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Peter
B. Lewis
Patron
and Cultural Activist
The
annals of Cleveland philanthropy are replete with the names of prominent
local families, foundations, and institutions whose generosity has
had an enormous impact on the lives and well-being of the residents
of Northeast Ohio. But until the last quarter of the 20th century,
Cleveland's long tradition of charitable giving could never claim
an individual benefactor with quite the hands-on approach of
Peter Lewis.
Chairman
of the insurance giant Progressive Corporation, a company founded
in Cleveland in 1937 by his father, Joseph, Lewis has been more
than just a supporter of causes or a giver of funds. Few other philanthropists,
locally or nationally, have been so engaged with the objects of
their benefactions, so willing to study problems and offer solutions,
so
eager to embrace the new-and so demanding of concrete results.
It
takes a strong leader to turn a little-known Midwestern insurance
company selling just $6 million of policies every year into a $7
billion-plus giant of the industry. And Lewis's legendary determination
and drive-not to mention a sense of certitude bordering on obstinacy-are
hallmarks of his philanthropic endeavors just as much as of his
corporate career.
Regularly
ranked among the top ten individual philanthropic donors in the
country, Lewis is a long-time supporter of the Democratic Party
and the American Civil Liberties Union (to which, some years ago,
he made the largest individual contribution in the organization's
history). But he has focused much of
his philanthropy on two of his passions: art and
higher education.
A
devoted collector of modern art, he has been a generous patron of
both the Cleveland Museum of
Art and the Cleveland Institute of Art. More significantly, in the
late 1960s he recognized the potential value and took a leading
role in the founding of the Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art,
a groundbreaking organization that would introduce the work of nationally
known contemporary artists as well as local talents to generations
of Cleveland audiences.
Lewis's
hands-on approach to giving is even more apparent in his tenure
as a trustee of the Solomon
R. Guggenheim Foundation, where he was the primary force behind
the development of a new mission statement and improved governance
structure for the Guggenheim Museum in New York,
to accommodate its expanding programs and increasingly international
profile. At Princeton University, his alma mater, he designated
$35 million of a $55-million gift in 2000 to support and
expand
the nascent Institute for Integrative Genomics, a pioneering program
intended to unravel the enigma
of genetic function in living organisms.
For
Clevelanders, perhaps the most visible evidence
of Peter Lewis's characteristically personal approach to philanthropy
can be seen on the campus of Case Western Reserve University. Lewis
donated more
than half of the $61.7-million cost of the new home of the University's
Weatherhead School of Management (completed in 2002), an eye-popping
building of unlikely waves and angles designed by his friend Frank
O. Gehry, the internationally acclaimed architect. By championing
the choice of a world-class architect to create a world-class structure,
Lewis accomplished three objectives. For Clevelanders, he helped
to create a landmark building in the heart of the city. For Weatherhead
students, he added an enriching inspirational dimension to the educational
process. For CWRU, he set a standard of excellence
to which he fully expects the rest of the university to aspire-not
only in its physical environment, but in
the stature of its academic accomplishment. In effect, Lewis turned
his gift into a challenge to excel-and what more worthy end could
a donor hope to achieve?
text
by
Mark
Gottlieb
Fall
2002
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