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  1. Sep 30, 2015 · Collector, patron, dealer, and later the founder of her own museum, Peggy Guggenheim managed to be at the center of the modern art world for nearly half a century by doing almost everything with...

  2. Guggenheim donated her home and collection to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation in 1976. Guggenheim was married twice; first, to Laurence Vail, in Paris in 1922 (left in 1928 for the English intellectual John Holms) and secondly, to the artist Max Ernst who she divorced in 1943.

  3. Guggenheim is married to fellow writer-producer and showrunner Tara Butters, [15] who has previously worked on projects including Marvel's Agent Carter, ABC's Resurrection and Dollhouse. [ 16 ] During the 2023 writers strike Guggenheim sided with the WGA and went on strike.

  4. Jun 3, 2024 · She met Laurence Vail whom she had first met in New York, they moved in together and he introduced her to his own bohemian friends. They married in 1922, soon producing two children. The couple trapezed through Europe then purchased their first home in Provence. Peggy kept animals and Laurence became a collage artist.

  5. Nov 22, 2023 · Perhaps one the most influential women in shaping the art world of the 20th century, Peggy Guggenheim held an exhibition in 1943 that was to be remembered as groundbreaking. Why is Peggy Guggenheims 31 Women exhibition so important for art history?

  6. Mar 13, 2021 · She moved to Paris in the 1920s where she became involved with the avant-garde artists living in Montparnasse and later married Max Ernst a prominent Surrealist. Whilst in Paris she educated herself about various movements, gathering one of the largest and most significant collections in modern art.

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  8. With her 1942 Exhibition by 31 Women Guggenheim also held the first exhibition solely devoted to women artists, though it had unexpected personal consequences. One of the artists was Dorothea Tanning with whom Max Ernst fell in love, leading to his divorce from Guggenheim in 1946, an event of which Guggenheim said, in her characteristic ironic ...