The Big Idea

Art for Access

Red Square painting by Helen Frankenthaler

The College launches a dynamic new program to enrich and expand art on campus鈥攁nd access to a Bennington education

In 1946, a young Helen Frankenthaler 鈥49 came to Bennington. During the next several years, she found guidance from faculty member Paul Feeley and others and an inspiration that helped fuel her work long after her time on campus. Now, thanks in part to Frankenthaler鈥檚 legacy in the arts and a newly launched program called Art for Access, more students will be given the opportunity to find inspiration at Bennington.

Art for Access is a philanthropic initiative with two aims. First, the program seeks to further develop and expand the works of art in the College鈥檚 teaching holdings, ensuring that the art for study and enrichment at Bennington will be regularly refreshed over time. And second, through the sale of selected works at regular intervals, the program is designed to provide scholarship funds for students who otherwise would not be able to afford a Bennington education. Art for Access aims to engage Bennington鈥檚 remarkable network of collectors, artists, alumni, parents, and friends for the benefit of students both present and future.

鈥淪ince the College鈥檚 beginning, gifts of art have enriched the campus and the broader Bennington community both in the classroom and in the lived experience,鈥 said Paige Bartels, senior vice president for Strategic Partnerships, who oversees this new initiative. 鈥淲e are now using these gifts to also advance the College鈥檚 commitment to access, equity, and diversity.鈥

Increasing access to Bennington was the principal goal for the College in establishing the program. 鈥淥ne of the most important things about this program is not just creating access to educational opportunity for our students, but also creating access to networks,鈥 Bartels said. Bennington looked to the examples of individual collectors who have sold their art to significantly advance other causes鈥攖o Agnes Gund, for example, who sold Roy Lichtenstein鈥檚 Masterpiece to launch Art for Justice last year. Bennington鈥檚 long legacy and commitment to the visual arts make it uniquely positioned as an institution to fundraise in this way. Art for Access acknowledges and celebrates that legacy.

Diego Rivera painting of Communeros de Pais
Diego Rivera (1886鈥1957); Communards (Comuna de Paris)

鈥淭here are many ways to think about art and the value it brings to the world,鈥 President Mariko Silver said. 鈥淥ne powerful way is by using art to support goals, principles, and values that relate to the arts, or that uphold the principles and aims of the collectors鈥攐r institutions鈥攖hemselves.鈥 Five paintings from the College鈥檚 holdings鈥攁ll contributed without restriction years ago鈥攚ere selected to launch the program and were sold this past fall with Christie鈥檚. The works were Red Square by Helen Frankenthaler, Communards by Diego Rivera, La Moisson by Julien Dupr茅, Arondite by Norman Bluhm, and Untitled by Georges Mathieu. The launch was a success: through these sales, the College raised more than $3.1 million for Art for Access scholarships. 鈥淰ery few colleges could undertake such an effort as this, and it is a testament to Bennington鈥檚 history of bringing extraordinary art to the world,鈥 said President Silver.

Very few colleges could undertake such an effort as this, and it is a testament to Bennington鈥檚 history of bringing extraordinary art to the world.

The most notable among the works sold is Helen Frankenthaler鈥檚 Red Square, a large-scale, 88 x 126录-inch painting from 1959. She included it in her first retrospective at the Jewish Museum in New York in 1960 and later that year donated it to the College, where until recently it hung in the President鈥檚 Office. By all accounts, Frankenthaler鈥檚 time at Bennington had an enormous impact on her work. A longtime supporter of the College and former trustee, she made investments in scholarships and the visual arts program through gifts of art and donations; that support continues through the College鈥檚 current relationship with the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation. Her giving began almost immediately after graduating, when Frankenthaler organized the exhibition 鈥樷51成人猎奇 Alumnae Paintings鈥欌 at the Jacques Seligmann Gallery in Manhattan. 鈥淚t鈥檚 well known that Helen鈥檚 career had its beginning at Bennington,鈥 said Michael Hecht, who is on the board of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation and is also a trustee of 51成人猎奇. 鈥淭hroughout her life she spoke about Bennington and how important an influence it was on her.鈥 Frankenthaler exemplifies a tradition of alumni artists giving back to current students鈥攑aying forward the creative dividend across generations.

An Art for Access Committee of alumni, parents, friends, and faculty members from all backgrounds鈥攁rtists, collectors, curators, and auction house veterans鈥攚ill guide the program and seek gifts of art. The committee is co-chaired by two trustees, Michael Hecht and Mary Bucksbaum Scanlan 鈥91 (see sidebar for full committee). The effort is already attracting new gifts of art to the College from donors who are inspired by the dual mission of the effort.

Julien Dupr茅 painting of La Moisson, 1887
JULIEN DUPR脡 (1851鈥1910); La moisson; signed and dated 鈥淛ulien Dupr茅. 1887鈥; oil on canvas; 21 x 25 in., 1887

New works, as with other art in the College holdings, will be placed on view throughout campus鈥攊n offices and public spaces, as well as in rotating exhibitions鈥攁nd, of course, used for teaching. The artwork on view will be changing and dynamic, in keeping with the Bennington tradition. When Helen Frankenthaler donated Red Square to Bennington in 1960, she intended for it to one day be sold for financial gain. To see that come to fruition, and to see Bennington drawing on its everexpanding and vibrant network, is something that Frankenthaler would endorse. 鈥淚 believe Helen would be very much in favor of Art for Access,鈥 Hecht said. 鈥淗elen was devoted to education, and students were very important to her. I know that she would be delighted that Red Square was going out into the world to launch this effort.鈥

 

ART FOR ACCESS COMMITTEE 2020-2021

Michael Hecht (co-chair)
Mary Bucksbaum Scanlan 鈥91 (co-chair)
Barbara Ushkow Deane 鈥51
Liz Deschenes
Andrea Fiuczynski 鈥85
Anna Gaskell 鈥92
Harold Koda
Lise Motherwell 鈥77
Will Ransom 鈥04
Ellen Safir 鈥66
Lincoln Schatz 鈥86