
Bob Rennie donates $22.8 million in art to the National Gallery of Canada: 'We want the works to be shown'
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Vancouver real estate marketer Bob Rennie is starting to think about his legacy, and where to place some of the 4,000-plus works in his art collection.
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The National Gallery of Canada appears to be at the top of his list. On Monday, the Ottawa institution announced Rennie and his family had donated 61 works to the gallery, valued at $22.8 million.
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The trove includes 40 works by the late Vancouver artist Rodney Graham and three works by Ai Weiwei, the outspoken contemporary art superstar from China.
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Rennie has already donated a couple of hundred works to the National Gallery, bringing the total to 260 pieces of art valued at $35 million.
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'I'm 69,' said Rennie, a wildly successful real estate marketer and internationally known art collector. 'My kids don't have the capacity to manage this collection, so I want a custodian that is better than me and that is well-funded for conservation, preservation, (and) blending.'
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He also notes the National Gallery has a new position designed 'to make sure that there's a lending practice across Canada to major, modest and small museums. We want the works to be shown.'
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There may be more art on the way.
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'We're discussing two major Kerry James Marshall works,' he said. 'I think (the gallery was) surprised that we might be willing to give them, because they're extremely valuable.'
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That isn't hype. A Marshall painting sold for $21.1 million US at Sotheby's auction in 2018.
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'It's very hard for museums to keep up with contemporary market prices,' he said.
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To get expensive works, art galleries rely on donations. Rennie said for a collector, donating art is like 'you're marrying off your children.'
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'You hope that they're marrying the right person, and the journey will be protected,' he said. 'And that's been our relationship with the National Gallery. We've been (that way) ever since our first donation to them 20 years ago. We've been very comfortable.'
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Rennie had local shows of his collection for a couple of decades at his own gallery in Chinatown, located at the historic Wing Sang building. Many of the works he has donated were at shows at his gallery, including a Rodney Graham exhibition.

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Japan Forward
2 hours ago
- Japan Forward
Japan's Economic Security Moment: Turning Resilience into Strategic Advantage
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Pandemic shutdowns idled Japanese car lines; Red Sea drone attacks recently drove 40-foot container (FEU) rates above $7,000; and the Sino‑American trade crossfire has shown how a just single bottleneck — lithography tools, gallium exports, even GPS signals — can be weaponized. Japan, which imports 90% of its primary energy and ranks fifth in world merchandise trade, sits squarely in the blast radius. Tokyo has reacted, but mainly with patchwork measures. The 2022 Economic Security Promotion Act created new screening powers and four programs for "Specified Important Materials," while the Japan-US Economic 2 + 2 ministerial has convened two ministerial meetings — in 2022 and 2023 — and a vice-ministerial session in 2024. What is still missing is a doctrine that converts defensive resilience into offensive relevance. Economic security is not an elite abstraction. 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Ottawa Citizen
3 hours ago
- Ottawa Citizen
Bob Rennie donates $22.8 million in art to the National Gallery of Canada: 'We want the works to be shown'
Article content Vancouver real estate marketer Bob Rennie is starting to think about his legacy, and where to place some of the 4,000-plus works in his art collection. Article content The National Gallery of Canada appears to be at the top of his list. On Monday, the Ottawa institution announced Rennie and his family had donated 61 works to the gallery, valued at $22.8 million. Article content Article content The trove includes 40 works by the late Vancouver artist Rodney Graham and three works by Ai Weiwei, the outspoken contemporary art superstar from China. Article content Article content Rennie has already donated a couple of hundred works to the National Gallery, bringing the total to 260 pieces of art valued at $35 million. Article content 'I'm 69,' said Rennie, a wildly successful real estate marketer and internationally known art collector. 'My kids don't have the capacity to manage this collection, so I want a custodian that is better than me and that is well-funded for conservation, preservation, (and) blending.' Article content Article content He also notes the National Gallery has a new position designed 'to make sure that there's a lending practice across Canada to major, modest and small museums. We want the works to be shown.' Article content There may be more art on the way. Article content 'We're discussing two major Kerry James Marshall works,' he said. 'I think (the gallery was) surprised that we might be willing to give them, because they're extremely valuable.' Article content Article content That isn't hype. A Marshall painting sold for $21.1 million US at Sotheby's auction in 2018. Article content Article content 'It's very hard for museums to keep up with contemporary market prices,' he said. Article content To get expensive works, art galleries rely on donations. Rennie said for a collector, donating art is like 'you're marrying off your children.' Article content 'You hope that they're marrying the right person, and the journey will be protected,' he said. 'And that's been our relationship with the National Gallery. We've been (that way) ever since our first donation to them 20 years ago. We've been very comfortable.' Article content Rennie had local shows of his collection for a couple of decades at his own gallery in Chinatown, located at the historic Wing Sang building. Many of the works he has donated were at shows at his gallery, including a Rodney Graham exhibition.


