|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

|
About Steve ::
Person :: Art
Art Collection in General
Steve has been collecting art since the 1970s.
He started with 19th century art, but then switched over to modern art.
He has a very large collection, and as a result has become part of the art
world in both Los Angeles and New York. He has also become friends
with a number of artists, most notably Eric Fischl and Ed Ruscha.
The following articles are miscellaneous items about his
own collecting and his place in that art world. |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The Washington Post
October 1, 2003
Final edition, Style Section, p. C03
Names & Faces
Steve Martin's Collect Calling
Steve Martin so impressed 700 of Washington's art aficionados Monday night
with his fine-tuned knowledge of the subject that he received a standing
ovation. (Or maybe it was his lime-green socks that won the crowd over.)
The actor/art collector was here at the request of the Corcoran Gallery of
Art and happily showcased a slide show of his collection followed by a Q and
A. After some slide mishaps (the first two were shown backward, whoops),
Martin really held his own, we're told, especially in his conversation with
New York Times contributor Deborah Solomon, with whom he shared the stage.
Martin touched upon why he's winnowing his collection (he's putting himself
on restriction: only one painting per wall) and admitted even he has limits
to what he purchases. "It's an expensive hobby."
"You really got the feeling that he was sitting in his living room going
through his personal art collection, with tons of funny quips," one attendee
told us. "He's definitely well read. There was no 'Oh, I really like the
colors' explanation." What, like that's bad?
-- Compiled by Anne Schroeder from staff and wire reports
|
|
|
 |
|
Los Angeles Times
May 12, 1991, Sunday, Home Edition
Calendar; Page 6; Calendar Desk
HOLLYWOOD'S ART CONNECTIONS; WHERE ACTORS, AGENTS AND MOVIE AND TV
EXECUTIVES MEET, ART IS THE TOPIC. WHETHER FOR LOVE OF ART OR THE LIMELIGHT,
CELEBRITIES HAVE BECOME BIG COLLECTORS
Barbara Isenberg
No doubt about it.
In Hollywood, art is the scene. It's what industry people discuss over pasta
checca and seared ahi. It represents beauty, wealth, passion, power,
culture, status and celebrity. It's about deal-making and high-rolling. The
players are glamorous. So is the game.
From Fran and Ray Stark's museum-like sculpture garden to the beginning
photography and print collections of young agents and producers, movie and
TV people are involved in the art world as never before.
Many contemporary art dealers here estimate that entertainment industry
people represent at least 25% of their buyers. Santa Monica-based Fred
Hoffman says his gallery alone has done business with more than 100 people
in the entertainment business the last two years.
"Where there is affluence, some level of leisure time and the motivation for
extending one's perception, it's a normal process to get involved with art,"
says New York dealer Arnold Glimcher. "People in film and the dramatic arts
in New York are also involved in collecting. Artists stick together."
They have the money, often paint or sculpt themselves, enjoy the social
cachet and hedge against future unemployment. Advisers and dealers line up
to provide advice, and their lawyers often buy from the same people. And if
you're going to keep an eye on your investments and financial future, it's
probably more fun to talk art with dealers and artists at DC-3 or 72 Market
Street than to invest in stock or real estate deals.
Celebrity art collectors regularly join insurance, retailing and banking
executives on Art and Antiques' annual list of the 100 top U.S. collectors.
This year's list, published in March, listed Diandra (Mrs. Michael) Douglas,
Madonna, Steve Martin, Andy Williams, Oprah Winfrey, super-agent
Michael Ovitz, and producers Douglas Cramer, Joel Silver and Ray Stark.
(Bill Cosby, David Geffen and Barbra Streisand are such regulars that the
magazine even explained why they weren't on this year's list.)
Because many of these people keep low profiles outside their immediate
circles, nobody knows for certain how many collectors wear down paths
between the studio and gallery rows on Colorado Boulevard in Santa Monica or
57th Street in New York. But interviews with dozens of collectors, dealers,
artists and others indicate between 20 and 30 important, multimillion dollar
collections -- and hundreds of smaller ones -- are being amassed locally by
industry patrons.
'It's a company town," says artist De Wain Valentine, "and the movie
business is our company."
