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Ira Licht

1938 - 2023

BORN

1938

DIED

2023

FUNERAL HOME

Levitt-Weinstein Blasberg, Rubin-Zilbert Memorial Chapels

18840 W. Dixie Hwy

North Miami Beach, Florida

Ira Licht Obituary

Ira Licht

December 24, 1938 - December 29, 2023

Miami, Florida - Ira Licht died on December 29, 2023. His beloved wife Carol died on Christmas day, 2020 and he was disconsolate every moment thereafter. He stayed alive to finish estate matters for his grandchildren and to give away some of his collections. Finally, he couldn't live another day without Carol's love and laughter.

Ira was born in New York December 24, 1938 to Louis William Licht, lawyer and real estate broker, and Rae Price Licht, legal secretary. From his father he learned ethical conduct, love of learning and Jewish culture. From his mother he received unquestioning love [for better or worse].

He was educated in the then excellent New York school system, attended Columbia College and received a Columbia University Fellowship for graduate study in art history. He was appointed assistant professor of art history at the University of Rochester before becoming curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago where his Bodyworks exhibition received a certain amount of notoriety and, later, influence. Then, at the National Endowment for the Arts, Ira directed the Art in Public Places program where he was responsible for placing important works by Andre, di Suvero, Oldenburg, Rauschenberg and Serra among many others in the public sphere.

In 1978, in a dubious career move that he never regretted, Ira declined the offer of curator of modern art at the Detroit Institute of Arts to become Director of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami. He undertook the challenging task of reestablishing the Lowe's reputation and expanding its renown nationally. To those ends he rapidly had the museum reaccredited, became a member of the Association of Art Museum Directors and secured state and national grants. He programmed over one hundred twenty exhibitions in eleven years and revitalized the acquisitions program. Notable among his purchases were the Chimu disc, Ribera's St. Onofrio, 16th century Yoruba ritual ring and early 19th century Seminole beadwork objects.

Ira gave and bequeathed many works to the Lowe including Andre, Calder, Duchamp, Mucha and Schwitters and left a substantial endowment for acquisitions. His donations of art to the Israel Museum, Williams College Museum, North Miami Museum of Art, and of some of his Judaica library to the Beth Torah Benny Rok Campus, of objects to the Smithsonian Museum of American History, Archives of American Art, Stockbridge Historical Society, Melville Collection of the Berkshire Athenaeum, Jacob's Pillow, Cuban Heritage Collection, Kurt Weill Foundation and the American Jewish Historical Society suggest the scope of his interests.

During his career, he identified an early Monet which had gone missing from a gallery, a Harnett painting in an English country home and a Duchamp object which the artist had forgotten about.

Ira loved music perhaps more even than art. Early on he heard the great conductors Toscanini, Monteux, Walter, Stokowski. Beecham et al. and he told of red letter days like attending Oistrakh's American debut, with every violinist he could recognize including Fritz Kreisler in the audience. preceded by an Elman recital and Milstein later that evening. During a memorable year in Vienna, he attended Klemperer's Beethoven cycle [and Fidelio in London] and Mravinsky's Tchaikovsky. He heard much of the operatic repertoire at four cents for standing room and was invited to Brendel and Mehta's recording session of the Emperor Concerto and dinner after. He talked himself into house seats at Salzburg and free accommodations at a building overlooking the entire town- until the mayor called to complain about his underwear drying on the parapet.

Ira leaves his loving and beloved sister Judith Denowitz and adored grandchildren Rochi, Hana, Rivka, Shimon, Dasi, Suri, Miri, Ayala, Yael, Yakov, Avraham, Naftali, their spouses and children. He left with many regrets, of love not shared, of art not seen, of music not heard or heard again, of wrongs not righted. If you knew Ira and happen to see Keaton's The General or Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky or when you listen to Schubert or Mahler, perhaps you might think of him. Services were private.
Published by the Miami Herald on Feb. 1, 2024.

Memories and Condolences
for Ira Licht

Not sure what to say?





13 Entries

Julian Head

March 27, 2025

As I sit here in Bristol, UK, I'm listening to a superb recording of four Mozart quartets, played by The New Music Quartet in about 1956. I liberated the slightly battered vinyl from a charity shop a few months ago for £1. Curiously it was stamped on the back, "Ira Licht, 18 Barrington St, Jamaica, New York." And now I know, though sadly through condolences, that I'm through touch and dust somehow connected with (for what i can tell from all these lovely words) a great man of art, music, love and life. To make this connection is not just helping me get through today, but will extend hope across humanity every tome i reach for the serenity and perfection of Mozart. I feel joined in spirit and by serendipity. Bless.

