Sam Salz


Sam Salz was an art dealer, art collector, and patron of the arts. He was born March 12, 1894 in Radomyśl Wielki, then in Galicia, Austria-Hungary ; he died on March 21, 1981, in New York City.

Personal life and start as an art dealer

The son of a Torah sofer, Salz was born in 1894 in the Galicia province of Austria-Hungary. At age 17, he traveled to Vienna to study painting and art history at the Academy of Fine Arts. During World War I he served in the Austrian army. After the war, Salz traveled to Paris to resume his study of art. After a short time working as an artist, he gave up his artistic plans and began to work in the art market. He became friends with one art dealer, Gaston Bernheim-Jeune, and worked for another, Ambroise Vollard, beginning around 1920.
Salz's marriage to the dancer Marina Franca ended in divorce. Marina and Sam had two sons, Marc and Andre. In 1970, Salz married Janet Reisner Traeger. He died in 1981 at the age of 87 in New York City.

Professional life

In the 1920s he opened a gallery in Cologne, where Salz sold works by Marc Chagall, Hans Arp, Georges Braque, and James Ensor. From 1926 to 1930 he worked in Brussels and then worked in Paris and London by the end of the 1930s. He purchased works of art directly from artists such as André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck, Édouard Vuillard, Pierre Bonnard, and Chaim Soutine. He got to know Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse personally. This period also saw several portraits of Sam Salz, including a watercolor by James Ensor, a pastel by Édouard Vuillard, and a photograph of August Sander.
Salz visited the United States for the first time in 1936. He settled in New York City in 1938. After the Second World War, he was involved in the repatriation of stolen art works. In New York, he began to specialize in the art of Impressionism. From his New York base, he sold artworks by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, Claude Monet, Édouard Manet, Alfred Sisley, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. Although he used an outside gallery, he created a private gallery in his home on East 76 Street, to which he asked potential buyers to come in order to show them his private art collection.
His clients have included renowned museums and collectors like Albert C. Barnes, Paul Mellon, Henry Ford II, David Rockefeller, and William S. Paley. There were personalities from the film such as Greta Garbo, Orson Welles, Billy Wilder, Kirk Douglas, and Edward G. Robinson. Among Salz's friends were writer Erich Maria Remarque, pianist Vladimir Horowitz, and painter Diego Rivera.

Charitable donations

He donated art to several institutions. He gave sketches by Paul Gauguin to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. He donated to the Louvre Édouard Manet's Asparagus. To the Art Institute of Chicago, he gave the paintings Virgin and Child with Saint Elizabeth and John the Baptist as a child by Jacques Blanchard. He gave Claude Monet's The Bodmer Oak, Fontainebleau Forest to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. He donated the sculpture The Serf by Henri Matisse and paintings and drawings by Édouard Vuillard to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. In recognition of his gifts to the museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art named Salz a Fellow in Perpetuity of the Museum. In Jerusalem, Salz underwrote the construction of a small park that was named for his father, who was murdered by the Germans during the Holocaust.
During the Kennedy administration, he donated to the White House in Washington, D.C., the painting The Declaration of Independence of the United States of America, July 4, 1776 by Charles Édouard Armand-Dumaresq.