2015 Emory Eye Magazine | Page 29

Giving Back | Friends of the Emory Eye Center The extraordinary work of Alex Katz “part P.T. Barnum, part brains, part chutzpah” By Ginger Pyron | Photo by David Woolf Alex Katz discussing retinal degeneration research with Jeff Boatright. S omebody, somewhere, has probably said, “That Alex Katz, he’s a piece of work.” That phrase could imply anything from insult to amusement to profound admiration. In reference to Alex Katz, however, one can safely assume that it indicates someone from whom one can expect surprises, at the very least. Abraham Katz, Alex’s father, gave his children a good education, sturdy self-confidence, and a strong work ethic. He told them, “It doesn’t matter what work you do. Just do it” (and do it well went without saying). By the time Alex reached his early teens, he was a working photographer earning $100 to $200 cash per week—good money for a kid in the mid-1960s. Today he’s the president of Kason Industries, known worldwide for its production of industrial hardware. As trustees of the Abraham J. & Phyllis Katz Foundation, Alex Katz and his brother David still do many things well, specifically as they determine which organizations, innovative research projects, and life-enhancement programs will receive Katz Family Foundation support. Katz is also a voracious reader and a passionate lover of the arts. In casual conversation he can rhapsodize about works that, for him, elicit what he calls “the wow factor”: a masterful octave leap by Pavarotti, for instance, or the pure simplicity and elegance in a Mozart piano sonata. He recounts such examples to emphasize what most piques 2015 | Emory Eye 27