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Shared Passions
Framing the Future
Regan Good
08/02/2004


Collectors often overlook the idea of donating art to charities other than museums or private foundations. Colleges, hospitals and other nonprofit organizations, such as nursing homes, accept—and even solicit—donations of art. The Hebrew Home for the Aged in Riverdale, N.Y., for example, has amassed a 4,500-piece collection that has earned it membership in the American Association of Museums. The IRS requires that the organization actually use the art as a part of its charitable work for at least two years, however, to allow the donor to deduct the full-market value of the piece. If the recipient sells the art before those two years are up, or the IRS rules that the art does not serve a charitable purpose, the donor can deduct only the price he paid for the work.

Preserving a Passion
If a collection does contain a significant number of important works, we stand a reasonable chance of getting it into an existing museum, especially if we get to know the curators. Norah and Norman Stone are an accomplished Bay Area couple who collect art and produce wine, among their other activities. Since they began collecting art, the Stones have served on committees and cultivated close ties with San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art. While they have not yet drafted a formal agreement with the museum, it appears that they will bequeath their collection to that institution.

Unlike Cartin, the Stones adamantly desire to keep intact their entire edgy collection of 1980s and 1990s American art—which includes some shocking pieces, to observers prone to shock. With works such as Duchamp’s Feuille de Vigne, a plaster cast of female genitalia, and Matthew Barney’s Repressia, a large installation that includes a video of Barney climbing the walls of an art gallery naked and shoving a piton up his rectum, select pieces of the Stone collection come with warning labels.

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Related Articles
» American Legacy
» The Inner Circles
» To Collect and Serve
» Creative Curators
» Aesthetic Aspirations
 
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