Herb Vogel never earned more than $23,000
a year. Born and raised in Harlem, Vogel worked for the post office in
Manhattan. He spent nearly 50 years living in a 450-square-foot one-bedroom
apartment with his wife, Dorothy, a reference librarian at the Brooklyn Public
Library. They lived frugally. They didn't travel. They ate TV dinners. Aside
from a menagerie of pets, Herb and Dorothy had just one indulgence: art. But
their passion for collecting turned them into unlikely celebrities,
working-class heroes in a world of Manhattan elites.
While their coworkers had no idea, the
press noticed. The New York Times labeled the Vogels the "In Couple" of New
York City. They counted minimalist masters Richard Tuttle and Donald Judd among
their close friends. And in just four decades, they assembled one of the most
important private art collections of the 20th century, stocking their tiny
apartment floor-to-ceiling with Chuck Close sketches, paintings by Roy
Lichtenstein, and sculptures by Andy Goldsworthy. Today, more than 1,000 of the
works they purchased are housed in the National Gallery, a collection a curator
there calls "literally priceless." J. Carter Brown, the museum's former
director, referred to the collection as "work of art in
itself."
The Vogels had no formal training in art
collecting. They didn't aspire to open a gallery or work in museums. They
bought art the way any amateur collector shops: for the love of the individual
pieces and the thrill of a good deal. But you don't accumulate a priceless
collection of anything by accident. Herb and Dorothy developed a methodical
system for scouting, assessing, and purchasing art. When it came to mastering
their hobby, the Vogels were self-trained professionals. This is how they did
it.
Read the entire story from Mental Floss here
Read the entire story from Mental Floss here
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