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Joseph H. Hirshhorn Papers

Smithsonian Libraries and Archives

Object Details

Topic
Art
Art museums
Art -- Collectors and collecting
See more items in
Joseph H. Hirshhorn Papers
Historical Note
Joseph Herman Hirshhorn was born in 1899 in Mitau, Latvia, the twelfth of thirteen children. His father died when Joseph was still an infant. In 1905 his mother emigrated with her children to the United States and settled the family in Brooklyn, New York, where she found work in a purse factory, six days a week, twelve hours a day. To keep the family afloat, the children had to help, and Joseph left school at the age of twelve to sell newspapers. By the age of fourteen, he was an office boy for the firm that later became the American Stock Exchange. In a short time, he became a chartist, charting stocks for an editor on Wall Street. In 1916 he took a small sum he had saved and launched himself as a broker, earning $168,000 the first year. In 1924 Hirshhorn became a broker's broker, dealing in bank stock and unlisted securities. He made his first million long before he reached the age of thirty. In 1929 he distrusted the booming stock market and pulled out completely with four million dollars just two months before the crash. In the 1930s, he began to invest heavily in Canadian mining, discovering gold and then uranium. He secretly acquired mining rights to some 56,000 acres, which became two huge uranium mines. By the mid 1950s, his interests stretched across Canada and the United States, involving him in more than two dozen mining and oil companies. Shortly thereafter, he began to reduce his business interests. His fortune was once estimated at more than one hundred million dollars. Although the grinding poverty of his childhood spurred Hirshhorn to create a fortune, he also credited it with his love of art. His mother managed to buy her children a piano, and an insurance policy with Prudential sent a yearly supply of calendars into the home. The calendars included reproductions of various art works, which Joseph pinned to his wall. Joseph H. Hirshhorn with Smithsonian Regent and Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller, at the Museum's First Anniversary, December 9, 1975. When he began to make money, he began to buy art, both paintings and sculpture. Using only his own tastes as guidance, he bought and bought, until the size of his private collection had grown to some 5,600 pieces. In the 1950s, he hired an art dealer, Abram Lerner, to curate his collection. Even Lerner could not always keep track of the acquisitions. Hirshhorn would sweep into a gallery and make so many purchases that the dealer felt his head spinning. Hirshhorn relied solely on his own "feel" for each piece he bought. He once told a dealer who was advising a purchase for investment purposes, "Don't tell me how to make money. I don't collect art to make money. I do it because I love art." (From Art in America, summer 1958.) In 1966 President Lyndon B. Johnson announced that Hirshhorn would donate his entire collection to the United States along with one million dollars to supplement the collection. A new museum would be constructed on the Mall as part of the Smithsonian Institution and would be named the Joseph H. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. The new museum opened in 1974 with Abram Lerner as its first director. It was called the most important development in art for the Capital since the Andrew Mellon gift of the National Gallery of Art. Hirshhorn's collection includes an international range of sculpture, but its paintings are primarily modern American. The collection has paintings by Thomas Eakins, Jackson Pollock, and Stuart Davis, and sculpture by Henry Moore, Picasso, and many others. Hirshhorn was married four times, lastly to Olga Zatorsky Cunningham, who shared his passion for art. His marriages produced four children and two adopted ones. He died in 1981.
Extent
29.78 cu. ft. (27 record storage boxes) (1 document box) (3 16x20 boxes) (3 oversize folders)
Date
circa 1926-1982 and undated
Archival Repository
Smithsonian Institution Archives
Identifier
Record Unit 7449
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Artifacts
Manuscripts
Black-and-white photographs
Citation
Smithsonian Institution Archives, Record Unit 7449, Joseph H. Hirshhorn Papers
Genre/Form
Artifacts
Manuscripts
Black-and-white photographs
Introduction
This finding aid was digitized with funds generously provided by the Smithsonian Institution Women's Committee.
Descriptive Entry
This collection consists of the personal papers of Joseph Hirshhorn, documenting his correspondence with artists and dealers, 1946-1981. Also included is his general and social correspondence; awards, plaques and diplomas; personal newspaper clippings, 1955-1981; fan letters; some biographical material; and many photographs. Not included in this collection is material relating to his business interests. Artists' correspondence in Boxes 3-7 were donated by Olga Hirshhorn.
Restrictions
Box 31 contains materials restricted indefinitely; see finding aid; Contact reference staff for details.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503511117863-1503511117878-0
Metadata Usage
CC0

