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With the $40 million they received for the old real estate, the center's executive director Henry Pillsbury and co-chairman Judith Pisar decided to put virtually the entire amount into a new building. At the same time, they launched a fund-raising campaign intended to create a $25 million endowment to cover the center's operating expenses. But the recession of the early '90s dried up donations. The fund-raising drive has brought in only $10 million so far, of which $4 million has yet to be paid. The annual budget of the center is expected to be about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DESIGN: An American in Paris | 6/13/1994 | See Source »

Laid-off staff members speak harshly of Pillsbury's and Pisar's "mismanagement." A former visual-arts curator, Michael Tarrantino, says that "Pillsbury's fantastic at greeting people, but he's not a manager." Says another ex-curator, Denise Luccioni: "There was no budget. I was just supposed to work, and we were told, 'We'll find the budget."' Even as the financial crisis was coming to a head in 1992, says Luccioni, the board of directors, uninformed about the money problems, was debating questions like "If you say American Center, does that imply Mexico and Canada?" Outsiders are also...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DESIGN: An American in Paris | 6/13/1994 | See Source »

...Pisar and Pillsbury adamantly reject the charges of incompetence. "When we conceived this building, economic times were different," Pisar says. "And the board approved everything. There was no dissension about the building or about our vision." Says Pillsbury: "It's not that we overspent; it's just that it's been a great struggle, as it has for every institution." Pillsbury, an heir to the flour fortune and a sometime actor and poet, will soon step down after 27 years as executive director to make "room for new leadership," as he puts it. Pisar seems headed for an emeritus position...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DESIGN: An American in Paris | 6/13/1994 | See Source »

...Pisar sees the greatest danger in the world in the economic dislocation that is sweeping the world. "Hitler was a progeny of unemployment and inflation, social unrest, and helpless politicians who could not cope." "Pisar observes, adding. "This is the stuff of which untold Holocausts are made...

Author: By Wendy L. Wall, | Title: The Long Road | 11/29/1982 | See Source »

Despite the severity of his warning. Pisar maintains that his ultimate message is deeply optimistic: "If there is one salient insight I have brought out of my experience, it is that the human sprit has an amazing and infinite ability to endure and survive. Man can rise from the ashes and your like the Phoenix--and I say this with the authority of the number engraved on my firm...

Author: By Wendy L. Wall, | Title: The Long Road | 11/29/1982 | See Source »

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