Belle Linsky


Belle Linsky was a businesswoman and philanthropist who was a Swingline Inc. executive with her husband, Swingline's president Jack Linsky. In 1982, she donated much of her art collection, valued at $90 million, to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Life

Belle Linsky was born in Kiev in 1904 and came to the United States as a child. With her husband she owned 19 percent of the stock of the Swingline corporation, based in New York City at the time, which they sold to American Brands Inc. in 1970 for $210 million. She was treasurer of Swingline at the time of the sale and Jack Linsky was inventor, president, and chairman.
She lived in Palm Beach, Florida and New York, where much of her art collection was housed. She died in New York on Monday, September 28, 1987.

Philanthropy and art collection

In 1965, the Linskys endowed for $1 million a pavilion that has bears their names at the Beth Israel Medical Center in Manhattan.
She and her husband, Jack Linsky, started collecting art during The Great Depression. After Mr. Linsky died in 1980, much of the art collection went into The Jack and Belle Linsky Foundation. In 1982, Mrs. Linsky decided to give some to The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, as well as a dozen other American museums. The collection includes more than 1000 objects. The bulk of which is housed in the 3,980 square-foot Jack and Belle Linsky Galleries at the museum.
At one point the Linskys had the one of the largest Fabergé egg collections in America.