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Developer, Arts Patron Trammell Crow Dead at 94

Trammell Crow Building in Downtown Dallas
(cc)Jonathan D. Blundell(flickr.com)
Trammell Crow Building in Downtown Dallas

Dallas, TX – Trammell Crow, a Dallas developer known for his vast real estate deals which shaped this city as well as his involvement in the city's arts scene, died late Wednesday. He was 94.

In the arts, Crow was best known for his small but exquisite addition to the Arts District: The Trammell and Margaret Crow Collection of Asian Art. The vast assemblage of more than 4,000 pieces was originally held at the Crow family ranch and their various homes, while over the years, individual pieces adorned the Wyndham Anatole Hotel.

Trammell and Margaret Crow had been collecting since the mid-1960s, and first visited China in 1976 the first of 14 visits. Some works hadn't even been uncrated, notably the magnificent sandstone Mughal Wall, when Trammell's son, Trammell S. Crow, was appointed by the family foundation to create the museum in the outbuildngs of the Trammell Crow Center tower.

The free-admission museum opened in 1998, featuring pieces from China, Japan, India and Southeast Asia from 3500 B.C. to early 20th century.

Read more coverage at artandseek.org, or tune in to KERA-FM 90.1.