Vancouver Sun

Realtor donates $12 million worth of art to National Gallery in Ottawa

- KEVIN GRIFFIN kevingriff­in@postmedia.com

Bob Rennie called his donation of 197 works of art to the National Gallery of Canada a “gift to the nation” as the country celebrates its 150th anniversar­y.

The works, valued at more than $12 million, are by Vancouver, Canadian and internatio­nal artists. They’re going to the National Gallery in Ottawa to make sure all Canadians have a chance to see them, said Rennie, a major art collector.

“We’ve been nurturing this relationsh­ip for over 10 years with the National Gallery,” Rennie said Tuesday in a phone interview. “We want to make sure the works are shown. The National Gallery has a really generous lending policy to other museums. It really is a gift to the nation. There is nothing else behind it.”

Rennie spoke from Venice, where he is at the 57th Venice Biennale, which opens to the public Saturday. This year, Canada’s representa­tive at the Biennale is Geoffrey Farmer, whose works are among the 197 donated to the National Gallery. Other works are by Brian Jungen, Damian Moppett, Rodney Graham and Ian Wallace.

A work by Doris Salcedo, a Colombian artist, is also included in the donation. The donation includes paintings, sculptures and mixed-media pieces. In recognitio­n of the gift, Rennie will get a gallery named after him. The National Gallery will call the Upper Contempora­ry exhibition gallery (B204) the Galerie Rennie Gallery.

The Rennie donation is being described as the biggest donation of contempora­ry art to the National Gallery in its history.

Marc Mayer, director and CEO of the National Gallery, said the donation turns the gallery into “the collection of record” for some of the country’s outstandin­g artists whose work is recognized around the world.

“It deepens the exhibition and the lending possibilit­ies for a museum whose mission is to preserve and disseminat­e our country’s most exceptiona­l artistic achievemen­ts,” Mayer said in a news release from the National Gallery.

Rennie is the principal of the Rennie Foundation. He shows his art collection at Rennie Collection at Wing Sang in the oldest building in Chinatown. An estimated $10 million was spent on renovation­s to the historic building at 51 East Pender to turn it into an office for Rennie’s real estate marketing firm and a showcase for his collection.

The Wing Sang was built in 1889 by Yip Sang, who brought Chinese labourers into the country to help build the Canadian Pacific Railway.

 ??  ?? Bob Rennie, Vancouver realtor and art collector, has donated 197 works of art valued at $12 million to the National Gallery of Canada.
Bob Rennie, Vancouver realtor and art collector, has donated 197 works of art valued at $12 million to the National Gallery of Canada.

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