“I think one of the really interesting opportunities is the dialogue between what we’re doing, and the collections that have come before it,” he said, pointing specifically to a painting by Jerrell Gibbs that was inspired by a Matisse at the museum, and the CMA’s Schiller Collection of Social Realist art from 1940 to 1970 which includes work by artists including Barkley L. The CMA has agreed to show the collection on a regular basis, though Scantland isn’t concerned that the works will be sitting in storage.
“In the way that it moved me, my hope is that it’ll have the same meaning for thousands of people who see it at the museum,” Scantland continued. As he considered the conservation and installation logistics of the work, it became clear that Assemblage was destined for the museum. “It’s an incredibly moving, compelling portrait of our culture,” Scantland said. Depending on how it’s installed, the work is made up of 400 to 700 drugstore photographs of people ranging from Martin Luther King Jr.
Scantland acquired Lawson’s photo installation Assemblage (2010–present) from the 2020 group show “New Images of Man” at Blum & Poe. Three notable installations by Lauren Halsey, Deana Lawson, and Fordjour, respectively, are certainly well suited to a public institution. So the fact that I was able to bring it to Columbus, and that it doesn’t hang in my house, is even better.” He estimates that the family will donate “another dozen or more works next year.” “For me, a lot of collecting is being interested in the idea of the work, but eventually you want to have the work seen. “I wanted to live with them for some period of time before I lost them forever,” Scantland quipped. And some pieces, like a dazzling abstract painting by the young New Zealand–born artist Angela Heisch, previously hung in Scantland’s home in Columbus. Some, though not all, of the works were promised to and acquired specifically for the museum. Cann, who organized the show, echoed that sentiment, noting that artists in the exhibition are “shaping the narrative right now” and that future additions to the Scantland Collection will ensure that the CMA can “give voice to this moment for years to come.” The 27 artists of “Present Generations” include many whose works Scantland has collected in depth, though he also chose pieces that he believes tell the story of contemporary art over the past few years. “This significant gift will build upon that tradition,” she said in a statement, “allowing the Museum to share new voices and experiences with our visitors.” Tyler Cann, director of exhibitions and Pizzuti Family Curator of Contemporary Art, noted that the donation “brings the museum’s contemporary acquisitions program to another level.” Maciejunes, CMA’s executive director and CEO, noted that private collections have long been the foundation of the museum’s collection of modern painting. And along the way, for some of these artists, this will be their first institutional acquisition, which is a big deal.” “By doing it this way, the museum has access to it during my whole collecting career. “So many people give at the end of their collecting career, and I thought it would be an interesting opportunity to do it at the beginning,” Scantland told Artsy. Scantland, the founder and CEO of the advertising company Orange Barrel Media, has been avidly building a breathless collection of works by “artists of this generation” over the past few years.
And within the broader landscape of American museums’ efforts to create greater representation for historically marginalized artists, the Scantland Collection-which foregrounds BIPOC, female-identifying, and LGBTQ+ artists-will undoubtedly invigorate the CMA’s permanent collection, and its programming more broadly. This ongoing commitment to donate a significant number of works by living artists, within years of the pieces being made, is certainly novel. The Scantland family’s gift reflects the influential role that private collectors continue to play in public institutions. This first group of works includes paintings and installations by some of today’s most sought-after artists-including Derek Fordjour, Louis Fratino, Vaughn Spann, Jadé Fadojutimi, and Julie Curtiss-and will go on view at the museum on June 25th in the exhibition “Present Generations: Creating the Scantland Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art,” which will run through May 22, 2022. The family intends to add works to the CMA collection on a yearly basis for the foreseeable future. The works of the Scantland Collection were originally acquired by Pete Scantland, who has sat on the CMA board since 2009 and is currently its vice president.