About 25% of the lenders to the County Museum of Art's coming exhibition,
"Monet to Matisse: French Art in Southern California Collections," are
somehow connected to the entertainment industry, says the show's co-curator,
Judi Freeman. Elizabeth Taylor is lending her Van Gogh, Stark's Monet
painting is on the catalogue's front cover and songwriter Billy Steinberg's
Matisse vase is on the back cover.
Stark, Geffen, Martin and producer David Wolper are all on the County
Museum of Art board; all have made or promised gifts to the museum, while
Martin and Geffen have each contributed enough money (about $250,000) to
have galleries named after them. TV producer Douglas Cramer is currently
president of the Museum of Contemporary Art, and last week Ovitz hosted a
major MOCA fund-raiser at Creative Artists Agency.
"Without the industry, MOCA would have had trouble coming into existence,"
says the museum's director, Richard Koshalek.
"No doubt about it."
Art collecting is becoming the thing to do. Nearly half of the people listed
in ARTnews' 1991 roster of the top 200 collectors weren't actively
collecting in 1980. Maurice Tuchman, senior curator of 20th-Century art at
the County Museum, estimates there are probably 20 times as many collectors
in America today as 20 years ago.
Many of them are in Southern California, where industry interest has both
profited from and contributed to the city's recognition in the '80s as an
international art center. Besides the presence of the J. Paul Getty Museum
and Norton Simon Museum heralding art of the past, contemporary art has come
of age here. Collectors and dealers alike point to the founding of MOCA, the
expansion of the County Museum of Art, a gallery boom.
"I think it coincides with their spiritual ideology," says consultant Molly
Barnes, who helped put together collections for producer Norman Lear and
others. "The museum and gallery have replaced the church as a place for
people to meet, mate and date. They look to art for spiritual answers as
well as a way to express themselves and be in."
Edward G. Robinson spent Matisse's 70th birthday with him in Paris, and so
do today's top collectors mix with today's art stars. Roy Lichtenstein, for
instance, says he "almost always" socializes with industry people when he's
in town. Producers and agents regularly entertain prominent New York-based
artists and dealers at their homes or trendy restaurants, while local
dealers cater elegant meals in the intimacy of their galleries.
"The artists are as interested in TV and movie stars as the other way
around, which I find is very healthy and fun to mesh," says producer Cramer.
Robert Rauschenberg and Gregory Peck met at a screening at Norman Lear's
house not long ago, for instance, and Peck later stopped by Gemini G.E.L. to
watch the artist create new prints. "It was nice for both of them," says
Gemini co-founder Sid Felsen. "I think Bob was thrilled that Gregory Peck
was here watching him, and I think Gregory Peck enjoyed watching Bob work."
TV executive and art collector Scott Spiegel's memorial service was at
Hoffman's gallery, and dealer Irving Blum's recent wedding reception was at
the home of Arthur Cohen, president of worldwide marketing for Paramount
Pictures. Glimcher, whose influence here has ranged from Wolper's Picasso
sculptures to Ovitz's modern art collection, has gone on to first produce
("Legal Eagles" and "Gorillas in the Mist") and now direct films ("The Mambo
Kings Sing Songs of Love").
It only makes sense that the worlds mingle, says sculptor Robert Graham,
whose work is in many industry collections and who is currently dating
Anjelica Huston. "When you meet people, you gravitate toward those who are
like you, who have the same struggles. The medium you use to manifest your
vision is different but the struggle is the same."
Publicly, their worlds intersect at charity art auctions, Hollywood parties
and big-ticket art events. The premiere of Martin's film, "L.A. Story,"
was the first joint fund-raiser of MOCA and LACMA and attracted such
performers as Cybill Shepherd, Michael Douglas and Tom Hanks. There were
1,200 people at the premiere, and each museum went home with $50,000.
"They're involved with the scene in a way older collectors in the industry
never were," says curator Tuchman. "They identify with artists and the art
world and commerce and risk; this is a story being told before their eyes."
Steve Martin has called paintings "the last luxury" and "an intellectual
harem," and many buyers simply relish being surrounded by beauty and
creativity. Tony Curtis speaks of the pleasure of standing in front of a
great painting, in the very same arc of space where the artist stood, for
instance. And the late Barry Lowen, a TV executive who inspired many of
today's collectors, would keep blocking off windows in his Hollywood home to
have more wall space for his art.
It's a far cry from Dusty, the rock star in Woody Allen's "Hannah and Her
Sisters," who has "a lot of wall space" in his new, huge house in
Southampton. Stopping by a SoHo studio, fabulously wealthy Dusty declines to
look at drawings because he wants "something big" -- with puce in it to go
with his new ottoman.
