Raymond D. Nasher
is one of this country’s leading collectors
of modern and contemporary sculpture. He
also was one of the first real estate developers
in the United States to place art, primarily sculpture,
in commercial retail complexes. He did this
believing that art nurtures intellectual and aesthetic
curiosity and enhances the overall experience
of every environment.
Mr. Nasher and his late wife, Patsy, began collecting
art nearly fifty years ago. Starting by
building an important collection of pre-Columbian
art, over time the collection evolved into one
of the most extensive and important collections
of modern sculpture in private hands. Mrs.
Nasher used to say about the couple’s partnership
in building the collection, “It’s
not that we collected art, but that the art collected
us!”
In 1965, when Mr. Nasher opened his first retail
shopping center in Dallas—NorthPark Center—he
made a commitment to installing art throughout
the Center. To do this, he designed a structure
inside and out that met the needs of the retailers
and had the space necessary to display large sculptures
by artists such as Jonathan Borofsky, Mark di
Suvero, Henry Moore, Beverly Pepper, and George
Segal. The design also included special
interior water features, open spaces, as well
as exterior landscape, all of which complement
the art. NorthPark Center and the nearby
NorthPark National Bank (now Comerica Bank)—another
project of The Nasher Company—have both
won architectural and design awards, and have
become models for other developers throughout
the world.
Mr. Nasher has played a leading role in the development
and growth of many of the major arts organizations
in Dallas. He has also focused attention
on business support of the arts in Dallas by establishing
the Dallas Business Committee for the Arts (DBCA)
in 1988, which contributed to increased business
support of the arts in Dallas from $4.5 million
in 1988 to approximately $24 million annually
today.
Mr. Nasher has been a member of the national
Business Committee for the Arts, Inc. (BCA) since
1987, and in October 2002, was appointed Chairman.
He also serves as a member of The National Council
of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and
on the International Council of the Tate Gallery
in London. He has been a board member of
The Dallas Museum of Art, The Dallas Opera, The
Dallas Symphony, the Dallas Theatre Center, Ballet
Dallas, and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.
Mr. Nasher is Chairman of The Nasher Foundation
and Chairman of Comerica Bank-Texas. He
was appointed to serve on the President’s
Committee on the Arts and the Humanities by President
George H.W. Bush in 1990, by President William
Jefferson Clinton in 1999, and by President George
W. Bush in 2002. He is currently Vice-Chairman
of the Committee. From 1992-1995 he served
on the Texas Commission on the Arts. From
1988 to 1992 he was the Ambassador of Cultural
Affairs for the City of Dallas. He received
the American Institute of Architects Award for
“Design of the Decade—1960’s”
for NorthPark Center; the Award for Distinguished
Service to the Visual Arts given by the University
of North Texas; and the 1994 Flora Award.
The Nasher Company received Business in the Arts
Awards in 1976 and 1987 in recognition of its
outstanding commitment to business-arts alliances.
Mr. Nasher has also served in several governmental
positions, including: Chairman, National
Commission of Urban Development, 1964-1965; Executive
Director of the White House Conference on International
Cooperation, 1965; member of the President’s
Commission on Urban Housing (Kaiser Commission)
1967-1968; United States Delegate to the General
Assembly of the United Nations, 1967-1968; member
United States Commission to UNESCO, 1962-1965;
Member – United States – German Cooperative
Delegation, 1967; Board Director, the United Nations
Association of the USA. He has been a member
of the Council on Foreign Relations since 1995
and is currently a member of the National Council
of the United Nations Association of the USA.
Mr. Nasher is the 2003 recipient of the H. Neil
Mallon Award of the World Affairs Council of Greater
Dallas. |