Donata Lewandowski Guerra

March 21, 2024

Ira made the experience of being a Lowe Art Museum docent a joy, and I remember with great clarity our discussions of classical music and recordings. He so valued his own collection. Thank you, Ira, for enhancing my aesthetic experiences during a brief number of years we spent in Miami.

Nora Licht

March 5, 2024

My husband, Doug Sheer, and I just learned of Ira's passing. We are filled with sadness at this news. We had the pleasure of spending time with Ira and Carol at their home in the Berkshires a few years ago. Never having gotten to know each other as children, we first cousins enjoyed our long overdue meeting. We didn't know that our late-blooming relationship would be so brief. Nevertheless, we appreciate what we did have, and offer our heart-felt condolences to his sister Judith and Ira's grandchildren. May his memory be a blessing.

Carol LeWitt

February 10, 2024

A dear friend whose memory will always be for blessings!

Barry Diamond

February 10, 2024

Sorry to lose Ira. A major contributor to the South Florida cultural landscape.

Katherine Hinds

February 5, 2024

Ira Licht brought the highest standards in Contemporary Art to Miami. The exhibitions he produced at the Lowe Art Museum were very influential and laid down the foundation for the Contemporary Art community of Miami today.

I remember his George Segal exhibition, which was brilliantly installed, and his Abstract Expressionist show.

He was generous with his knowledge, and his connoisseurship was unparalleled in Miami.

There will never be another Ira Licht.

I will remember him fondly and always.

Hortensia Sampedro

February 5, 2024

I will always remember the enthusiasm with which Ira received the CINTAS Foundation Old Masters Collection long-term loan and the support he gave exhibiting the El Greco, Goya and Murillo masterpieces to the Miami community. His dry wit gave his efforts a certain gravitas which made our collaboration special. Rest in Peace.

Hermina Seiden

February 3, 2024

Ira was a wonderful inspiration to many of those who supported
The Lowe Art Museum at the
University of Miami years ago.
He was the magnetic force that
brought together art lovers seeking involvement. His
intelligence at that time was unmatched. The University of
Miami and the art community especially was marked with good fortune through Ira´s direction.
Rest in Peace Ira, a friend and
Inspiration.
Hermina J. Seiden

Martin Margulies

February 2, 2024

How sad to read about Ira. When I moved into my new apartment and started art collecting, he helped me understand how critical the placement of the artwork was. We spent three days working on hanging the collection and ensuring all was placed well. Ira was a brilliant, charming and mysterious man. I valued his experience, our conversations, and his sensitivity as a friend.

Denise Gerson

February 1, 2024

Only Ira could have written that dryly amusing obituary! I had the great pleasure of working for him for the last 2 years of his tenure at the Lowe. Ira was simultaneously brilliant, hilarious, charismatic, and yes, infuriating. Should I say he set more than a few hearts aflutter? A wild man, whom Carol tamed. Deepest condolences to the family.

Margarita Cano

February 1, 2024

In loving memory of a wonderful person. We will love you and miss you always.

Brian A Dursum

February 1, 2024

I worked with Ira during his tenure at the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami from 1978-1988. Among Ira's most important accomplishments at the Lowe was its re-re-accreditation by the American Association of Museums. He also helped to create a code of ethics for the Lowe, helped develop a collection's management policy, as well as acquiring through gift and purchase a number of critically important fine art acquisitions for the permanent collection. When he arrived at the Lowe there was a sizable operating deficit which he worked to totally repay leaving the Lowe solvent and financially more stable than he found it. Ira was an extremely creative director. His exhibitions were innovative and topical. The Miami art scene had never been so interesting. I enjoyed my professional relationship with him and he will be missed.

Leslie Sternlieb

February 1, 2024

Ira Licht was a presence at every worthy cultural event in South Florida, and his sophistication and refinement were obvious to everyone who met him. He lent his extraordinary sensibilities to his estimable work as director of the Lowe, and elevated its stature to become a fine university museum. One night we were walking down NE Second Avenue, near Gusman Hall, after a performance by Miami City Ballet. When he saw my license plate-LHOOQ, a Duchampian reference-he asked me to let him know when I would relinquish the tag. I did, many years later, and I hope it ended up as his monicker, too. May his memory be for a blessing.

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