But just as with any industry, passion, commitment and motivation vary
widely among Hollywood collectors. "I think with rare exceptions, they don't
devote the time," says dealer Irving Blum, who runs galleries on both
coasts. "I think they collect mostly for reasons of fashion. They pick up
these shelter magazines and are often very influenced. They think paintings
look really handsome on large white walls."
"If it's trendy to collect art, they'll collect art," says consultant Marcia
Medavoy Ross. "In the early '70s, it was trendy to collect Tiffany lamps. If
one person builds a screening room, everyone builds them. If you have 200
people collecting, and 30 who are serious, that's a lot."
Santa Monica dealer Michael Kohn is less diplomatic: "They want the
accouterments of wealth and taste . Serious collectors go to galleries every
weekend, sit on museum committees and don't just buy a lot of (art) that's
supposed to be worth a lot of money. It's hard to sink in an idea of quality
to people who think a good movie is one that makes $100 million."
Yet, museum curators frequently praise individuals in terms of scholarship
as well as gift-giving, and Koshalek describes in-home art libraries that
are well-used as well as extensive. "People who have a high profile in the
industry are special targets of envy because of the surroundings of
glamour," Tuchman says. "I think it's a nice change of pace for people in
the industry to gossip about art rather than the revenues of the newest
production."
Moreover, the "industry" may have been hit by recession, but not so badly as
real estate and banking. As the art-market frenzy dies down and many buyers
are more cautious, art dealers here and elsewhere are courting show business
buyers as never before.
These are people who have been known to trade expensive automobiles for fine
paintings. Local collectors and dealers alike report that even New York
dealers who may once have dismissed industry buyers are today seriously
wooing them.
Some dealers wouldn't name a celebrity buyer if their Jaguar leases depended
on it, but others readily mention such things as how producer Thom Mount
buys "strictly from his gut" and Bruce Springsteen is a "very nice guy" who
stopped in and bought art during regular business hours. One dealer even has
inscribed photographs in the gallery restroom from such people as Bruce
Willis and Jodie Foster.
Connections certainly help. Marcia Medavoy Ross' ex-husband is Mike Medavoy,
chairman of Tri-Star Pictures. Dealer Earl McGrath was president of Rolling
Stones Records at one point, and dealer Michael Kohn, who was born and
raised here, says many of his friends from school are studio VPs now. Ruth
Bloom of Meyers/Bloom in Santa Monica is married to entertainment lawyer
Jake Bloom.
Dealer Jeanne Meyers says, for instance, that it was attorney Bloom who
introduced her and many of his colleagues to the work of Leon Polk Smith. At
the gallery's recent Smith show, which closed March 30, she figures 40% of
the artworks -- at prices from $6,000 for a small collage to $210,000 for a
large painting from the '60s -- went to entertainment industry people.
TV and film producer Gene Corman criticizes colleagues who buy art because
"somebody suggests an artist or another artist is hot." Corman, who with his
wife Nan has created a highly regarded collection of modern figurative art,
feels that "people should judge on their own, and it's not that difficult.
When you read a book, you know instantly whether the person can write. Same
with a screenplay. The words tell you the imagery and the substance. Looking
at art is the same."
Maybe for Corman, who traces his interest in art back to his college days at
Stanford. But others are less sure of themselves. Today's show-business
people, much like today's corporate buyers, often rely on helpers.
Reputation and money both are involved, which make pedigree very important.
They go to well-known dealers their friends use or they have read about, and
they tend to buy familiar names.
'I think everybody fears looking stupid," Blum says. "Consultants are more
powerful than they've ever been because people don't want to be made to look
silly and often aren't prepared to devote the time themselves that it
requires."
Not that using consultants is worry-free. Sylvester Stallone sued art
consultant Barbara Guggenheim for $5 million in December, 1989, saying that
based on controversy surrounding a $1.8-million 19th-Century Bouguereau
painting that she bought for him, he felt he paid too much for several other
artworks bought through her. Both sides confirm that the suit was later
dropped, and asked about the resultant bad publicity, Guggenheim says, "It
comes with the territory. If you don't cross the street, you don't get run
over. That was an unfortunate situation . . . but I have the highest regard
for (Stallone)."
