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You are here: Home / Uncategorized / FLINT-BORN ARTS PATRONESS, FRIEND OF KENNEDYS DEAD AT AGE 99

FLINT-BORN ARTS PATRONESS, FRIEND OF KENNEDYS DEAD AT AGE 99

April 21, 2019 by tbreport Leave a Comment

Jayne Wrightsman, New York’s Most Glamorous Arts Benefactor, Is Dead at 99

APRIL 21, 2019
Vogue 1960
Photographed by Cecil Beaton, Vogue, 1960

Jayne Wrightsman, one of New York City’s best-dressed philanthropists and benefactors of the arts, has passed away at 99. She died on Saturday in her home in Manhattan.

Wrightsman was born in Flint, Michigan, as Jane Larkin. Her father ran a construction company. When she was 12, her parents divorced, and she moved to Los Angeles with her mother and siblings.

Along with being a stylish fixture on New York City’s high-society scene, Wrightsman was particularly known for her involvement with the Metropolitan Museum of the Art. According to the New York Times, Wrightsman, along with her late husband, Charles B,. Wrightsman, an oil tycoon who died in 1986, gave the museum some of its most important European paintings over the years, including a rare collection of 18th-century French decorative arts, including Monet’s “The Garden of Monet’s House in Argenteuil.”

While Wrightsman had no formal training in the arts, she became a connoisseur of the field through her travels and studies. She eventually became a trustee at the Met, having given millions to the institution for buying new art and refurbishing its galleries. “Jayne Wrightsman’s incredible impact on the Metropolitan Museum of Art cannot be overstated,” Max Hollein, the Met’s director, told the Times on Saturday. “Through her beneficence, expertise and guidance, she has forever transformed the museum, and the museum will be forever connected with her.”

Having lived her early years in Michigan and Los Angeles, Wrightsman met her late husband when she was only 24-years-old. (He was 48.) During their time together, they both developed an appreciation for the arts as they travelled; they collected an impressive collection of 18th century French decorative arts together, including furniture, as well as paintings by Europe’s most celebrated artists.

They also developed an important friends circle along the way of politicians, editors, curators, and the like. (Her Manhattan dinner parties were iconic for the guest lists alone.) They were particularly close friends of President John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline, who were their neighbors in Palm Beach; Wrightsman was also friends with Annette de la Renta, wife of the late fashion designer Oscar de la Renta, among many others.

Though she often shied away from attending public events or parties, Wrightsman’s glamorous presence was indeed well known whenever she entered a room; she was the definition of high New York style. Back in 1965, her elegant gowns and signature bouffant even earned the honor of landing on the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame.

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