Stefan Edlis (1925 in Vienna, Austria – October 15, 2019) was an Austrian born American art collector and philanthropist. As a collector he initially focused on Pop Art.[1]
Biography
Edlis escaped Nazi Reich annexed Austria with his mother and two siblings in 1941 and emigrated to the United States. He was later drafted into the U.S. Navy and stationed in Iwo Jima where he buried Japanese prisoners.[2][3]
Edlis founded Apollo Plastics in 1965 and initially only collected art made from plastic.[4] He later found out that art dealers told artists to create works in plastics because "Stefan would buy it".[5]
In 2015 Edlis and Neeson donated more than 40 works to the Art Institute of Chicago. With an estimated value of $400 million, it is the largest bequest in the museum's history. The museum in turn agreed to exhibit the collection for at least the next fifty years.[7] In 2000 Edlis and Neeson made a partial gift of their Jeff Koons's Rabbit to the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.[3][8]
In 2018 Edlis appeared in Nathaniel Kahn's HBO art market documentary The Price of Everything and delivered a quote from the Oscar Wilde play Lady Windermere's Fan which became the title of the film: "There are a lot of people who know the price of everything and the value of nothing."[9][10][11]
Personal life
Edlis was married twice.[12] Edlis and his second wife Gael Neeson, whom he married in the 1970s, pursued their passion for art together and had homes in Chicago and Aspen, Colorado.[13][14]