WALTHAM, MASS.- Lizbeth Krupp, a leading patron of the arts and collector, has been named chair of the
Rose Art Museums Board of Advisors, Brandeis President Frederick Lawrence announced.
Krupp will serve a three-year term as volunteer leader of the Rose, home to one of New Englands principal collections of modern and contemporary art. She is a trustee of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; board member of the American Friends of the Israel Museum; trustee emeritus of the Boston Ballet; and director of the Krupp Family Foundation. In addition, Krupp formerly served on the advisory board for the American Repertory Theatre and co-chaired the New Center for Arts and Culture Task Force.
We are excited Liz will be leading the Rose Board of Advisors at this important juncture in the museums history, Lawrence said. Liz will partner with Christopher Bedford, the Henry and Lois Foster Director of the Rose, to integrate the Rose further into campus life and to make the museum a destination for art lovers in the Greater Boston community and beyond.
Krupp succeeds George Wachter, Sothebys worldwide co-chair of Old Master paintings.
While a student at Wellesley College, and later, as a member of its Davis Museum Advisory Council, Krupp saw the integral role that a great college museum can have in campus life. Its an indispensable asset to a college education, she said.
In addition to increasing faculty and student involvement with the instructional mission of the Rose, she also hopes to boost the museums off-campus profile.
I see myself as an ambassador and advocate for the Rose. It is a virtual treasure trove of modern and contemporary art, perhaps the greatest collection of post-World War II art in any university museum in this country, said Krupp. Chris has already brought incredible dynamism and vision to the museum; one can almost feel the energy with which he has infused the Rose since his arrival.
Krupp grew up in Miami Beach surrounded by art. Her parents, particularly her mother, nurtured an appreciation for the arts. In her husband, George, a Boston business executive and Brandeis trustee, she found the perfect partner to share her life and love of the arts. They have long believed in the importance of art within education and, more broadly, as a transformative tool for changing lives, she said.
The Krupps built their collection with paintings by late 19th- and early 20th- century American artists, though in recent years they have focused on contemporary art: paintings, sculpture and video. They also collect Greek antiquities, journalistic photography, rare books and antique dolls.