J. Carter Brown
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John Carter Brown (October 8, 1934 – June 17, 2002), director of the U.S. National Gallery of Art from 1969 to 1992 and a leading figure in American intellectual life. Under Brown's direction, the National Gallery became one of the leading art museums in United States, if not the world. He was known as a champion of the arts and public access to art at a time of decreased public spending on the humanities.
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[edit] Early life
Brown was born in Providence, Rhode Island to a family that had been prominent since before the American Revolution. His ancestors donated the initial endowment for Brown University and served as professors, administrators, and benefactors of the school in its early years. His father, John Nicholas Brown, served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy under President Harry S. Truman. Brown’s parents, both involved in numerous cultural organizations, encouraged their son’s interest in art.
As a boy he attended the Arizona Desert School near Tucson, Arizona before completing his secondary education at a school in Massachusetts, where he graduated at the top of his class. He spent one year in England before enrolling at Harvard University. He graduated summa cum laude with a major in History and Literature and was president of the Harvard Glee Club. Seeking a unique entry point into the world of art and culture, Brown decided to pursue a business degree long before "arts management" existed as a common course of study. After completing his M.B.A. at Harvard Business School, he spent a year studying with Harvard-trained art historian Bernard Berenson in Florence, Italy. He then enrolled at New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts. After completing his master’s degree, he decided not to complete a Ph.D. in art history.
Brown married Constance Mellon Byers, a relative of Paul Mellon, chairman of the National Gallery's Board of Trustees and a major donor, in 1971. They divorced in 1973. He later married Pamela Braga Drexel in 1976 in Westminster Abbey, London. Brown had two children, John Carter (Jay) Brown IV and Elissa Brown.
[edit] National Gallery
In 1961, Brown was hired by the National Gallery as an assistant to the Director, John Walker. He was soon groomed to be Walker’s successor and appointed assistant director in 1964. In this capacity he supervised the construction of the National Gallery’s East Building, designed by world-renowned American architect I. M. Pei. In 1969, at the age of 34, Brown became director the National Gallery. He would become the longest serving director in the National Gallery's history.
Brown transformed the National Gallery from a minor museum of American art into a museum on par with many of the great art museums of Europe. He was known for bringing “blockbuster” exhibitions to the museum. The National Gallery became a rival of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York for exhibitions and donations. During his 23 years as director of the National Gallery, he added over 20,000 works to the collection. As many museums and cultural institutions lost public funding, Brown worked with Congress to increase the Gallery's operating budget year after year. He inherited a budget of $3 million in 1969 and increased that to $52 million when he retired in 1992. During the same period, the Gallery's endowment grew from $34 million to $186 million.
Through his high-profile leadership of the National Gallery, Brown became one of the leading public intellectuals in American and the champion of American art. Many regarded him as America’s unofficial Secretary for Culture. His contacts in Washington politics and New York society aided him in his work at the museum. He also served as a a trustee of the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts, a member of the Committee for the Preservation of the White House, and the chairman of the Fine Arts Commission, a review panel that oversees public art and architecture in the nation's capital. In this latter position, he approved the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the addition to the Corcoran Gallery of Art designed by Frank Gehry. He also supported the erection of the National World War II Memorial on the National Mall, though he described U. S. Marine Corps's Iwo Jima Memorial as "kitsch," comparing the monument to "a great piece of Ivory Soap carved."
Brown retired in 1992, after the National Gallery’s 50th anniversary.
[edit] Retirement
After leaving the National Gallery in 1992, he became chairman of Ovation, a cable television arts network that furthered his ambition to "bring the arts into people's living rooms.” He also remained involved in many cultural organizations, including the American Federation of Arts, the National Academy of Design, the Storm King Art Center, and the World Monuments Fund. He continued to serve also as a trustee of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University and as chairman of the jury for the Pritzker Prize, the leading award for architecture.
In August 2000, Carter was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a terminal blood cancer, which was treated with an autologous stem cell transplant. Brown resumed his normal life until May 2003, when he was rehospitalized. He died six weeks later.
Near the end of his life, he became engaged to marry Anne Hawley of Brookline, Massachusetts. He had also begun writing a book about his life and his father’s life.
[edit] Quotes
- I found that it wasn't so oddball to like music and poetry and visual arts, they're like kinderd spirits.
- That was very rewarding to be there with a purpose, not just rubbernecking. And we really felt needed, and doing something for America and for Harvard, and also for ourselves.
- "I was hopeless. I was very unathletic, and when I was in school I was two years younger than everybody in my class, so I got beaten up all the time, and I got laughed at for being interested in studying and doing stupid things like that."