William Augustine McCarty-Cooper (July 5, 1937 – May 30, 1991) was an American interior designer based in London and philanthropist.
Early life
William "Billy" McCarty was born on July 5, 1937, and raised in Miami Springs, Florida. He was the son of Eugenie and William A. McCarty. He had two brothers, Terrence McCarty and John McCarty, and two sisters, Patricia (née McCarty) Hawkins and Denise (née McCarty) Black.[1]
After moving to London in 1963 to work for decorator David Nightingale Hicks (husband to Lady Pamela Mountbatten), he became one of the most prominent decorators in London. Two years later in 1965, he opened his own firm, known as William McCarty Associates, to design interiors and furnishings,[1] including for drawing rooms for the Rothschild family and salons for Vidal Sassoon in Beverly Hills.[2]
In the late 1970s, he was associated with the Paris-based art and antiques gallery Didier Aaron. He created interiors for the firm in Paris, London and New York City.[1]
Philanthropy
In 1986, McCarty-Cooper donated Three Women Under a Tree', an important proto-Cubist painting by Pablo Picasso, to the Musée Picasso in Paris. Under his stewardship, the Cooper Collection was widely exhibited throughout Europe and the United States, including at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.[3] In his later years, McCarty-Cooper collected Art Deco furniture, silver, rare books, and African art.[1]
Personal life
In 1972, he was adopted by Douglas Cooper, the British art historian and prominent collector of the Cubist period. The adoption "took place in France, where by law a son is automatically entitled to at least one half of his father’s estate. Such an arrangement, where the adoptee is not an orphan, is not uncommon in the world of the arts and society. Cooper's friend Jean Cocteau, for example, had adopted his young friend Eduard Dermit. In Cooper’s case, it was also a way of keeping his wealth from falling into the hands of his hated birth family."[2] McCarty-Cooper then devoted most of his time to collecting and philanthropy. After Cooper died in 1984,[4] McCarty-Cooper made available to scholars and the public Cooper's rarely exhibited collection of Cubist art.[1]
McCarty-Cooper died of complications from AIDS in Los Angeles, California on May 30, 1991.[5][6] At the time of his death, his partner was David Johnson of London.[1] He left the bulk of his estate, divided into thirty-four equal parts, to his brothers, sisters, nephews, parents and a handful of friends.[2] The collection was auctioned off at Christie's.[7][8]
^Carter, Edward G. L. (March 19, 2017). "Remembering: Billy McCarty-Cooper". The Amazing Life and Times of Edward Carter – Unique Entrepreneur. Retrieved 12 August 2021.