Rachael Blackburn provided a concise overview of the breadth and depth of the Cantor Foundation’s Rodin interests in her Foreword for the 2001 book, Rodin: A Magnificent Obsession. As she noted:
In 1978, when the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Foundation became the successor to the B.G. Cantor Art Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. Cantor provided the Foundation with its own endowment and its own collection. The concept was unique. A philanthropic foundation that was also an active collector and lender of works of art is rare – especially if it was not created from an artist’s estate to nourish that artist’s legacy.
Using these purchases and donations, the Foundation organized its own exhibitions and loaned them to museums all over the world. Between 1978 and 2009, nearly 9.5 million people visited Foundation-organized shows in the United States, Canada, Australia, Singapore, Venezuela, and other nations. The exhibitions included materials to help the public understand the sculptor’s achievements: family guides, teachers’ guides, docent training materials, brochures about the artist and his work, and Iris Cantor’s award-winning documentary The Gates of Hell, which many venues showed continuously during the exhibitions.
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Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Court at the North Carolina Museum of Art
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In 2009, the Foundation Board of Directors decided to discontinue the traveling exhibition program in order to concentrate on philanthropic interests. Pursuant to this development, it presented gifts of bronzes, prints, and Rodin-related objects to fifteen American museums. The most important of these gifts was a group of thirty Rodins and one Claudel that went to the North Carolina Museum of Art. This transformative gift celebrated the Museum's new building and established a Rodin study center in the American Southeast. The new center is comparable to those established by Mr. and Mrs. Cantor’s earlier donations of multiple works of art to the Brooklyn Museum of Art and to Stanford University. |
Honoring Mr. Cantor’s legacy, the Cantor Foundation has continued throughout the past decade to fund Rodin and related research by young as well as advanced scholars. This research has added to Rodin scholarship in such areas as Rodin’s illustrations for Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal, the collectors of Rodin during his lifetime, and the relationship of Rodin’s The Gates of Hell to Dante’s Inferno.