J. Tomilson Hill (born May 24, 1948) is an American billionaire investor, former hedge fund executive, and prominent art collector renowned for his pioneering roles in mergers and acquisitions and alternative asset management.[1] With a net worth estimated at $3.3 billion as of November 2025, Hill built his fortune through high-profile Wall Street careers, including co-founding the M&A department at First Boston in the 1970s, leading investment banking at Lehman Brothers during the 1980s where he orchestrated the landmark $14 billion Time Inc.-Warner Communications merger, and joining Blackstone in 1993 to head its corporate and M&A advisory before becoming president and CEO of Blackstone Alternative Asset Management (BAAM) in 2000.[2][2][3] Under his leadership, BAAM grew from less than $1 billion to over $75 billion in assets under management, establishing it as the world's largest discretionary investor in hedge funds, until his transition to chairman in 2018 and full departure as vice chairman in 2019.[4][4][2]
A Harvard College and Harvard Business School alumnus, Hill, now 77, resides in New York City with his wife Janine, with whom he has two children, and continues to influence finance as CEO of Two Sigma's real estate business, chairman of its private investments arm, and a managing director at the firm.[2][2][2] His post-Blackstone endeavors also include heading the Hill Art Foundation, which he co-founded with Janine in 2018 to showcase their eclectic collection spanning Old Masters, Renaissance bronzes, postwar, and contemporary art through exhibitions in Chelsea, New York.[2][5][5]
Hill's collection features standout acquisitions such as a 1607 Caravaggio-attributed Judith and Holofernes purchased for an estimated $170 million in 2019, Peter Paul Rubens's 1608 Portrait of a Commander, Francis Bacon's 1956 "Pope" series painting, and Willem de Kooning's 1972 The Clam Digger.[5][5][5] The foundation has hosted educational programs and lent works to institutions like the Frick Collection for a 2014 exhibition of 33 Renaissance and Baroque bronzes.[5][5]
As a philanthropist, Hill serves as chairman of the Guggenheim Museum's board since 2021 (having joined in 2019), a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, chairman emeritus of Lincoln Center Theater, and a member of the Smithsonian Institution's investment committee, alongside his role on the Council on Foreign Relations board where he is chairman emeritus of the investment committee.[5][3][3] He also holds directorships at firms including Patria Investments, First Eagle Investment Management, and Hamilton Insurance Group.[3][3]
Early life and education
Early life
J. Tomilson Hill was born on May 24, 1948, in New York City.[1] He grew up in a privileged household on Park Avenue in the Upper East Side of Manhattan.[6] His mother, Dorothy Hill, was a sculptor who worked daily in her studio with clay and bronze until her death at age 98, providing Hill with early immersion in artistic creation.[7][8]
From a young age, Hill frequented museums in New York City, which, combined with his mother's influence, fostered a deep appreciation for art and culture that would shape his later collecting pursuits.[9] He attended The Buckley School, a prestigious preparatory institution in Manhattan, before transferring to Milton Academy in Massachusetts.[10] At Milton, Hill participated in varsity wrestling, developing discipline and resilience amid his elite education.[6]
Following his secondary schooling, Hill enrolled at Harvard University.[6]
Education
J. Tomilson Hill earned a B.A. cum laude from Harvard College in 1970, with concentrations in history, literature, and Japanese studies.[1] During his undergraduate years, he contributed to the Harvard Lampoon, honing skills in creative and analytical writing that complemented his interdisciplinary studies.[11] These pursuits provided a broad liberal arts foundation, emphasizing critical thinking and international perspectives through his focus on Japanese studies.[12]
He then pursued graduate education at Harvard Business School, obtaining an M.B.A. in 1973.[13] The rigorous curriculum at Harvard Business School, renowned for its emphasis on finance, strategy, and management, equipped him with the specialized knowledge and networks essential for entering the field of investment banking.[14] This educational path shifted his interests from humanities toward finance, preparing him to apply analytical rigor to complex financial transactions.[15]
Career
Early investment banking roles
After graduating from Harvard Business School with an MBA in 1973, J. Tomilson Hill joined Credit Suisse First Boston as one of the founding principals of its newly established mergers and acquisitions (M&A) department.[6][2][3] In this pioneering role, Hill contributed to building one of Wall Street's first dedicated M&A groups at a time when such specialized departments were rare, helping to position First Boston as a leader in advisory services for corporate transactions during the emerging era of hostile takeovers and leveraged buyouts in the 1970s.[2][16] His work focused on advising clients on complex deal structures and negotiations, laying the groundwork for the firm's expansion in this high-stakes area of investment banking.[6]
Hill remained at First Boston until 1979, during which period the M&A department grew significantly under his involvement, handling advisory roles in early transformative deals that exemplified the shift toward aggressive corporate strategies.[13] These foundational experiences honed his expertise in merger tactics and valuation, establishing him as a key figure in the nascent M&A landscape.[6][3]
In 1979, Hill moved to Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. as Senior Vice President and Director of its M&A department, where he assumed leadership of the group.[13] Over the next three years, he oversaw the expansion of Smith Barney's M&A advisory practice, guiding clients through a range of transactions amid increasing market volatility and regulatory changes in the early 1980s.[14][16] His tenure there solidified his reputation as a strategic deal maker, with a focus on innovative approaches to mergers that anticipated the decade's boom in corporate consolidations.[6]
Leadership at Lehman Brothers
J. Tomilson Hill joined Lehman Brothers in 1982 as a partner in its mergers and acquisitions (M&A) department, leveraging his earlier experience co-founding the M&A group at First Boston.[2][3] His rapid ascent within the firm positioned him as a key figure in high-stakes deal-making during the leveraged buyout boom of the 1980s.
