New York's Whitney Museum announced yesterday that its chairman, the cosmetics executive Leonard Lauder, would donate $131 million to boost the institution's endowment. The gift is a transformational sum for the museum, which is devoted to American modern art, and one of the largest donations ever made to a museum endowment. But Lauder's gift has a catch, writes the New York Times: he's requiring the museum to halt plans to move out of its famous building on Madison Avenue.
The art world had wondered if the museum, frustrated by failed attempts to expand, would abandon the hulking black behemoth designed by Marcel Breuer in 1966. But Lauder was determined that they stay put: "Like so many architecture lovers, I believe the Whitney and the Breuer building are one." Lauder's gift brings the Whitney's endowment to $195 million—still only a shade of the $850 million endowment of MoMA, once chaired by his brother Ronald. (More Whitney Museum stories.)