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THE ARTS 94 P O R T L A N D MONTHLY MAGAZINE the world to a crashing halt. According to the Portland Press Herald the Goldfarbs met while he was an undergrad at Brown and she was top of her class at Browns Pem- broke College. Her parents owned Maine Hardware. They married in Portland in De- cember 1955. M oving here in 1968 he quickly rose to become a respected sur- geon while she earned a second degree at Bowdoin and became an ex- pert at two-dimensional electrophoresis the separation identification and quanti- fication of proteins in a variety of biologic and other industrial fluidsIn 1985 Mar- cia left Ventrex to start her own biotech company Anatecwith customers and contracts all over the world. Together as art lovers and collectors with a home on Bowdoin Street in the West End this high- power couple built their collection with a dazzling exacting eye. You learned this from the obituary correct says Dr. Goldfarb when we called to learn why his collection was so aston- ishingly quiet. I provided that informa- tion. I miss her so much I had to have her name on the collection. Theres a pause. But Im the one with the eye. But why not whirlwind painters of motion like Warhol or Dahlov Ipcar Surely its too easy to sug- gest Dr. G. loves these exacting works in near absolute silence because hes a sur- geon It isnt quite that easy he says. Its