By the late 1980s, Hill had advanced to head of M&A at Lehman Brothers, overseeing pivotal transactions that exemplified the era's aggressive corporate takeovers. He later progressed to head of the firm's overall investment banking division and, by 1990, assumed the role of co-chief executive officer of Lehman Brothers alongside Richard Fuld, while also serving as co-president and co-chief operating officer of the parent Shearson Lehman Brothers Holding Inc. following its acquisition by American Express.[3][17] One of his most prominent deals was advising on the multi-sided bidding war for RJR Nabisco in 1988, the largest leveraged buyout in history at the time, which earned him a mention in the seminal account Barbarians at the Gate.[6] Filmmaker Oliver Stone drew partial inspiration from Hill's persona and deal-making style for the character Gordon Gekko in the 1987 film Wall Street, portraying the archetype of the era's slick investment banker.[18]
Hill's tenure as co-CEO ended abruptly in 1993 amid internal power struggles and firm-wide restructuring efforts at Shearson Lehman Brothers, where he was ousted in favor of Fuld's sole leadership.[6][19] This period reflected broader challenges at the firm, including integration issues post-acquisition and competitive pressures in investment banking.[20]
Tenure at Blackstone
J. Tomilson Hill joined The Blackstone Group in 1993 as co-head of its corporate advisory and mergers and acquisitions business, leveraging his prior experience in investment banking from Lehman Brothers.[17]
In 2000, Hill was appointed president and chief executive officer of Blackstone Alternative Asset Management (BAAM), the firm's hedge fund solutions unit, which he helped establish to manage internal capital and expand into external client portfolios. Under his leadership, BAAM grew from approximately $1 billion in assets under management in 2000 to over $56 billion by 2013, establishing itself as the world's largest discretionary investor in hedge funds. By 2018, AUM had expanded further to more than $75 billion, driven by innovative strategies such as customized multi-manager portfolios, fund-of-funds approaches, and targeted investments in emerging hedge fund managers to diversify risk and capture alpha for institutional clients.[4][21][22]
Hill became vice chairman of Blackstone in 2007 and joined the firm's board of directors, where he served on the management and executive committees while continuing to oversee BAAM's alternative investment initiatives. His tenure emphasized scalable hedge fund solutions tailored for endowments, pensions, and sovereign wealth funds, focusing on liquidity management, risk mitigation, and long-term performance through diversified allocations across equity long/short, credit, and macro strategies. In recognition of these contributions, Hill was inducted into Institutional Investor's Alpha Hedge Fund Hall of Fame in 2014.[4][23][24]
Hill transitioned to chairman of BAAM in January 2018, retaining his vice chairman role until the end of that year, after which he provided strategic advisory support until his full departure from Blackstone in 2019.[4][1]
Roles at Two Sigma
In March 2021, J. Tomilson Hill was appointed to the newly created role of Chairman of Two Sigma's private investment business, overseeing its expansion into alternative assets including venture capital, real estate, and strategic opportunities.[25][26] This part-time role, which Hill had consulted on since 2019, built on his prior experience leading Blackstone's alternative asset management unit, where he grew BAAM's assets to over $70 billion.[25] Under his leadership, the private investment business, which managed approximately $3 billion in assets at the time, focused on leveraging Two Sigma's quantitative data science to identify opportunities in non-public markets.[27]
In April 2021, Hill became CEO of the newly launched Two Sigma Real Estate, a dedicated arm aimed at investing in private real estate assets across sectors using advanced analytics and data-driven strategies.[28][29] As a managing director and member of the real estate investment committee, he has guided the unit's growth, emphasizing opportunistic investments in multifamily, industrial, and other property types.[30] Notable transactions include the $80 million acquisition of the 452-unit Stonehenge Apartments in Raleigh, North Carolina, in June 2023, marking a key entry into the southeastern U.S. multifamily market.[31] In early 2024, Two Sigma Real Estate acquired a multi-building industrial park at 560-620 E. Germann Road in Gilbert, Arizona, in what was reported as the largest industrial transaction in the Phoenix area that year.[32]
As of 2025, Hill continues as Chairman of the private investment businesses—which encompass Two Sigma Ventures, Two Sigma Real Estate, and Sightway Capital—and CEO of Two Sigma Real Estate, driving further integration of quantitative methods into private markets.[30][2] In October 2024, the firm announced plans to raise external capital for a new real estate investment fund, signaling ongoing expansion under his oversight.[33] Hill's efforts have contributed to the broader growth of Two Sigma's alternative strategies, with the firm's total assets under management exceeding $60 billion.[34]
