Gabriele Henkel (née Hünermann; 9 December 1931 - 28 September 2017),[1] was a German art collector, art patron, author and artist. She was married to Konrad Henkel, the long-standing head of the Henkel Group.
Life
Gabriele Hünermann was born in Düsseldorf, a daughter of Theodor Hünermann, chief physician of the Marien Hospital there.[citation needed] After a deprived war childhood without schooling, her father sent her to London to be an au pair at the age of 16. After which she worked as a journalist for the weekly magazines, The Observer and Newsweek, and was the youngest member of the Federal Press Conference when she met Konrad Henkel at the Rhenish Carnival.[citation needed] The couple married in 1955, she took her husband's last name.[citation needed]
From 1970 to 2000, she collected art from all over the world for the Henkel company, therefore building up the Group's art collection.[2] The works are located in the offices, meeting rooms and staff canteens at the companies headquarters in Düsseldorf.[3] The collection comprises about 4,000 works.[4]
Since 1972 she was a member of the International Advisory Board of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.[5][6]
Through Bazon Brock, she received a lectureship for art history at the University of Wuppertal in 1983 where she became an honorary professor for communication design.[6]
In 2001 she founded the Kythera Cultural Foundation, which has been awarding the Kythera Prize annually since 2002.[citation needed]
In 2016, she exhibited 40 pieces from the collection of classical modern and contemporary art outside the company for the first time at the K 20 art collection in Düsseldorf.[3]
In August 2017, she published her memoirs under the title Die Zeit ist ein Augenblick.[8] On 28 September 2017, an exhibition of Gabriele Henkel's works was opened at the Hetjens Museum in Düsseldorf. She played a decisive role in the design. She was not present at the vernissage; she died the following night at the age of 85.[9]