit of beauty, extending   Contemporary figures, acquiring works by artists such as Mark Rothko, René
          from  the  art-filled  rooms  of  their  Chicago  residence  to  distant  continents   Magritte, Frida Kahlo, Fernand Léger, Jean Dubuffet, and others. In 1967, the
          and historic lands. The couple’s philosophy of collecting, as Marilynn Alsdorf   Alsdorfs  joined  other  prominent  Chicago  collectors,  including  Edwin  and
          explained,  was  simple  yet  profound:  “We  looked  for  objects,”  she  said,  “to   Lindy Bergman and Robert and Beatrice Mayer, in founding the Museum of
          delight our eyes and souls….”                       Contemporary  Art  Chicago,  an  institution  to  which  they  would  provide
                                                              extensive  financial  and  personal  leadership.  The  Alsdorfs’  patronage  of
          Married  in  1952,  James  and  Marilynn  Alsdorf  would  spend  nearly  four   museums  and  cultural  institutions  extended  across  Chicago  and  the  wider
          decades  together  building  a  life  centered  on  art,  philanthropy,  and  family.   United States: Mr. Alsdorf was a member of the International Council of the
          The son of a former Dutch diplomat and exporter, James W. Alsdorf joined   Museum of Modern Art, the Collectors Committee of the National Gallery of
          his  father’s  business  after  studying  at  the  Wharton  School  of  Business  at   Art, and a board member of Dumbarton Oaks, among others. Mrs. Alsdorf, for
          the University of Pennsylvania. It was while working for his family’s company,   her part, served as president of the Arts Club of Chicago and in leadership
          Alsdorf  International,  Ltd.,  that  Mr.  Alsdorf  came  upon  the  opportunity  to  positions at institutions including the Smart Museum of Art at the University
          acquire the Cory Corporation, a producer of coffee brewers and equipment.   of Chicago, the Snite Museum of Art at the University of Notre Dame, and the
          Under  Mr.  Alsdorf’s  leadership,  Cory  grew  to  become  the  nation’s  top   Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University.
          manufacturer  in  the  field,  allowing  him  to  expand  the  business  into  other
          areas of production and service. After successfully selling the company to the   With  the  passing  of  James  Alsdorf  in  1990,  his  wife  and  family  sought  to
          Hershey Corporation in the late 1960s, he re-joined the Alsdorf family’s export   continue  to  build  upon  the  legacy  in  art  and  philanthropy  that  had  defined
          firm, and worked together with his wife, Marilynn, to amass an exceptional   his  life.  From  the  1950s,  the  Alsdorfs  were  especially  ardent  patrons  of
          private collection of fine art.                      the  Art  Institute  of  Chicago,  gifting  or  lending  hundreds  of  works  to  the
                                                              museum  commencing  in  the  earliest  days  of  their  collecting.  A  longtime
          Raised in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood and educated at Northwestern   AIC  trustee,  Mrs.  Alsdorf  served  for  a  time  as  president  of  the  museum’s
          University, Marilynn Alsdorf was a woman whose intelligence and passion for   Women’s  Board,  while  Mr.  Alsdorf  served  as  AIC  chairman  from  1975  to
          fine art left an indelible mark on the Alsdorfs’ collection and the community in   1978. The couple’s decades of generosity toward the AIC would extend past
          which they lived. The couple made their first acquisition at a Chicago auction   Mr.  Alsdorf’s  death  and  into  the  twenty-first  century.  In  1997,  Mrs.  Alsdorf
          shortly after their marriage. The work was a harbinger of greater things to   presented the AIC with some four hundred works of Southeast Asian art, a
          come, prompting the couple to look deeper into the innumerable strands of art   transformative  bequest  celebrated  by  the  landmark  exhibition  A  Collecting
          historical expression found throughout history—from the societies of ancient   Odyssey:  Indian,  Himalayan,  and  Southeast  Asian  Art  from  the  James  and
          Egypt  and  Greece  to  the  early  Renaissance,  Islamic  art,  Chinese  and  East  Marilynn  Alsdorf  Collection.  Less  than  a  decade  later,  Mrs.  Aldorf  made
          Asian art, and Modern painting and sculpture. Through international travel,   yet  another  monumental  gift  when  she  supported  the  construction  of  the
          personal scholarship, and in conversation with leading curators, dealers, and   Alsdorf  Galleries  of  Indian,  Southeast  Asian,  Himalayan,  and  Islamic  Art,
          living artists, the Alsdorfs honed a shared, astute connoisseurship, one driven   an arresting Renzo Piano-designed space bridging the museum’s Michigan
          by  an  ineffable,  almost  spiritual  quality  found  in  the  works  they  chose  Avenue building and Modern Wing. At the same time, Mrs. Alsdorf funded
          to acquire.                                         a dedicated curatorial position at the AIC in Southeast Asian art, ensuring
                                                              that generations of visitors will continue to discover the wonders of the field
          It was this “love of the object,” as the Alsdorfs described it, that resulted in   through exhibitions and education.
          an  extraordinary,  polymathic  private  collection.  The  couple’s  residence  on
          Chicago’s Lake Shore Drive became home to a striking mélange of works in
          which painting, sculpture, and decorative arts from around the world stood in   In 2006, when Marilynn Alsdorf was presented with the Joseph R. Shapiro
          art historical conversation—a curatorial achievement in its own right for which   Award from the Smart Museum of Art, fellow collector John Bryan lauded her
          the Alsdorfs were widely celebrated. The couple were especially pioneering   as “an art patron without equal in our time in Chicago.” Together, the Alsdorfs
          in their acquisition of Indian, Southeast Asian, and Himalayan art, areas that   had  not  only  built  a  peerless  private  collection  of  fine  art  from  around  the
          were largely undervalued when they first began to acquire these works in the   world, but had also dedicated themselves to sharing that collection and the
          1960s.  The  Alsdorfs’  first  visit  to  India  in  1968  was  followed  by  numerous  passion that fueled its acquisition. The James and Marilynn Alsdorf Collection
          trips  in  the  region,  allowing  them  to  expand  both  their  expertise  and  their  now serves as the tangible representation of the wide-reaching curiosity and
          collection. Each new spark of art historical interest—in Old Master drawings,   connoisseurship of its namesakes—an unwavering belief in the transcendent
          Buddhist sculpture, Chinese porcelain, Native American art, and beyond—set   and timeless power of art.
 James and Marilynn Alsdorf  at the Kenilworth, Miami 1950.  off a flurry of erudition and acquisition. “You have to love something before
 Photographer unknown, courtesy of the consignor.

 詹姆斯及瑪麗蓮•阿爾斯多夫於 1950年攝於凱尼爾沃思,邁阿密。
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