Philanthropy and art interests
Board memberships and civic roles
J. Tomilson Hill has held prominent leadership positions in several cultural institutions. He served as chairman of the board of directors of Lincoln Center Theater from 2010 until transitioning to chairman emeritus, where he continues to serve on the board, contributing to the oversight of one of New York's leading nonprofit theaters dedicated to producing innovative productions.[35][3] Similarly, Hill chaired the board of trustees of the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden until his resignation in October 2012, after which he became chairman emeritus, playing a key role in guiding the institution's strategic direction during a period of exhibition expansions and financial management.[36][3]
Hill is a trustee of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, elected in January 2012, and serves on its executive committee, where he has supported curatorial initiatives and investment decisions as a lender of artworks and member of visiting committees for European paintings and sculpture.[37][3] He has been chairman of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation's board of trustees since 2021, having joined the board in 2019.[38] He serves on the investment committee of the Smithsonian Institution. In foreign policy circles, he is a longtime member of the Council on Foreign Relations, serving on its board of directors and as chairman emeritus of the investment committee, while chairing the ongoing investment committee to ensure the organization's financial sustainability amid global policy discussions.[3][39]
In education, Hill serves as treasurer and founding member of the board of trustees of the Advantage Testing Foundation, supporting access to standardized testing preparation for underserved students since the organization's inception.[40][41] He is also a board member of Our Lady Queen of Angels School in New York, aiding educational opportunities for children in East Harlem.[3] Additionally, Hill contributes to community development as a board member of the Telluride Foundation, which funds initiatives in arts, education, and health in the San Miguel County region.[42][3] He serves on the board of the Friends of the High Line.[3]
Hill and his wife, Janine, sponsor the International Affairs Fellowship in National Security at the Council on Foreign Relations, providing a transformational gift that funds stipends, travel grants, and program management for emerging scholars and practitioners addressing global security challenges; the fellowship has supported multiple cohorts annually, including four fellows in the 2024–2025 cycle focused on topics like humanitarian initiatives and migration policy.[43] Through these roles up to 2025, Hill has advanced institutional governance in culture, education, and foreign policy, leveraging his financial expertise to enhance organizational impacts.[3]
Hill Art Foundation
The Hill Art Foundation was co-founded in 2018 by J. Tomilson Hill and his wife Janine Hill as a philanthropic initiative to share their art collection with the public.[5] The foundation's public gallery opened in February 2019 in a custom-built 7,700-square-foot space designed by architect Peter Marino, located at 239 Tenth Avenue in New York City's Chelsea neighborhood.[44][45] Admission is free, and the space hosts rotating exhibitions drawn primarily from the Hills' collection of contemporary and modern art.[45]
The foundation's mission centers on amplifying artists' voices, fostering deeper connections between art and viewers, and linking historical and contemporary artistic movements through public exhibitions and educational programs.[45] It prioritizes education by offering year-round initiatives for New York City high school students, including the Teen Curators program, HAF Educators training, and Teen Summer Fellows, which engage participants in curatorial and interpretive activities.[45] These efforts aim to make art accessible and to cultivate the next generation of art enthusiasts and professionals.[45]
Recent activities highlight the foundation's growing role in the art community. In December 2024, it presented "The Writing's on the Wall: Language and Silence in the Visual Arts," a group exhibition curated by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Hilton Als, exploring themes of communication through works by artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Cy Twombly, on view through March 2025.[46] In May 2025, J. Tomilson Hill and family members participated in a TEFAF New York panel discussion on multigenerational collecting, discussing the foundation's impact on public access to private collections.[47] Through these programs and exhibitions, the foundation has significantly expanded the visibility of the Hills' collection, transforming private holdings into a communal resource for education and cultural dialogue.[45]
