Hester Diamond

Hester Diamond (December 10, 1928 – January 23, 2020) was an American art collector, dealer, and interior designer. With her first husband, Harold Diamond, she amassed a collection of Modernist art that the New York Times described as "astonishing." Following her husband's death, Diamond switched her focus to Old Masters, assembling "one of the greatest, most idiosyncratic art collections in America".[1][2][3]

Hester Diamond
Born
Hester Klein

1928
Died2020 (age 91)
New York, New York
Alma materHunter College
OccupationArt collector
Art dealer
Interior designer

Early life and education

Diamond was born in the Bronx to David Klein, a structural engineer of Hungarian descent from Bayonne, New Jersey, and Edith (Wilbur) Klein, a bookkeeper born 1904 in Lithuania.[4] An only child, she attended Hunter College High School, and often visited the Museum of Modern Art—her favorite museum—and the Guggenheim. She graduated from Hunter College in 1949 with a BA in English and became a secretary.[5][3]

Career

In 1950, she married Harold Diamond, a fourth-grade teacher in Harlem who was from the Bronx neighborhood she grew up in. A Columbia University graduate, he shared Hester's passion for art. They frequented Manhattan art galleries in their spare time, and in the early 1950s began working weekends at art dealer Martha Jackson's gallery. In 1955 they set up eight North American museum shows for the British sculptor Barbara Hepworth, arranging for each to purchase one Hepworth piece. They subsequently represented buyers for several private sales, and in 1959, after facilitating the sale of a Henry Moore sculpture for a $5,000 fee, Harold and Hester—by then a social worker—quit their jobs to focus on art full-time.[3] They were noted for their discretion: Time reported that they worked with "the tact of a diplomat and the cunning of a spy." [6] Becoming renowned as dealers as well as collectors,[7] the Diamond's personal collection included works by Picasso, Fernand Léger, Mondrian, Constantin Brâncuși, Mark Rothko, and William de Kooning.[3]

In 1980, Diamond was asked by J. Seward Johnson, heir to the Johnson & Johnson fortune, to decorate an apartment he had purchased for his future wife Barbara ("Basia") Piasecka. Although she had no previous experience, Diamond said yes, and shortly thereafter started an interior design business. In a 2008 interview she said: "As a child of the Bronx, my design education came from going to the Museum of Modern Art. The design of that original building always inspired me. It was all about breaking symmetry."[8] She continued her interior design work until 1989.[7]

After Harold Diamond's death in 1982 she began to collect art by Old Masters.To finance her acquisitions, she sold significant pieces from her collection, including works by Henri Matisse, Picasso and Wassily Kandinsky. Her love of the Old Masters inspired her in 1995 to co-found the non-profit organizations the Medici Archive Project, which funds research for students and scholars on Renaissance and Baroque art, and in 2013, a publishing project for scholarship on Old Master sculpture, VISTAS (Virtual Images of Sculpture in Time and Space).[9][10]

Diamond died in January 2020. In October, Sotheby's announced Fearless: The Collection of Hester Diamond, an auction of 60 lots from Diamond's collection. In addition to contemporary work by artists such as Bill Viola, included Baroque sculpture by Pietro and Gian Lorenzo Bernini, as well as work by Jörg Lederer, Girolamo della Robbia, Dosso Dossi, and Pieter Coecke van Aelst. Scheduled for January 2021, the auction was expected to bring $30 million.[11]

Diamond maintained a close relationship with MoMA and made substantial gifts to the museum over the course of her lifetime.[12]

Personal life

In addition to Harold Diamond, Diamond was married in 1985 to Ralph Kaminsky, an economics professor who died in 2012. In 2015 she married David S. Wilson, a psychoanalyst. She had one stepdaughter, three stepsons, and three sons: David, Mike, a founding member of the Beastie Boys, and Stephen, who died of neuroendocrine cancer in 1999.[3] Her stepdaughter, Rachel Kaminsky, is an art dealer, and once the head of Christie's Old Masters paintings department.[11]

References

  1. "Sotheby's New York Will Auction Off Hester Diamond's Eclectic Art Collection This Month". Departures. Retrieved 2021-01-16.
  2. Moore, Susan (9 January 2015). "Art publishing: Old masters in a virtual world". The Financial Times. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  3. Gates, Anita (January 31, 2020). "Hester Diamond, Passionate Art Collector, Is Dead at 91". New York Times. 169 (58595). p. B12. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  4. Richards, Judith Olch. "Oral History Transcript". Archives of American Art. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  5. Pappademas, Alex (2021-01-14). "Mike D Is Cleaning Out the Family Attic". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-14.
  6. "Art: By Appointment Only". Time. 96 (5). August 3, 1970. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  7. Moore, Susan (January 29, 2020). "Hester Diamond (1928–2020)". Apollo. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  8. Egan, BY Maura (2008-08-13). "Pop Goes the Veronese (Published 2008)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  9. "Hester Diamond Collection to Sell for as Much as $30M at Sotheby's". TheCollector. 2020-10-17. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  10. Penny, Nicholas (January 29, 2021). "Hester Diamond and VISTAS". Sotheby's. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  11. Villa, Angelica; Villa, Angelica (2020-10-16). "Sotheby's to Sell $30 M. in Art from Sought-After Hester Diamond Estate". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  12. "Object of the Week: Hester Diamond Tribute". SAMBlog. 2020-01-31. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
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