In the Collection

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  • Hayes, David

  • Box 22

  • "Joseph H. Hirshhorn Day" Washington, DC, 1974

  • Ipousteguy, Jean-Robert

  • Motherwell, Robert

  • Glazer, Bernard

  • Von Schlegell, David

  • Barbara Babcock Milhouse

  • JHH and Olga Dancing

  • Otero, Roberto

  • SI Office of Public Affairs News Releases - 1974

  • "The Nutmegger" Bicentennial Edition, September 1976

  • General Correspondence, 1969

  • Box 3

  • Rose, Herman

  • National Art Materials Trade Association - 1967

  • Schuler, Melvin

  • C, Unknown

  • Stark, Margaret

  • Los Angeles - Taken by Naomi, June 1968

  • Scofield, John

  • Groundbreaking, 1969

  • Rauschenberg, Robert

  • "Action" shots of JHH

  • Bar, Nelli

  • Horatio Alger Award

  • Ms. Marian King, February 1980

  • Wave Hill, 1977-1980

  • Photographs

  • Hawley, Brenda

  • Russel, John and Bernier, Peggy

  • Scrapbook, 1953-1955

  • Statues from Round Hill - October 1972 (removed to Box 30)

  • JHH Birthday Celebration, 1979 (80 Years)

  • Kulicke, Robert

  • Meyerowitz, Patricia

  • Levine, Naomi

  • Olitski, Jules

  • Cain, Dixon

  • JHH Portraits - Karsh

  • Adams, Ansel

  • Goldberg, Elias

  • Jenkins, Paul

  • Roth, Frank

  • Art Correspondence, 1946-1974 (18 folders)

  • Haseltine, Herbert

  • Opening Night

  • Smith, David

  • Press Coverage of JHH

  • Chamberlain, John

  • Dorazio, Piero

  • JHH Museum - Correspondence, 1971-1972

  • Joyce Cutler Shaw, 1976

  • JoAnn Hirshhorn (from Box 25)

  • Key of Baltimore

  • Berry, Glenn

  • Soshana

  • Mason, Raymond

  • De Rothschild, Guy

  • Eichholz, Robt.

  • Portraits of JHH

  • Oliveira, Nathan

  • Business Photos

  • Famous May 21 Luncheon (Lyndon B. Johnson)

  • Paradise Island by Frank Lloyd, 1969

  • Kramer, Hilton

  • RESTRICTED FILES.

  • Opening Night, 1974

  • With Georgia O'Keeffe at Hirshhorn, November 9, 1977

  • Feitelson, Lorser

  • Assorted

  • Rickey, George

  • Zilzer, Gyula

  • Holman, Libby

  • Box 16

  • Biography: Magazine Articles

  • Garden Tour Correspondence, 1967

  • Gabriel, Romano

  • Karina, Elena

  • JHH in Mirror, 1975

  • Gross, Chaim

  • JHH Duplicate Clippings, 1955-1973 (19 folders)

  • Humphrey, Hubert

  • Biography: Current Biography, 1966

  • Davis, Sophie

  • Pomodoro, Arnaldo

  • Godfrey, Richard

  • Cunningham, Mike

  • Baizerman, Eugene

  • Key to the City of Washington

  • MacIver, Loren

  • Korner, John

  • JHH - Bachrach Portrait

  • Stock Interests, 1978-1979

  • Rayne, Max

  • Jolley, George

  • Moynihan, Daniel

  • Biography: Clippings and Reprints from Newspapers

  • Engman, Robert

  • Ripley, S. Dillon 1965-1981 (4 folders)

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View Finding aid

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