Jump to content

Thomas B. Clarke

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas B. Clarke
Thomas B. Clarke by Charles Frederic Ulrich (1884)
Shepherd of The Lambs
In office
1898–1900
Preceded byClay M. Greene
Succeeded byDeWolf Hopper
Personal details
Born
Thomas Benedict Clarke

December 11, 1848
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedJanuary 18, 1931 (1931-01-19) (aged 82)
Resting placeGreen-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, NY
SpouseFannie Eugenia Morris
Parent
  • George Washington Clarke (father)
OccupationArt Collector

Thomas Benedict Clarke (December 11, 1848 – January 18, 1931) was an art collector from New York City.

Biography

[edit]

He was born December 11, 1848, in New York City as the son of Dr. George Washington Clarke (1816–1908), headmaster of the Mount Washington Collegiate Institute of New York. He finished his education at his father's institution and started off as a businessman in linen and lace manufacturing, but also became a patron of American contemporary art.[1] He married Fannie Eugenia Morris in 1871 and became a patron of leading artists of the Hudson River School in the 1870s, including George Inness and Albert Bierstadt.[2] In 1883, his collection was shown as one of the first exhibitions at the American Art Association.

He also began collecting porcelain, and donated some to Union League Club of New York while he was chairman of the art committee there.[3] He retired from the linen business in 1888 to become a full-time art dealer and was an art advisor and agent for J. P. Morgan.[4]

Clarke was elected 8th Shepherd (president) of The Lambs in 1898. The closest connection he had with the theater was through his son, who was briefly married to actress Elsie Ferguson. Clarke was elected to the club in 1888 as a non-theatrical member; he joined the council almost immediately. He was corresponding secretary 1889-98, and served as shepherd for two one-year terms, 1898-1900.

Clarke bought the premises of the Suffolk Hunt Club in East Hampton, Long Island in 1917 as a summer home, while transforming his new residence in New York into an art gallery, today the home of the Collectors Club of New York. His daughter Grace, who married the equestrian painter Richard Newton Jr., had been a member there until her death in 1915, and Clarke published her books with illustrations by her husband in 1917.[5] He renamed his Long Island residence "Lindenland".[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Clarke, Thomas B. (Thomas Benedict), 1848-1931 on Winterthur.org
  2. ^ Catalogue of the Thomas B. Clarke collection of American pictures, 1891, by Thomas B. Clarke in the RKD
  3. ^ "Art Gossip" column 12 March 1911, The Sun (New York) newspaper article on Fultonhistory.org
  4. ^ Clarke, Thomas B. (Thomas Benedict), 1848-1931 record at the Frick Collection's Archives Directory for the History of Collecting in America
  5. ^ A Hunting Alphabet by Grace Clarke Newton, 1917, on Gutenberg books
  6. ^ The Suffolk Hunt Club in Hayground by Julie Green
[edit]