Vancouver Sun
4 hours ago
- Vancouver Sun
Bob Rennie donates $22.8 million in art to the National Gallery of Canada: 'We want the works to be shown'
Vancouver real estate marketer Bob Rennie is starting to think about his legacy, and where to place some of the 4,000-plus works in his art collection. The National Gallery of Canada appears to be at the top of his list. On Monday, the Ottawa institution announced Rennie and his family had donated 61 works to the gallery, valued at $22.8 million. The trove includes 40 works by the late Vancouver artist Rodney Graham and three works by Ai Weiwei, the outspoken contemporary art superstar from China. There are also 10 pieces by Palestinian artist Mona Hatoum, a large installation by British artist Yinka Shonibare, and three works by the late American artist Dan Graham, among others. Get top headlines and gossip from the world of celebrity and entertainment. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sun Spots will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Rennie has already donated a couple of hundred works to the National Gallery, bringing the total to 260 pieces of art valued at $35 million. 'I'm 69,' said Rennie, a wildly successful real estate marketer and internationally known art collector. 'My kids don't have the capacity to manage this collection, so I want a custodian that is better than me and that is well-funded for conservation, preservation, (and) blending.' He also notes the National Gallery has a new position designed 'to make sure that there's a lending practice across Canada to major, modest and small museums. We want the works to be shown.' There may be more art on the way. 'We're discussing two major Kerry James Marshall works,' he said. 'I think (the gallery was) surprised that we might be willing to give them, because they're extremely valuable.' That isn't hype. A Marshall painting sold for $21.1 million US at Sotheby's auction in 2018. 'It's very hard for museums to keep up with contemporary market prices,' he said. To get expensive works, art galleries rely on donations. Rennie said for a collector, donating art is like 'you're marrying off your children.' 'You hope that they're marrying the right person, and the journey will be protected,' he said. 'And that's been our relationship with the National Gallery. We've been (that way) ever since our first donation to them 20 years ago. We've been very comfortable.' Rennie had local shows of his collection for a couple of decades at his own gallery in Chinatown, located at the historic Wing Sang building. Many of the works he has donated were at shows at his gallery, including a Rodney Graham exhibition. 'I wanted to keep (the Graham works) all together, and (thought) the National Gallery would be a really safe place for it,' he said. A neon globe that was the centrepiece of Mona Hatoum's show at the Rennie gallery is not going to the National Gallery, however. He donated it to a museum in Qatar. He sold the Wing Sang building to the province in 2022, which converted it into a Chinese Canadian Museum. Much of his focus now is on lending art from his collection for exhibitions. He currently has 62 artworks on loan around the world, and is lending some Marshall paintings to an exhibition that will open this fall at the Royal Academy in London, England. His collection is largely focused on what he calls 'raising artists' voices.' 'Social justice is too weak a word. It's used too often,' he said. 'But raising artists' voices and making sure that topics of our time are raised.' He has blue-chip international art connections. He is chair of the collections committee at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. After 17 years of association with the Tate Gallery in London, he stepped down as president of the Tate Americas Foundation last November. He has also been a critic of the Vancouver Art Gallery's proposal to build a new facility. But he had breakfast on Monday with the two people currently running the VAG, Eva Respini and Sirish Rao, and said he now has 'the nicest relationship with the Vancouver Art Gallery that I have had since 2002.' And he is still collecting. 'I've acquired 342 works since Jan. 1, 2023.' jmackie@