Who is ronald lauder
Since then, Lauder has recorded no contributions to either the president's campaign, his joint fundraising committees, the Republican National Committee or the pro-Trump super PAC America First Action.
Fundraisers and friends of the president's have yet to hear from Lauder on whether he plans to give larger contributions to Trump's reelection, according to people familiar with the matter, who declined to be named as these conversations were deemed private.
Eric Soufer, a spokesman for Lauder, told CNBC that the businessman is currently focused on assisting schools in Europe that have been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. Lauder has been focused on rescuing the 35 schools he founded in Eastern Europe, among others, and covering the full tuition for families that have been devastated by the current economic and public health crisis," Soufer said on Friday.
The statement did not mention Trump. It was about Lauder's spending on the issues he's focusing on, which includes his fight against anti-Semitism. While Lauder has historically not written large checks to Trump-related entities, he has spent more in previous cycles backing Republican groups that often align with the president's agenda.
Records show that he did not contribute to Trump's initial run for president in Still, Lauder has stood with the president on a variety of issues and has the resources that would allow him to be a key asset to Trump's reelection. In , he put out a statement praising Trump's "incredible insight and intelligence. In January , the foundation brought a delegation of more than Auschwitz-Birkenau Survivors and their families to the memorial site to participate in the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the camp.
In , he was appointed by President Reagan as U. Ambassador to Austria. In that role, he built strong diplomatic bonds between the two countries. During that time, he initiated what has become a core personal mission — supporting the revitalization of Jewish life across central and eastern Europe in communities that had been devastated by the Holocaust, and remained suppressed under Communism.
In , he established The Ronald S. I Accept. Mandatory cookies. Statistics cookies. Marketing cookies. Our President Ronald S. Their economies in many ways depend on each other, and as they work together it helps the global economy. A fight between the two would hurt the economy of the entire world. As an art collector you specialize in German and Austrian art. They say that you call it your Mona Lisa.
Does your passion for the Vienna Secession art movement come from your time in Vienna? Collecting Schiele and Klimt preceded my time of Vienna by about 30 years.
I started when I was about 14 and 15, when no one had heard of them, and I have never stopped buying their works. I purchased a great piece of Austrian art a month ago. At the same time, I collect art in many other fields.
I never stop collecting. You gave 91 pieces of medieval and Renaissance armor to the Metropolitan Museum. What does that armor have to do with Vienna? They are completely different. Just as one has to eat, sometimes you eat fish, sometimes steak, sometimes vegetables. When I was 14 or 15 with the different fields. The first piece of medieval art I bought was when I was 19 years old; my first piece of armor when I was A famous author named Pierre Cabanne describes collecting as almost like taking heroin.
I collect everything. How can you know and love so many different things? With my eyes. I have three categories. Fortunately I have the ability to determine what is good, very good and great. I buy great. Ronald Lauder gave the keynote speech on the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz in I have not been able to travel to Europe.
I have houses in Paris, in London, in Vienna. Thank God for Zoom. Yesterday I was on Zoom seven times. When people have a piece of art to show me, they sometimes will show it to me on Zoom, or I do my business on Zoom. I do my travel on Zoom. I need to touch them, I need to see them. Often I have them sent to me. It took me seven years of working with different people, different groups, and with the family, to finally get the picture.
They were happy and so was I. Because the picture was stolen by the Nazis and had ended up in a museum. Finally, because Austria changed the laws and decided to do restitution, I was able to get it. And now Italy is particularly difficult for art, because a great deal of art is blocked by the government from leaving the country.
You created your own museum, the Neue Galerie, and you, and also your brother, gave fantastic pieces to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Are you very passionate about museums? I love museums. I love to see things. Every piece I bought in my life I paid too much for. And it turned out that in three or five years, I got a bargain. You never know. You can never tell. The difference between business and art valuation is that in the case of business you work on it every day. But also, when I buy art I buy it only because I love it. We also have drugs now that will slow it down. There are many different things we can do and new things are coming along all the time.
What do you feel about the technological world with its artificial intelligence on the one hand and the green movement that fights for the environment on the other? Technology will be something that may save this earth.
The world is constantly changing. We have limited resources and we must do everything we can to use them wisely. We must change, and solve global warming. We can affect it, but it requires a great deal of effort.
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