In the 1940s the Arensbergs began to look for a permanent home for their collection. In 1941, a group around actors
Vincent Price,
Edward G. Robinson,
Fanny Brice, and
Sam Jaffe tried to get the collection to stay on the West Coast, for the Modern Institute of Art in Beverly Hills. In 1944, the Arensbergs signed a deed of gift with the
University of California, Los Angeles, which included the stipulation that the University build an appropriate museum to house the collection in a specified time frame; their friend and fellow collector
Galka Scheyer subsequently signed a similar agreement. By the fall of 1947 it was obvious that this condition would not be met and the contract was nullified. In 1939, the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art's board turned down a gift of avant-garde works from the collection. The Arensbergs then began negotiations with numerous other institutions, including the
Art Institute of Chicago, the
Denver Art Museum,
Harvard University, the
Honolulu Academy of Arts, the
Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes (Mexico, D.F.), the
National Gallery, the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, the
San Francisco Museum of Art,
Stanford University, the
University of California, Berkeley, and the
University of Minnesota. The Arensbergs eventually dropped their demand that the recipient of the collection also provide for the continuance of the Francis Bacon Foundation. After protracted discussions and many visits from Director
Fiske Kimball and his wife Marie, the Arensbergs presented their collection of over 1000 objects, including correspondence, ephemera, clippings, writings, personal and art collection records, and photographs documenting the couple's art collecting activities as well as their friendship with many important artists, writers and scholars, to the
Philadelphia Museum of Art on December 27, 1950. For the exhibition
Making Mischief: Dada Invades New York in 1996, the
Whitney Museum of American Art partially recreated the interior of the Manhattan apartment of the Arensbergs. 'Hollywood Arensberg', by Mark Nelson,
William H. Sherman, and Ellen Hoobler, provides a room-by-room, wall-by-wall, and object-by-object reconstruction of the couple’s Los Angeles home and art collection. Published by the Getty Research Institute in 2020, the book provides detailed context for the Arensbergs’ massive accumulation of modern and pre-Columbian art as well as Renaissance books and manuscripts. It recovers the intellectual world of a collector obsessed with chess and devoted to
Baconian research, and sheds significant light on the couple's relationships with
Marcel Duchamp,
Beatrice Wood,
Earl Stendahl,
Robert Woods Bliss,
Marius de Zayas,
Walter Pach,
William Friedman, and others. == References ==