174
174
oil on canvas board 10 h × 8 w in (25 × 20 cm)
estimate: $500–700
result: $126
provenance: Fischbach Gallery, New York | Collection of A. Aladar Marberger
This work will ship from Lambertville, New Jersey.
Founded in 1960 by Marilyn Cole Fischbach, the influential Fischbach Gallery helped to launch the careers of a range of major 20th century artists, including Alex Katz and Eva Hesse, and was known for pioneering the work of young minimalist artists in the 1960s. When Aladar Marberger was named gallery director in the 1970s, he successfully worked to shift the gallery’s focus from the contemporary avant-garde to painterly realism; his personal collection reflects this range of styles, with works from Ronald Bladen, Alex Katz, Raymond Parker, Georg Pfahler, Doug Ohlson, and Robert Swain alongside Wynn Chamberlain, Neil Welliver, and Nancy Hagin, among others. Marberger worked closely with the gallery’s artists, tirelessly supporting them in and outside of the gallery walls: one notable example is his facilitation of Gene Davis’s 1972 public work known as Franklin’s Footpath. The massive outdoor painting of the artist’s signature stripes on the ground lead up to the Philadelphia Museum of Art and, at 414 feet in length, it was the world’s largest painting at the time.
“[Aladar] didn’t just accept what was given to him…he created what he wanted around him. That is, of course, Aladar’s secret.” —Elaine de Kooning
The eldest of four siblings, Arnold Aladar Marberger was born in Philadelphia in 1947. His father, Albert, was a wholesale optician and Olympic gymnast who escaped Nazi persecution in Europe. Ethel, his mother, was an artist, mother, teacher, and bookkeeper of the family wholesale optical labratory. Marberger was “Arnold” before he became Aladar, the name he used once he started at Carnegie Mellon. He possessed his innate sense of poise and presentation from childhood—an insistence on beauty that wove through his illustrious career as a New York art dealer, his roles as beloved son, brother, and friend, his romantic relationships with poet John Ashbery and Joffrey Ballet founder Robert Joffrey, and his outspoken resistance to the stigma and silence of AIDS in the 1980s.