- Roy Neuberger
Infobox Person
name = Roy Neuberger
image_size =
caption = Roy Neuberger (center, seated) receiving theNational Medal of Arts fromGeorge W. Bush in 2007.
birth_date = birth date and age|1903|7|21
birth_place =Bridgeport, Connecticut ,
United States
death_date =
death_place =
occupation =Financier and art patronRoy R. Neuberger (born
July 21 ,1903 ) is an Americanfinancier who has contributed money to the cause of public awareness and publicity of modernart through acquisition of deserving pieces. He is the establisher and eponym of the investment firmNeuberger Berman .Neuberger was born in
Bridgeport, Connecticut , and spent his childhood in New York. Born into a wealthyJewish family, he was orphaned at the age of 12. He describes himself as having been interested during high school intennis and "the ladies."Fact|date=February 2008 He matriculated atNew York University , originally to studyjournalism , but grew restless and dropped out without obtaining a degree to pursue business.His first job was working in the
Manhattan department store calledB. Altman and Company , through which he learned the ins and outs of business. Among the things he practiced selling werepainting s, which nurtured his love of art.After his job with B. Altman's, he sailed to Europe at age 20 on an inheritance from his parents and went to live in
Paris . He lived his bohemian,Roaring Twenties existence there, where he visited theLouvre three times a week and met his lifelong friendMeyer Schapiro . He painted and studied art until 1928, when he readFloret Fels ' biography ofVincent Van Gogh . Neuberger was startled when he learned how Van Gogh had only sold one painting, and was heartstricken to learn that Van Gogh, like so many other artists, lived in pain, poverty and misery.He moved back to the United States and entered
Wall Street in 1929. It was seven months beforeBlack Tuesday . He started out withHalle & Steiglitz and sold short RCA shares, right through the stock market crash and well into theGreat Depression . He founded Neuberger Berman in 1939 withRobert Berman . In 1950, Neuberger's firm started one of the first no-loadmutual fund s, theGuardian Mutual Fund .By 1939, he had made enough money to buy the first painting that he would lend to rocket the artist to fame:
Peter Hurd 's "Boy from the Plains". He allowedNelson Rockefeller , another avid art collector, to use "Boy from the Plains" in a travelling American art exhibition. Rockefeller's exhibition travelled toSouth America , and many people in both South and North America were thus exposed to the art of Hurd.Among the other artists whose works Neuberger has collected are
Jackson Pollock ,Ben Shahn ,William Baziotes ,Alexander Calder , Stuart Davis,Louis Eilshemius ,Edward Hopper ,Jacob Lawrence ,Jack Levine , David Smith and especiallyMilton Avery , of whose works Neuberger purchased dozens. The first Avery he ever purchased was "Gaspé Landscape", which he bought while it was snowing and wrapped neatly specially before going out during the snowstorm, determined to keep the painting intact to make the man famous. Neuberger still has "Gaspé Landscape" on the wall of his apartment. Neuberger also began donating works to institutions, among them theMetropolitan Museum of Art , theMuseum of Modern Art and theWhitney Museum as well as many college and university museums.His friend Nelson Rockefeller later became governor of
New York and set up theState University of New York system. For his friend Neuberger, Rockefeller set up a museum as part of the new university where Neuberger could display a substantial amount of the art he had acquired. With the help ofarchitect Philip Johnson , the Neuberger Museum of Art was built on the SUNYPurchase College campus and opened in 1974. Neuberger contributed more than 500 of his paintings toward the collection.Although of Jewish descent, Neuberger absolutely avoids anything to do with religion and is a staunch atheist who has never seen any appeal in spirituality, especially
Judaism . His son, Roy Salant Neuberger, who felt his life growing up without religion was empty, turned to Judaism and has since become famous in his own right as a speaker on Jewish spirituality. The two still have a close relationship, and Roy Neuberger Sr. has joked that he has "a wonderful son, but he has a disease". [ [http://www.tosinai.com/tosinai/press/Haaretz1.htm Haaretz] ]Neuberger was married for many years to the late Marie Salant Neuberger, also a distinguished patron of the arts, and together they had three children and many grandchildren and even some great-grandchildren. He is still alive at 105 years old. In 1997, he published his memoir, "
So Far, So Good - the First 94 Years ". His life as an art collector is chronicled in the 2003 book "The Passionate Collector: Eighty Years in the World of Art."His son Roy S. Neuberger has written an autobiography telling how he went from his parents' assimilated world to being an orthodox Jew. [ [http://www.aish.com/societyWork/arts/Leaving_Wall_Street.asp Leaving Wall Street] ]
References
*cite book
last = Roy Neuberger
year = 1997
url = http://books.global-investor.com/books/5806.htm
title = So Far So Good - The First 94 Years
publisher = John Wiley & Sons
id = 047-1171-86-7
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