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Peter MacGill | |
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Nationality | American |
Education | B.A. – Ohio Wesleyan University M.F.A. – University of Arizona |
Occupation | Curator |
Spouse | Susan MacGill |
Children | Mary MacGill,[1] Gordon MacGill[2] |
Peter MacGill is an American gallerist, curator, and art historian. MacGill is the former President of the Pace/MacGill Gallery,[3] which opened in 1983 on East 57th Street in New York City[4] and was consolidated into the Pace Gallery in 2019–20.[5]
In 2006 he was the first recipient of the Harold Jones Distinguished Alumni Award at The University of Arizona.[citation needed]
MacGill graduated with a B.A. from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1974 and a M.F.A. from the University of Arizona in 1977, where he was the first student to graduate from the MFA Photography program[6]. He began working in the photography world as a college intern at Light Gallery in 1973 where he hung Stephen Shore’s first solo show.[6] While attending the University of Arizona MacGill served as a curator at the Center for Creative Photography.[7] In 2005 he was ranked 15th on the list of "The 100 Most Important People in Photography" compiled by American Photo magazine.[8]
MacGill is President of the Pace/MacGill Gallery,[4] which opened in 1983 on East 57th Street in New York City. Although Pace/MacGill specializes in photography, the gallery has also exhibited non-photographic work since the mid-1990s.[9] In 1999 the gallery sold Man Ray's Glass Tears (1930–33) for $1.3 million, at the time the highest price ever paid for a photograph.[10] MacGill has stated that the work sold for such a high amount because of its scarcity (only three prints were made).[11] In 2006 MacGill set a new record when he bought Edward Steichen’s The Pond—Moonlight for $2.9 million on behalf of a private buyer.[12]
In 2019 MacGill established a partnership with RadicalMedia to develop a streaming platform focused on the history of photography.[13]