
Charles Bronfman, left, and
Martin Indyk. |
TEL AVIV MUSEUM OF ART
Motti Warms Up
And Gets Calder
By Nina Boxer
ON
HULDAI, the mayor of Tel Aviv, likes to tell the tale about the
harried motorist who circled the city square a couple of times,
searching desperately for a place to park.
He looked up and said, “God, if you give me a
parking space, I’ll go to shul twice a day and be an observant
Jew.”
Just then he pulled into a parking spot.
“God, forget it. I don’t need it
anymore.”
The mayor’s story amused Stanley Batkin,
chairman of the American Friends of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art and
his elegant guests gathered at the elegant Rainbow Room in New York
to celebrate the museum’s 70th birthday.

Ron Huldai, Stanley Batkin and
Motti Omer. |
Honorary dinner chairpersons Arne and Milly
Glimcher presented a citation to Alexander S.C. Rower,
grandson of the late great sculptor Alexander Calder. Martin Indyk,
the former U.S. Ambassador to Israel, also received an award.
Rower, who founded the Calder Foundation to
manage the artist’s distinctive three-dimensional sculptures, told
how one piece of art got to Tel Aviv Museum.
When museum director and chief curator Mordechai
Omer sought to acquire a Calder piece, Rower said that
everything was on loan.
Omer wouldn’t take no for an answer.
Finally Rower said there was a tall sculpture
in the garden of the family house in Connecticut that had never been
seen in public.
“We’ll take it,” Omer said, sight unseen.

Alan Slifka, Arne Glimcher and
Ann Solomon of Pace
Gallery.
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Beginning next year, this “stabile” will be
on permanent loan to the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.
Collector/historian Arturo Schwartz,
head of the Italian Friends of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, told
about a Chinese philosopher who was asked why he lived in such poor
circumstances.
“When I have money,” he answered, “I buy
bread, and if there is anything left I buy a flower.”
The Tel Aviv Museum, Schwartz concluded, is
“the bread and flower of the Jewish people.”
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