The high visibility makes celebrity buyers more subject to scrutiny,
comments artist Billy Al Bengston, "and probably a little more timid in
terms of making selections. If you take a nice egghead investor, he can
collect anything he wants to and never get any flak for it."
Art & Antiques editor Jeffrey Schaire notes, for instance, that Oprah
Winfrey bought quite a bit of Shaker furniture last August at auction "and
did it very publicly. (The buying) was picked up everywhere as a piece of
gossip and I think that was a mildly unpleasant experience for her."
Better to be candid about what you're doing. "I'm not a very educated
collector," says Norman Lear, who has been collecting art since the '70s. "I
also can't walk around and tell you what year and what period of the
artist's creative life a piece of work was done in. What we have here amuses
us and lifts our spirits."
Artists and studio people have been slow-dancing for years. Siqueiros
painted a mural on John Huston's screening room wall, and Balthus encouraged
Tony Curtis to paint.
West Hollywood dealer Patricia Faure recalls the '40s when, as a teen-ager,
she worked as a volunteer with Vincent Price, a founder of Beverly Hills'
Modern Institute of Art and a key influence on art connoisseurship among his
colleagues. Edward G. Robinson showed his collection of Impressionist and
other masterworks at the County Museum of Art in 1956.
Ray Stark's mother-in-law Fanny Brice collected art, and brother-in-law
William Brice creates it; there are Brice paintings hanging alongside the
Matisses and Diebenkorns throughout the house. Stark first became friendly
with Henry Moore when "Funny Girl" was opening in London, and says that
Moore interested the Starks in other sculptors.
Robinson sold most of his holdings because of a divorce settlement. And over
the years, such important industry-based collections as those of Hal Wallis,
Billy Wilder, and Edie Mayer Goetz and her husband, producer William Goetz,
have raised millions of dollars at auction.
But collecting is addictive. Wilder's collection of Impressionist and
20th-Century art may have fetched $32.6 million at Christie's in 1989, for
instance, but the award-winning producer-director is still buying art.
Wilder, who once said "I wish I'd collected more and directed less,"
recently attended an opening at Gemini. There were four new Roy Lichtenstein
prints on the gallery walls upstairs and four on the first floor, and Wilder
loved every one of them. So when he couldn't decide which of Lichtenstein's
"Interiors" to buy -- for prices starting at $25,000 apiece -- he bought all
eight of them.
Dealers and collectors continually refer to a group of influential,
well-known industry buyers like Wilder as "centers of influence." Actor
Curtis recalls learning about artists from Wilder, and Steve Martin has been
quoted as tipping his hat to Andy Williams. Actor/director/artist Dennis
Hopper bridges the art scenes of the '60s and the '90s.
Perhaps the key "center of influence" in the '80s was Barry Lowen, vice
president for creative affairs at Aaron Spelling Productions until his death
in 1985. From Cramer and Ovitz to new, younger collectors, serious buyers
nearly always mention Lowen's name. Before he died and his contemporary art
collection was left to MOCA, Lowen's art-engulfed Hollywood Hills home was a
must visit for his colleagues and others.
Lowen was also a founder in 1985 of the Entertainment Alliance unit of the
Modern and Contemporary Art Council support group at the County Museum of
Art, an entity that has since all but disappeared. Maurice Tuchman blames
its demise in part on the industry's odd hours and irregular schedules, but
he does not seem discouraged. "Now the numbers are such that they offer a
venturesomeness and collegiality," Tuchman says. "There's a sense of
community arising for the first time."
What do they buy?
Purchases vary from collector to collector, but Kenneth Noland and Frank
Stella seem as popular today as they were in the '70s. Fewer people these
days can afford to buy the Impressionists, but many people in Hollywood own
work by David Hockney, Franz Kline and Alexander Calder. They own works by
Rauschenberg, Claes Oldenburg, Ellsworth Kelly, Jonathan Borofsky, Joel
Shapiro and Bruce Nauman.
Everybody who can afford it has at least one work by Eric Fischl, David
Salle or Julian Schnabel, the "hot" artists of the '80s. And both Madonna
and Jack Nicholson reportedly collect Tamara de Lempicka -- the artist
institutionalized by the play "Tamara" -- in addition to other work.
