Friendships rooted in farming and a passion for art have inspired a California cattle breeder to give the Minneapolis Institute of Arts $25 million worth of Japanese art.
The gift, announced Tuesday, is among the largest in the MIA's history, consisting of nearly 1,700 objects — paintings, sculpture, ceramics, woodblock prints, bamboo baskets — spanning more than 1,000 years.
Combined with a pending bequest of about 500 Japanese objects from a New York collector, the Californian's gift will transform the Minneapolis museum into one of the country's largest and most comprehensive centers of Japanese art.
"I'm absolutely thrilled," said MIA director Kaywin Feldman. She has known the donors, Libby and Bill Clark, since the mid-1990s, when she ran Fresno's art museum, not far from the tiny Japanese museum and study center the Clarks set up at their home in Hanford, Calif., southeast of San Francisco.
Their friendship blossomed over almonds. Feldman's architect husband, Jim Lutz, is from an almond-growing family whose land is near almond farms owned by Clark.
"At art events, Bill would introduce me saying, 'This is Kaywin Feldman. She's a farmer's wife'," the director said, laughing.
Clark's interest in Japanese culture was spurred during tours of Japan while serving in the U.S. Navy. Back in the States, he built his family's dairy farm into an international leader in artificial insemination as founder and former CEO of World Wide Sires. Japan has twice awarded him honors for improving its dairy industry and promoting the study of Japanese art.
In the 1970s he began collecting seriously and, in 1995, launched the nonprofit Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture. As the collection outgrew its one-gallery home, they loaned art to other museums and organized traveling shows.