Daniel C. Searle (Q5216725): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 07:45, 5 September 2024

American businessman, art collector, museum trustee and conservative activist
  • Daniel Searle
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Daniel C. Searle
American businessman, art collector, museum trustee and conservative activist
  • Daniel Searle

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To better navigate the federal government’s regulatory maze, Searle recruited Rumsfeld, an old friend whose successful run for Congress 15 years earlier had been financed by Searle and other Chicago businessmen. Rumsfeld became Searle’s chief executive and president, and Searle took the chairman’s post. (English)
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Landscape with Smokestacks (English)
5 September 2024
Estate of the artist, from 1917 [stamp (Lugt 658), lower left in red]; sold, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, July 2–4 1919, lot 45. Nunes et Fiquet, Paris [Lemoisne 1946]. L. Wolff, Hamburg [Paris 1932 auc. cat.]. Unidentified private collector, to 1932 [Although the 1932 auction included the Simon and Silberberg collections, it remains unclear who owned this specific lot. It could have been Simon, Silberberg, or an unknown third party.]; sold, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, June 9, 1932, lot 5, to Dr. Helmut Lutjens, the Director of the Amsterdam branch of Paul Cassirer, for Friedrich and Louise Gutmann, Heemstede, Holland [annotated sale catalogue obtained from Walter Feilchenfeldt]; sent by Friedrich Gutmann to Paul Graupe, Paris, 1939; sent to the Wacker-Bondy storage facility on the Boulevard Raspail, by 1945 [letter from Arthur Goldschmidt of Paul Graupe to Friedrich Gutmann]. Hans Wendland, Paris, to his brother-in-law, Hans Fritz Fankhauser, Basel [Janis 1968]; sold by Hans Fritz Fankhauser to Emile Wolf, New York, 1951 [Janis 1968]; sold by Emile Wolf, through Margo Pollins Schab, New York, to Daniel Searle, Winnetka, Ill., 1987; given by Daniel Searle and sold by the Goodman (formerly Gutmann) family to the Art Institute, 1998. (English)

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