Up to date artwork gallery proprietor and philanthropist Gloria Naftali spent a lot of her life turning a Chelsea warehouse at 508-534 West twenty sixth Road into an reasonably priced house for artists, photographers, and galleries and warranted its tenants it could stay that manner nicely after her loss of life.
“I was the first person on the floor and took a space with no walls and I was told by her I don’t ever have anything to worry about,” sculptor and mixed-media artist Arlene Rush, who has been a tenant within the constructing for 30 years, mentioned in an interview with Hyperallergic. “A lot of people were told that, since we’re long-term tenants here.”
The household’s property had different concepts. Two years after Naftali died in 2022 on the age of 96, the trustees of the Raymond and Gloria Basis quietly put the 400,000-square-foot industrial increase on the market for $170 million and started soliciting bids for a brand new proprietor final December, as first reported by the Industrial Observer.
Derek Wolman, an actual property lawyer with Davidoff Hutcher & Citron and co-executor of Naftali’s property, mentioned the first aim of the household basis was to assist the humanities, Holocaust training, and causes that fought antisemitism.
“Unfortunately, the Raymond and Gloria Foundation cannot afford to maintain the building in its current form and also carry out its mission to support the numerous charitable purposes for which it was formed,” Wolman mentioned in a press release to Hyperallergic. “We are hopeful we can find a buyer who will keep the character of the building intact as a community for artists where they can create and showcase their work.”
Judi Harvest’s “Venetian Satellite” (2006) within the foyer at 526 W twenty sixth Road (picture courtesy the artist)
Some questioned whether or not a 180-day clause of their leases meant they may very well be cleared out of their studios regardless of having four- to five-year leases.
“The way it was handled was my biggest complaint,” Harvest mentioned. “They’re biting the hand that feeds them. What would happen if we all moved out and they didn’t sell it right away. Is it better to have an empty building or a fully leased building?”
Others argue that Naftali wished her 10-story artwork area to stay a hub for galleries and artwork studios in perpetuity, based mostly on conversations that they had along with her and a line in her will that learn: “It is my wish, but I pose no legal obligation, that the Foundation maintain the character and the use (primarily for artist studios and galleries) of the building located at 508-534 West 26th Street, New York, New York, as the same shall exist at the time of my death.”
Alison Bradley, whose namesake gallery has been within the constructing since 2021, echoed these sentiments. “Gloria always wanted this building as a safe haven for the arts and people like me can’t have a gallery without this building,” Bradley instructed Hyperallergic. “This is the antidote to the corporate contemporary art world and they’re going to annihilate it. And the art world is going to suffer if that happens.”
Inbuilt 1910, the Chelsea warehouse was house to a ebook manufacturing firm earlier than Naftali transformed it into cheap artist studios in 1993. She opened Greene Naftali, one in all Chelsea’s first modern artwork galleries, two years later, and the constructing quickly attracted lots of of artists together with Glenn Ligon, Gary Simmons, Louise Fishman, and photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto. (Naftali’s co-founder Carol Greene didn’t return a name requesting remark.)
It has remained an important cease throughout Chelsea’s Thursday evening artwork crawls to close by galleries together with Thomas Erben, Morgan Lehman, Galerie Lelong, Alexander Grey Associates, and since-shuttered Mitchell-Innes & Nash.
For Mary Sabbatino, vp and accomplice at Galerie Lelong, the gallery’s transfer to Chelsea within the second week of September 2001 “is inextricably tied up with the trauma and loss of those days in New York.”
She recalled introducing painter Sean Scully to Naftali whereas they had been negotiating the lease for the area.
“I’m certain her admiration of his work was a reason we did get the lease,” Sabbatino mentioned. “We’ve lived a great part of the gallery’s story here and the gallery’s story will continue — here or elsewhere.”
Work by Motohiro Takeda at Alison Bradley Initiatives (picture by Dario Lasagni, courtesy Alison Bradley Initiatives)
Christine Berry, co-founder of Berry Cambell gallery, recalled how Naftali would “come to the building every day and say hi to everybody.”
“It’s a really wonderful community. One of the reasons we came to this building is because it was going to be an artist’s building and not any other business beyond the arts,” Berry instructed Hyperallergic.
Now the constructing’s future is unsure. A consultant from Colliers Capital Markets, which is advertising and marketing the constructing, mentioned they’ve obtained curiosity from a number of potential bidders, however the sale might take roughly six months.
“The Foundation is focused on identifying a buyer that will continue to maintain it as a home for the art community,” mentioned Zach Redding, managing director of Colliers Capital Markets.
Tenants are contemplating their authorized choices, which might embrace submitting a bid of their very own, maybe with one other basis or well-heeled patron of the humanities.
In the meantime, Chelsea Councilman Erik Bottcher and 4 different elected officers requested a gathering with the Naftali Basis within the coming weeks to debate discovering a monetary possibility that retains tenants of their studios.
“I strongly believe that the tenants should remain in place and that this building should continue to serve as an affordable hub for the arts,” Bottcher mentioned. “I am hopeful that through productive dialogue, we can work together to ensure that any future actions prioritize the best interests of the neighborhood and preserve its vibrant artistic community.”
For now, the constructing is bustling with Vogue Week exhibits and gallery openings whereas artists plan their schedules with none agency commitments that they may stay of their workspaces for the remainder of the 12 months.
“It’s a sad thing to keep pushing us out. We don’t need another luxury condo, we have plenty of them,” Harvest mentioned. “Why do people want to live in Chelsea? Because it’s interesting. You take away the interesting part, and they’re just looking at each other.”