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Top 10 Private Contemporary Art Museums

If you’re lucky enough to be in the vicinity of a private art museum, go check it out if you haven’t already done so. You will almost surely avoid the large crowds normally found at the museums that everyone has already heard of. Plus, you might just be in for a few surprises in terms of the collections themselves. Remember, this is artwork that someone with the means really wanted to call their own, not what a curator thought would please a crowd. So, you’ll often see a collector’s obsession or get a peek into how the rich and famous spend their disposable income, which can be interesting, curious and enlightening. Some of these museums in the US and around the world are in the collector’s former home, which adds another dimension to the group of artworks on display. Schedule a day out of the house to go view art!

The following is reported by ArtnetNews:

Interior of the Brant Foundation Art Study Center.
Photo: Matteo Prandoni/BFAny.com.

THE BRANT FOUNDATION ART STUDY CENTER, Greenwich, CT
Founded by Peter Brant in 2009

The Brant Foundation has primarily an educational focus, but features long-term exhibitions from the foundation’s collection as well, including a recent survey show of Julian Schnabel—the artist’s first in this country since 2002—and an ongoing Dan Colen exhibition.

Rob Pruitt gradient paintings at the de la Cruz Collection. At left: Felix González-Torres Untitled (Portrait of Dad) (1991). At right: Rob Pruitt Us (2013). Photo: Courtesy the de la Cruz Collection Contemporary Art Space, Miami, Florida.

DE LA CRUZ COLLECTION, Miami, FL
Founded by Rosa and Carlos de la Cruz in 2009

The de la Cruz Collection, which focuses on contemporary art as well as art education, has been open to the public since 2009—though its director, Ibett Yanez, points out that people had been able to privately ask to see the collection for the previous 25 years. The collection is housed in a distinctive building that is also an extension of Rosa and Carlos de la Cruz’s home. Built in the middle of the Miami Design District, the Collection has been a seminal attraction for art world migrants attending Art Basel in Miami Beach since the fair launched in 2002.

The interior of the El Segundo Museum of Art. Photo: Courtesy ESMoA.

EL SEGUNDO MUSEUM OF ART, El Segundo, CA
Founded by Eva and Brian Sweeney in 2013

An offshoot of the ARTLAB 21 Foundation, the El Segundo Museum of Art was founded by architect Eva Sweeney and real estate developer Brian Sweeney. Described as a “laboratory,” the museum shows the Sweeneys’ impressive and eclectic collection, which includes a range of modern and contemporary artists including Gustav Klimt, Andy Warhol, Chuck Close, and Claude Monet.

Installation view of “Legacy: Photographs from Emily Fisher Landau’s Gift to the Whitney Museum of Art.” Photo: Courtesy the Fisher Landau Center for Art.

FISHER LANDAU CENTER FOR ART, Queens, NY
Founded by Emily Fisher Landau in 1991 (open to the public since 2002)

The Fisher Landau Center for Art was originally built in 1991 as a private storage facility for much of Emily Fisher Landau’s collection, and in 2002 it opened to the public. The center boasts 1,500 works, most of which date from “1960 to the present.” The Fisher collection includes works by Cy Twombly, Robert Rauschenberg, Matthew Barney, Jasper Johns, and Ed Ruscha, among many others. Landau is a trustee of the Whitney Museum, to which she has donated works by Willem de Kooning, Andy Warhol, Carl Andre, and Kiki Smith, to name just a few.

View of Glenstone. Photo: Scott Frances. Courtesy of Glenstone.

GLENSTONE, Potomac, MD
Founded by Mitchell and Emily Rales in 2006

Though Glenstone has held only four exhibitions at its 200 acre Potomac, Maryland, estate since 2006, the depth and strength of its collection can be seen in larger public museums on the east coast and in Europe this year alone. One of the Rales’s holdings featured prominently in the New York Jewish Museum’s recent Mel Bochner retrospective (see “Mel Bochner’s ‘Strong Language’ at The Jewish Museum”), and two others are on view in MoMA’s “Christopher Williams: The Production Line of Happiness” exhibition (see “Christopher Williams at MoMA: The Aesthetics of Smartypants”).

Exterior of the Goss-Michael Foundation. Photo: Courtesy the Goss-Michael Foundation.

GOSS-MICHAEL FOUNDATION, Dallas, TX
Founded by George Michael and Kenny Goss in 2007

Founded by pop-singer George Michael and his partner Kenny Goss, the foundation is based in Dallas, Texas, and showcases their personal collection of British contemporary art, including works like Damien Hirst’s Saint Sebastian Exquisite Pain. The foundation, whose first show was curated by Hirst, also provides exhibitions for emerging British artists who may not have gained much exposure in the US.

Olafur Eliasson, Waterfall (2004). Photo: Courtesy the Hall Art Foundation. © Olafur Eliasson.

HALL ART FOUNDATION, Reading, VT
Founded by Andrew and Christine Hall in 2007

The Hall Art Foundation was created by Andrew J. Hall, a former Citigroup trader who also dabbles in organic farming, and his wife, Christine. They have also partnered with Mass MoCA for a long-term installation devoted to the works of Anselm Kiefer from the Halls’ collection. In addition to Kiefer, the Halls’ collection of over 5,000 pieces of postwar and contemporary art includes works by Joseph Beuys, Eric Fischl, Andy Warhol, and Malcolm Morley, among others.

Daniel Joseph Martinez, Beauty…it rubs against one’s tongue it hangs there hurting one insisting its own existence finally it gets so one can stand the pain then one must have beauty extracted (2006). Photo: Mark Menjivar. Courtesy the Linda Pace Foundation.

LINDA PACE FOUNDATION, San Antonio, TX
Founded by Linda Pace in 2003

The Linda Pace Foundation was founded by its namesake in 2003. Linda Pace, an artist and collector, died in 2007. Her foundation manages and exhibits a collection of about 500 works, which is mostly focused on contemporary art from US artists, and includes works by Marilyn Minter, Wangechi Mutu, Dario Robleto, Isa Genzken, and others.

The interior of Pier 24. Photo: Benjamin Sutton.

PIER 24, San Francisco, CA
Founded by Andy Pilara in 2010

Billing itself as a “place to view and think about photography,” Pier 24 is a 28,000-square-foot warehouse space that serves as a home for the Pilara Foundation Collection. Its free admission (with appointment) offers the public a chance to see what is probably the largest dedicated space for photography on the West Coast, if not the entire country. In addition to exhibiting works from the Foundation’s collection—which includes virtually every major figure in contemporary photography, from Richard Avedon and Lee Friedlander to Catherine Opie and Jeff Wall—Pier 24 also mounts special exhibitions.

Sterling Ruby, Installation view, “American Exuberance,” Rubell Family Collection, Miami, 2011-12. Photo: Courtesy the Rubell Family Collection.

RUBELL FAMILY COLLECTION, Miami, FL
Founded by Donald and Mera Rubell, 1964 in New York (in Miami since 1993)

Housed in a 45,000-square-foot former DEA facility, the Rubells’ museum counts artworks by Andy Warhol, Kara Walker, Keith Haring, Cindy Sherman, and Jeff Koons in its collection. While it is considered to be one of the founding “Miami Model” private collecting institutions that helped spawn Art Basel in Miami Beach, several of the RFC’s recent exhibitions have traveled to public institutions including the Brooklyn Museum and the North Carolina Museum of Art.

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