Philanthropy
Fidelity's Peter Lynch Gifts $20 Million Artworks To Boston College

The story highlights a continuing trend of big gifts by ultra-high net worth individuals, many of whom have made their living in the financial services industry.
A prominent figure in the world of investment management, Peter
Lynch, has given 27 paintings and three drawings together worth
more than $20 million to Boston College. The move continues the
big gift trend in the North American philanthropy
space.
Lynch, vice chairman of Fidelity Management and Research Company
and trustee associate at Boston College, gifted the art from his
and his late wife Carolyn’s private art collection to Boston
College’s McMullen Museum of Art. The works include renowned
works from Pablo Picasso, Winslow Homer, John Singer Sargent,
Mary Cassatt, Childe Hassam, Albert Bierstadt, Martin Johnson
Heade, and Jack Butler Yeats.
The donation includes an additional $5 million grant to support
the ongoing curation and exhibition of what will be called the
Carolyn A and Peter S Lynch Collection, making the total gift one
of the largest in university history, the college said in a
statement yesterday.
Lynch, a 1965 graduate of Boston College, said he donated the art
to the McMullen Museum to inspire Boston College students and
museum visitors through the diverse collection of paintings and
drawings from 20 of the world’s most acclaimed artists.
“My hope is that this artwork, all of which my wife Carolyn and I
collected during our 50 years together, will help students to
develop a deeper understanding of art and its importance as a
form of expression,” said Lynch. “All students definitely can
learn from this collection, which includes a diversity of styles
of painting, many of which depict the natural beauty of our
country from its most celebrated painters. I also wanted to
enhance the McMullen Museum’s permanent collection through our
donation and encourage others to follow.”
Including art in charitable gifts is a complex field, and one
that high net worth individuals and families can employ as part
of their philanthropy. Susan Winer, a member of this news
service’s editorial advisory board, and Ron Varney, a specialist
advisor on fine art, have recently commented
on this area.
Boston College said Lynch’s art collection includes Pablo
Picasso’s drawing Head; Winslow Homer’s painting
Grace Hoops; Mary Cassatt’s watercolor Mother
and Child; John Singer Sargent’s painting Olive Trees,
Corfu; and Jack Butler Yeats’s 1929 painting Farewell to
Mayo, which British actor Sir Laurence Olivier gifted as a
wedding present to actress Vivien Leigh.
Theodore E Stebbins Jr, the consultative curator of American art
at Harvard University's Fogg Museum and former curator of
American paintings at the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA), Boston,
described the collection as “an extraordinary compilation of
artwork” that includes masterpieces any museum in the nation
would desire.
Lynch said he first took an interest in art after visiting the Museum of Fine Arts as a boy with his mother and repeatedly admiring John Singleton Copley’s master painting Watson and the Shark. His interest was further piqued after taking art history classes as a student at Boston College. In his 30s, he and Carolyn were a part of a group of collectors at the MFA called “The Young Seminarians,” whose major focus was furniture before turning to paintings. His interest in art collecting grew after marrying Carolyn, who passed away in 2015.
Lynch said that his personal favorites from the collection include Diego Rivera’s drawing of a family, the Martin Johnson Heade painting Orchid and Hummingbirds Near a Mountain Lake, William Bradford’s Among the Ice Floes, and Albert Bierstadt’s Near the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains, which, Lynch said, he was inspired to acquire following one of his more than 25 visits to US National Parks with his wife and three daughters.