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Charles Benenson passed away peacefully at his home February 22, 2004 at the age of 91. He was a prominent figure in many circles, but for the readers of this list, he was significant for his love of African art. He was a founding board member and long time supporter of the Center for African Art (now Museum for African Art); as a generous supporter of African exhibition space at the Metropolitan Museum; and as a donor to the Yale University Art Gallery. But it is certainly as a collector that he made his most personal contribution to the field. Charles Benenson, with a fearless and often unconventional taste, quietly formed one of the great, distinctive, African art collections of the late twentieth century. Modest and self-deprecating, he guarded the strictest anonymity even when fifty major objects from his collection were published and exhibited.* As a collector, he broke all the rules. Collectors are supposed to flag after a decade of buying one kind of art, but his love of African art, awakened over thirty years ago, never waned. I would guess he bought at least one sculpture every month from the time I met him sometime in 1971 through the mid 1990's. In the midst of a hectic business life, he could never resist someone who wanted to show him a work of African art - he would look at anything. The most elegant art dealers from Europe and the newly arrived Africans with minimal English - all alike were cordially treated to his quick eye, fierce bargaining, and easy access. He loved to buy - and he loved to have and live with every single individual piece. No one was a more reluctant lender to exhibitions, and no one missed each specific presence in his life as much as he did when they left the house. The many hundreds of sculptures he has left to the Yale University Art Gallery are evidence of his singular eye. He chose those works one by one with appalling speed; in seconds, literally, he could understand a piece and see its quality. He also chose them with what might have been reckless disregard for what was fashionable or rare, or published and famous, or admired by other people. His only regard was for great sculpture, and that he could spot wherever it lay - in great classical Yoruba altars with their serene wide eyes, in funky recent masks with plastic flowers on them, and above all in the powerful, aggressive, demanding pieces from Nigeria and Cameroon that dominate the collection. This collection is a curator's nightmare and a curator's dream because so many of the works are completely unlike anything in other collections. They can be impossible to classify, impossible to write about - other than that they are breathtakingly wonderful. He didn't care very much about documentation or where something came from, and never bothered much with the anthropology. For those details and for authenticity he relied on someone else. He had one of the most insignificant shelves of African art books that I have ever seen. Judging from the results, no one ever needed them less. (Susan Vogel) * as "An American Collection" in Closeup: Lessons in Seeing African Art by J. L. Thompson and S. Vogel (1990, the Center for African Art and Prestel Verlag). Susan Vogel Director Prince Street Pictures, Inc. 112 Prince Street New York, N.Y. 10012
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