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Home»Art Market
Art Market

Egidio Marzona, Collector Who Built a Monument to the Avant-Garde, Dies at 81

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 17, 2026
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Egidio Marzona, the German-Italian collector, publisher, and patron whose vast holdings helped define the study and display of 20th-century avant-garde art, has died at 81. He died Sunday in Berlin, according to the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation (Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, or SPK).

Unlike many collectors of his generation, Marzona treated archives not as secondary material but as the core of the work itself, amassing not just paintings and objects but the paper trail of ideas—letters, diagrams, exhibition plans—that mapped how the avant-garde thought, circulated, and sustained itself. His holdings in both art and its ephemera focused on movements from the interwar period, like Dada and Bauhaus, to the postwar, such as Fluxus, conceptual art, and Arte Povera. Marzona’s holdings has since become foundational to how museums and scholars understand these different strains of art.

His commitment to public access was equally defining. Beginning in the early 2000s, Marzona transferred large portions of his holdings to German institutions, including more than 600 artworks and tens of thousands of archival materials now held by the SPK and dispersed across Berlin museums and libraries, with plans for further consolidation in the forthcoming Berlin Modern museum.

He continued to expand and refine those gifts in later years, including the donation of rare artist books from the 1960s—works by figures such as Carl Andre, Bruce Nauman, and Lawrence Weiner—that are seldom found in public collections.

Marzona also pursued more experimental forms of patronage. In 2018, his foundation acquired a long-abandoned castle in eastern Germany with plans to transform it into dieDAS Design Akademie Saaleck, a design academy offering residencies and convening international practitioners in architecture, craft, and design—an effort aimed as much at shaping future creative networks as preserving past ones.

On Instagram, Tatjana Sprick, director of program and development at dieDAS, wrote of her experience developing dieDAS with Marzona, saying, “What began as a collaboration soon became something much more meaningful: Egidio’s vision, generosity, and deep belief in the importance of art, design, and education shaped not only the project but also my own thinking. He cared deeply about supporting young designers, craftspeople, architects, and artists, and about creating spaces where ideas could grow freely. Helping bring this vision to life together with him has been one of the greatest honors of my professional life.”

Egidio Marzona was born in Bielefeld, Germany in 1944. His interest in collecting began early in late, around the late 1960s. His earliest interest was in conceptual art, drawn as much to artistic process as to finished objects. He founded a short-lived gallery in Bielefeld in the ’70s, but soon turned his attention to publishing, founding Edition Marzona, which produced volumes on Bauhaus and photography, among other topics.

But, ultimately, his true calling would be institutional patronage. His achievement was not simply the scale of what he gathered, but the way he reframed collecting itself as a form of intellectual infrastructure, built patiently and then handed over to the public. That legacy is most visible in Berlin, via his SPK donation, and Dresden, where he donated 1.5 million objects from his collection to the Free State of Saxony. That gift culminated in the Archive of the Avant-Gardes, which opened in Dresden in 2024, a rare attempt to house the avant-garde’s paper trail at institutional scale. For his contributions to German capital’s art scene, he was awarded the Order of Merit of the State of Berlin in 2014.

“Egidio Marzona dedicated his life to art,” SPK president Marion Ackermann said in a statement. “He was a passionate and tireless collector of 20th-century avant-garde art, seeking to capture the artistic and intellectual movements of an entire century. His collection is not limited to artworks but extends to evidence of the entire artistic creative process. Berlin and Dresden owe him a great debt, as he gradually transferred his collections to the respective museums, where they act like a battery, constantly generating new narratives and contexts.”

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