Art collecting and exhibitions
J. Tomilson Hill began collecting art in the late 1980s alongside his wife Janine, initially focusing on postwar masterpieces before expanding into Renaissance and Baroque bronzes, contemporary works, and Old Masters. Over more than two decades, their collection grew to encompass over 400 pieces valued at more than $800 million as of 2016, with a particular emphasis on small-scale bronzes from the 15th to 18th centuries by artists such as Andrea Riccio, Giambologna, and Adriaen de Vries, as well as postwar and contemporary artists including Willem de Kooning, Francis Bacon, Christopher Wool, and Cy Twombly.[5][48] In 2025, the Hills acquired Jacopo Bassano's The Way to Calvary (1542–c. 1545) for their Old Master collection.[49]
Hill's collecting philosophy centers on fostering dialogue between historical and modern art, driven by his attraction to the immediacy and innovation of contemporary works, particularly those by American women artists and Chinese creators. He views Renaissance and Baroque bronzes as "immortaliz[ing] a moment" through their capture of action, tension, and emotion, but emphasizes the importance of moving beyond their historical seclusion in private royal collections to public view. This commitment to accessibility underscores his curation of pieces that bridge eras, making high-quality art available for broader appreciation rather than private enjoyment alone.[50][51]
A pivotal example of Hill's personal involvement in exhibitions was the 2014 loan of 33 Renaissance and Baroque bronzes from his collection to the Frick Collection in New York, marking the first public display of these works as a cohesive group. Titled Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes from the Hill Collection, the exhibition ran from January 28 to June 15 and featured statuettes of mythological figures, religious subjects, and rulers, juxtaposed with selections from the Hills' contemporary paintings by artists like Ed Ruscha and Lucio Fontana to highlight cross-temporal connections. Through such loans to institutions, Hill has prioritized individual curation and public engagement with his holdings, distinct from later institutional efforts.[52][48]
Personal life
Family
J. Tomilson Hill has been married to Janine W. Hill since the 1970s, with the couple jointly building a prominent art collection over decades.[5] Janine W. Hill served as managing director of Fellowship Affairs at the Council on Foreign Relations from 2002 until 2022, managing fellowship programs and fundraising efforts.[43][53]
The Hills have two daughters: Margot Langdon Hill Kirby and Astrid Hill Lloyd. Margot married Colin James Kirby in 2013.[54] Astrid, who married Ryan Joseph Dattilo in 2013 before later taking the surname Lloyd, serves as vice president of the Hill Art Foundation, reflecting the family's shared passion for art.[55][56]
The family engages in joint philanthropic initiatives, notably sponsoring the International Affairs Fellowship in National Security at the Council on Foreign Relations, which supports emerging leaders in foreign policy through grants and programming.[43] They also established the Janine and J. Tomilson Hill Family Trust to fund charitable, religious, and educational causes, distributing over $1.7 million in grants by recent years.[57]
Residences and notable sales
J. Tomilson Hill and his wife, Janine, primarily reside in a spacious, park-facing apartment at 834 Fifth Avenue in New York City, which they acquired in 2016 for $30.5 million from the estate of philanthropist Carroll Petrie.[58] The full-floor unit, spanning over 5,000 square feet with two bedrooms and four bathrooms, overlooks Central Park and was designed by architect Peter Marino, one of several residences the couple has collaborated on with the designer.[59] Prior to this purchase, the Hills owned a full-floor co-op at 1040 Park Avenue on East 72nd Street, which they listed for sale in 2016 at $20 million.[60]
In addition to their New York base, the Hills maintain homes in East Hampton, New York; Paris, France; and Telluride, Colorado, supporting a lifestyle that spans urban sophistication and seasonal retreats for skiing and coastal living.[10] These properties, many renovated by Marino, underscore the couple's preference for meticulously curated living spaces that integrate their personal interests.[11]
One of Hill's most notable personal asset transactions occurred in 2004, when he consigned Mark Rothko's abstract painting No. 6 (Yellow, White, Blue Over Yellow on Gray) to Sotheby's contemporary art evening auction, where it sold for $17.3 million—a record price for Rothko at the time.[61] As of November 2025, Hill's net worth is estimated at $3.3 billion, primarily from investments, enabling such substantial real estate and asset management.[2] He and Janine share their New York residence.[