Robert Mnuchin
Robert E. Mnuchin (born 1933) is an American art dealer and former banker. After a 33-year career with Goldman Sachs, he retired to fund the Mnuchin Gallery in New York City. As an art dealer, Mnuchin is particularly known for his long association with Dutch-American abstract painter Willem de Kooning.[1][2] In 2019, he set a record for the most money paid for a work by a living artist by bidding $80 million for Jeff Koons' Rabbit.[1] Mnuchin is the father of Steven Mnuchin, who was the United States Secretary of the Treasury in the first Trump administration.[1] Early lifeMnuchin was born in 1933,[3] and grew up in Scarsdale, New York. His parents, Harriet (Gevirtz) and Leon A. Mnuchin, were "modest collectors" of art, owning pieces by Franz Kline, Mark Rothko, and a piece by Henri Matisse later revealed as a fake.[1][4][5] Mnuchin graduated from Yale University in 1955.[4] CareerAfter graduating from Yale, Mnuchin served in the US Army for two years as a private.[4] He subsequently joined Goldman Sachs in 1957, staying there for 33 years. Mnuchin was named a general partner in 1967, headed the trading and arbitrage division in 1976, and joined the management committee in 1980. He, along with his co-worker at Goldman Gus Levy, developed Goldman's block trading business and ran the firm's equities division until his retirement in 1990 to pursue his interest in art.[4][6][7] In his final year before retirement, he earned a reported $8.7 million salary.[8] In 1992, Mnuchin opened his gallery, C & M Arts, with James Corcoran, a Los Angeles-based dealer.[4] Mnuchin became particularly known for his exhibitions of the work of Dutch-American abstract artist Willem de Kooning, including a 50-year retrospective.[1][2] Among other shows, the gallery hosted an exhibition of Jeff Koons' work that, according to Koons' biographer, helped restore the sculptor to prominence after a previous failed show.[1] His gallery has also exhibited work by Andy Warhol,[2] Donald Judd,[4] Frank Stella,[4] John Chamberlain,[9] Alexander Calder,[2] Philip Guston,[2] Damien Hirst,[2] Julian Schnabel,[2] David Hammons,[2] Sam Gilliam,[2] and Ed Clark.[2] In 2005, the name of gallery was changed to L&M Arts when Mnuchin entered into partnership with Dominique Lévy; she left in 2013 to open her own gallery nearby.[10][11] After Levy's departure, dealer Sukanya Rajaratnam was promoted to a partner at the again-renamed Mnuchin Gallery, remaining in the position until 2023.[12] In 2019, Mnuchin set a new record for the highest amount paid for an artwork by a living artist when he bid $80 million ($91.1 million after fees) in a Christie’s auction for Rabbit, a 1986 stainless steel sculpture by Jeff Koons, on behalf of an anonymous client later revealed to be hedge fund manager Steve Cohen.[1][13][14][15] Mnuchin's personal collection includes work by de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko.[4] Personal lifeMnuchin's first wife was Elaine Terner Cooper.[16] They had two children. One son, Alan G. Mnuchin, was a vice president at Goldman Sachs in 1995, when he married Kimberly E. Kassel.[17] The second son, Steven Mnuchin, also became a banker with Goldman Sachs[7][16] and Secretary of the Treasury under US President Donald Trump.[1] In 1999 Cooper was a vice president of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum's international directors council, and a director of the Byrd Hoffman Foundation.[16] She died on May 14, 2005.[18] Mnuchin married his second wife Adriana in 1963. Adriana Mnuchin founded retail enterprises Tennis Lady and Cashmere-Cashmere.[4] In 1995, she co-founded The Shakespeare Society (the first in the USA) and in 2009, Roundtable Cultural Seminars, an adult continuing education organization.[1] Robert and Adriana Mnuchin have one child together: a daughter, Valerie Mnuchin.[19] Robert and Valerie Mnuchin opened a restaurant together in Shelter Island, New York in 2023.[20] His step-daughter, Lisa Abelow Hedley, was nominated for an Emmy award for documentary film, and is married to the writer of Flashdance, Tom Hedley, with whom she has four children.[21] In 1990, Mnuchin and his wife Adriana bought the Mayflower Inn, a country house hotel in Washington, Connecticut,[22] which they turned into a Relais & Chateaux 30-room hotel, spa and restaurant, before selling it in 2007.[23] In 2011, they purchased a 5,850-square-foot (543 m2) Upper East Side house at 14 East 95th Street from Solomon Asser for $14.25 million, using his company, Nuke Properties LLC.[24] Initially listed in 2014 at $17 million, it sold in January 2016 to Alastair and Alisa Wood for a reported $13 million.[25] Mnuchin contributes to Democratic politicians in most election cycles and has declined to discuss his son's politics with reporters.[1] References
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