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Windows’
fate is unclear
May/June 2010
by Carole
Bass ’83, ’97MSL
The
mystery of Yale’s missing stained-glass windows, almost 40 years in the making,
may be nearing an end—but not a solution.
“We
can’t account for them,” says Jock Reynolds, Henry J. Heinz II Director of the
Yale University Art Gallery, which was charged with caring for the 12 panels
that once graced the grand stairway in Linsly-Chittenden Hall.
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The confusion reflects Yale’s “severe deferred maintenance” in the 1970s and ’80s.
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The
windows, made by Clayton & Bell of London and depicting literary figures,
faced the Old Campus. Fearing for their safety before May Day 1970, when
thousands of demonstrators were expected on campus to protest a Black Panther
trial, the university had them removed and asked the gallery to add them to its
collection. They were stored in Linsly-Chit’s basement, a low-security space
shared with other departments. By 1987, an inventory found only a few cases of
stained glass, much of it in pieces. Just one panel remained intact.
What
happened to the rest?
“We
don’t know what happened to them,” says Reynolds, who thinks they were likely
lost, thrown out, or salvaged and sold by contractors. “This was a slip; no
other way to describe it.”
The
Yale administrator who had ordered the windows’ storage had the wrong stained
glass (as Richard Conniff ’73 wrote in “A Tale of Two Windows,”
January/February 2010). He thought he was protecting Yale’s near-priceless
Tiffany, but it stayed in place, unharmed, during May Day—while the Clayton
& Bells, which have little or no value in the art market, weren’t as safe
as he thought.
Just
before we went to press with the “Tale of Two Windows,” the gallery reported
finding some promising crates of stained glass. But, Reynolds says, the
contents turned out to be “other unknown, unattributed pieces of stained
glass.”
The
confusion reflects more than just the chaotic times in which a Yale
administrator hastily ordered the wrong windows removed and then, apparently,
forgot to order their restoration. It also reflects the university-wide legacy
of “severe deferred maintenance” in the 1970s and ’80s, Reynolds
says—compounded, for the gallery, by inadequate storage and staffing and the
difficulty of occasionally being asked to take in orphaned campus artifacts
like the Clayton & Bells.
When
Reynolds arrived in 1998, the gallery had six off-site storage locations of
varying quality and security. As Yale’s finances improved, and as the gallery
staff was boosted by donors who have endowed 18 of its current 22 curatorial
positions, Reynolds has had the scattered collections inventoried and cleared
out. One space housed some 2,000 “architectural elements, plaster casts, and
iron elements,” says gallery spokeswoman Ana Davis. The stored collections have
been consolidated in a new state-of-the-art facility in Hamden.
With
the university’s massive infrastructure investments over the last two decades,
“the whole nature of collection care has really been transformed,” the director
says. In addition to the changes in staff and facilities, “there’s a lot of
gifts we don’t accept.” The vast majority of the gallery’s collections were
donated. But it will turn down a work for reasons of condition, quality, or
redundancy with the existing holdings. “The admissions office takes only 7
percent of applicants,” he says. “We take more than 7 percent. But we can’t
take everything, because we can’t take care of everything. It’s like having a
kid: making love and conception are great, but it’s yours for life.” 
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