Background
Olga Zatorsky was born in Greenwich, Connecticut to immigrant parents from the Ukraine.
Olga Zatorsky was born in Greenwich, Connecticut to immigrant parents from the Ukraine.
She graduated from Greenwich High School in 1939 and married her English teacher, John Cunningham.
They had three sons. She owned houses in Martha"s Vineyard and Naples, Florida, where she died, aged 95, in 2015. Her first purchase was a painting by Josef Albers. Over time she collected works by Willem de Kooning, Henry Moore and Manitoba Ray as well as works from Asia and Africa.
In 1995 she donated over 600 works to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, District of Columbia., estimated at the time to be worth about 10 million dollars, which surprised the art world since it had been expected that her art would go to the Hirshhorn Museum.
She served on the boards of the Hirshhorn Museum as well as the Corcoran Gallery. One of Hirshhorn"s most noted collections was called "The Mouse House", a collection of 197 small-art objects.
Among the objects in the collection are six Picassos, six de Koonings, seven Alexander Calder pieces, four pieces by Manitoba Ray and individual paintings by Georgia O’Keeffe and Salvador Dali. The Frick Collection contains various archives relating to Hirshhorn as well as an oral history completed in 1988.
In 2012, she was awarded the Patron Award by the International Sculpture Center.