Edward Warburg was an American philanthropist and patron of the arts from New York City.
Background
Edward Warburg was born on June 5, 1908 in White Plains, New New York His father, Felix M. Warburg, was a partner of the investment bank Kuhn, Loeb & Company His mother, Frieda, was the daughter of Jacob Schiff.
He grew up at the Felix M. Warburg House, a mansion on Fifth Avenue now home to the Jewish Museum on the Upper East Side of New York City.
Education
He graduated from Harvard University in 1930.
Career
He taught Modern Art at Bryn Mawr College and he was vice director for public affairs of the Metropolitan Museum of Artist He collected many paintings and sculptures, and donated the bulk of them to museums, especially the Museum of Modern Artist He was raised in the Jewish faith.
Warburg was educated at the Middlesex School, a boarding school in Concord, Massachusetts.
While at Harvard, he took courses with Edward West. Forbes and Paul J. Sachs. Furthermore, Warburg co-founded the Harvard Society for Contemporary Art with Lincoln Kirstein and John Walker in 1928.
The student organization exhibited the works of the likes of Edward Hopper and Georgia O"Keeffe. During World World War II, Warburg served in Normandy, France, with the United States Army.
Warburg taught Modern Art at Bryn Mawr College, a women"s college in Pennsylvania.
He served as vice director for public affairs of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City from 1971 to 1974. Warburg self-published a biography of Sydney South. Spivack in 1981, entitled Sydney South. Spivack (1907-1969). Two years later, in 1936, Warburg and Kirstein co-founded the American Ballet, a precursor to the New York City Ballet.
Warburg is credited with bringing George Balanchine to the United States.
Warburg patronised Balanchine"s early ballets in the United States. He also patronised the first Stravinsky Festival at the Metropolitan Opera House, "commissioning the score for Jeu de Cartes."
Warburg joined the Board of Trustees of the Museum of Modern Art in 1933.
He served on the Board of Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art from 1988 to 1992. Over the years, Warburg collected many paintings by Georgia O"Keefe and Edward Hopper, but also by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Paul Klee, and Joan Miró.
He also collected sculptures by Ernst Barlach, Gaston Lachaise, Constantin Brâncuși and Alexander Milne Calder.
He donated many of his paintings and sculptures to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Additionally, Warburg donated to Jewish causes. He served as the Chair of the Art division of the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York the 1930s.
He made charitable contributions to the Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the Habima Theatre in Israel as early as the 1930s.
In a 1933 article published by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, it was explained that he did not "view Palestine as a national homeland but as a university center in which the ideals and culture of the Jewish people may have an opportunity to flourish and spread throughout the whole world."
Warburg died of heart failure in September 1992 at the Norwalk Hospital in Norwalk, Connecticut.