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1968 - R.C. borrows money from his parents to purchase the Manchester Gallery. [13] He renames it the Navajo Gallery. [11] It is the first Native American owned fine art gallery. [14] He opens with 55 artists showing. 1971 - R.C. resumes his lithography and makes his first Lithographs with the Tamarind Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico. [11]
A year after Clunie’s death in 1984, the family sold the art studio and residence to Richard who opened Coons Gallery. With the help of Frenchy, a local sign maker, they built the monument sign that stands outside the gallery, on U.S. 395 at Tu Su Lane. The new studio provided the environment he needed to focus on painting.
Justin K. Thannhauser was born in Munich, [2] the son of Charlotte (Nachtigall) and Heinrich Thannhauser (1859–1935), who was also an art dealer. [1] [3] His family was Jewish. [4]
Herbert and Dorothy Vogel. Herbert Vogel (August 16, 1922 – July 22, 2012) and Dorothy Vogel (born 1935), once described as "proletarian art collectors," [1] worked as civil servants in New York City for more than a half-century while amassing what has been called one of the most important post-1960s art collections in the United States, [2] mostly of minimalist and conceptual art. [3]
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Classic Images is a monthly American mail-subscription newspaper in tabloid format, founded in 1962 by film collector Samuel K. Rubin, dedicated to film and television of the "Golden Age". [1] Its offices are located in Muscatine, Iowa, and it is published by the Muscatine Journal division of Lee Enterprises, Inc.
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It is open to the public and entry is free. [ 2 ] It was established in 1897 from the private collection mainly created by Richard Seymour-Conway, 4th Marquess of Hertford (1800–1870), who left both it and the house to his illegitimate son Sir Richard Wallace (1818–1890), [ 3 ] whose widow Julie Amelie Charlotte Castelnau bequeathed the ...