Ralph T. Coe

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Ralph Tracy "Ted" Coe (August 27, 1929 – September 14, 2010) was a notable art collector and scholar, best known for developing modern appreciation of Native American art.[1] "He was kind of the beginning player, enormously significant in the growth of appreciation of Native American art in the 20th century", noted a curator from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[1]

Biography

Coe grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, where his parents and sister were also involved in the art world,[2] with his father an art collector specializing in Impressionist art as a trustee of the Cleveland Museum of Art.[1] He earned a bachelor's degree at Oberlin College, and a master's at Yale University, both in art history.[2] At Yale he worked for John Pope Hennessy as a research assistant.[2] He worked at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and then at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.. He was hired by what was then the Nelson Gallery of Art as curator of painting and sculpture in 1959.[3]

His lifelong interest in Native American art was sparked serendipitously in 1955, when he happened upon a Northwest coast totem pole standing in a shop on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan.[1] This chance encounter led to an interest in collecting Native American art, over the years amassing a collection of more than 1,000 pieces that dated from prehistoric times to the 20th century. Included in Coe's collection were kachina dolls, war bonnets, ceramic pieces and beaded garments. The material he found was located by crisscrossing the country to visit Indian reservations across the United States, where he acquired pieces and learned about the history and significance of the articles he collected. In 1976, an exhibition based on his work titled Sacred Circles: 2,000 Years of North American Indian Art opened at the Hayward Gallery in London. The exhibit was relocated to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1977, where Coe served as the museum's director until 1982. After leaving his position as museum director, Coe said he felt liberated, exchanging "a pinstripe suit for a pair of jeans" and having "the Indian world became the real world" to him, "a beguiling world of color and visual excitement, of pungent and humorous people". A 1986 exhibition that debuted at the American Museum of Natural History was titled Lost and Found Traditions: Native American Art, 1965-1985, focusing on works of contemporary artists, which Coe developed as part of what The New York Times called "his determination to show that Indian art is a living tradition". An exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that included some 200 items from his collection opened in 2003, titled The Responsive Eye: Ralph T. Coe and the Collecting of American Indian Art.[1] Coe donated significant portions of his collection to the Met in 2003.[3]

Coe also influenced the work of other collectors, including Marion and Henry W. Bloch's well-regarded collection of Impressionist works[4][5] and Eugene V. Thaw.[2] Bloch said that he "would never have had a collection if not for Ted," and credited Coe with having guided the selection of virtually every piece in their collection.[3]

Coe died at age 81 on September 14, 2010, at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.[1]

Significant exhibitions curated

Books

  • Ralph T. Coe and the Collecting of American Indian Art

Further reading

  • Biography, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
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Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Hevesi, Dennis. "Ralph T. Coe, 81, Advocate for Native American Art, Is Dead", New York Times (obituary), 2010/09/26.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Ralph T. Coe, Collector of American Indian Art (1929-2010), In View, ArtInfo.com; adapted from interview with Coe published in The Art Newspaper (2003).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Spivak, Ann. "Ralph T. Coe, former Nelson director, dies at 81", The Kansas City Star, September 16, 2010. Accessed September 27, 2010.
  4. Ralph T. Coe, Former Director, Nelson-Atkins Museum, Antiques and the Arts, Sept. 21, 2010.
  5. Alice Thorson, "A tiny Renoir began impressive obsession Bloch collection gets its first public exhibition", The Kansas City Star (June 2, 2007).