Such Los Angeles-based artists as Ed Ruscha, Laddie John Dill, John
Baldessari, Charles Arnoldi, Valentine and Graham often appear in these
collections, but the emphasis remains on New York artists. Says Billy Al
Bengston: "If I had to depend on the movie industry, I'd sure be up a
creek."
Madonna, who has been quoted saying she began collecting art "as soon as I
had the bread," has not only bought paintings by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo
but also commissioned a screenplay about her. Consultant Guggenheim says she
seeks out social-realist paintings for one producer, paintings with very
strong points of view or specialized lighting for a director client.
Producer Daniel Melnick, she says, collects "cool, minimalist paintings and
works by young abstract painters working off that tradition," while
Stallone, she says, looks for "heroic" figures in his art, whether in Old
Masters or more contemporary work.
Industry people tend to concentrate on particular artists or periods, says
Sandra Starr, director of the James Corcoran Gallery, "and I think this is
one of the reasons they tend to end up having very good collections.
Possibly because they don't have a lot of time, they tend to be very intense
and that kind of intensity (can) produce very good collections."
Producer David Wolper, for instance, stalked Picasso sculpture; in the bar
of the Plaza Athenee in Paris, he and Glimcher looked through books together
at potential purchases, then set out to buy them. That was in 1980, and by
1984, Wolper had amassed so many that when the County Museum of Art
exhibited "David L. Wolper's Picassos," the collection represented the
largest group of Picasso sculpture then in private hands.
Like people in other businesses who buy art, some collectors can't wait to
talk about it. Walking a visitor through their collections, they toss off
the provenance of their artworks, peppering their conversation with phrases
like "lucky to get it" and "don't make me sound pretentious." They note
which of their paintings have been featured in art magazines, and are quick
to send along glossy photo spreads from Architectural Record.
Producer Joel Silver ("Die Hard" and "Lethal Weapon"), who generally refuses
to talk to the press, readily chats about his passion for Frank Lloyd Wright
houses -- he's been living in Wright's 2,500-square-foot Storer house in the
Hollywood Hills since '84 and has been working on the Auldbrass Plantation
in South Carolina since purchasing it in 1986. Silver even sets up a
walk-through of his home for the reporter.
The tour is led by dealer Tod Volpe, who estimates that the entertainment
industry could account for half of the Arts and Crafts business here
generally. Volpe helped producer Silver locate and buy furniture and
decorative art pieces for his Wright-designed homes, then went on to work
with many of Silver's friends and colleagues. Art adviser to such
heavyweights as Larry Gordon ("Field of Dreams") and actors Nicholson,
Streisand and Willis, Volpe left behind his Madison Avenue gallery and
headed West to cultivate a market here.
Although such celebrities as Nicholson and Stallone have been spotted at
auctions, many of their colleagues lie low for privacy or security reasons
-- or to keep prices from escalating. Steve Martin, for instance, will
roller-skate through the County Museum of Art in "L.A. Story," or open his
home to top collectors affiliated with MOCA, but requests to talk about his
art are nearly always turned down flat.
Creative Artists Agency chairman Michael Ovitz also shies away from
discussing his personal art collection, preferring to talk about his new
corporate headquarters. The I.M. Pei building "was built to be a piece of
art itself," says Ovitz, who also commissioned Roy Lichtenstein to create a
monumental 26-foot-high painting on-site.
While Ovitz's contemporary desk reflects the curves and style of Pei's
building, the rest of the office reflects his eclectic collecting style. A
book about Pei rests on a Noguchi table not far from a minimalist Robert
Mangold painting; there are Giacometti chairs, turn-of-the-century African
sculpture, a Japanese woodblock, a Miro sculpture and Chinese silk fabrics.
Ovitz and other well-heeled collectors generally make many of their
purchases in New York and observers guess show business people are buying as
much -- if not more -- in New York as here. Most of these people are
bi-coastal, and those who don't have homes in both cities still regularly
visit New York. They travel SoHo galleries on Saturdays, hit the 57th Street
galleries during the week. Cramer is on the Museum of Modern Art's
international council, and Ovitz is on MOMA's high-level Chairman's Council
and was recently named to the museum's Trustee Committee on Film.
What about future buying by the industry? Agents David and Bob Gersh grew up
in a house filled with fine art by their parents, Beatrice and Phil Gersh,
and are building their own impressive collections. Young stars and producers
are growing accustomed to seeing good art on the walls of their agents' and
lawyers' homes and offices. Is it making an impression?
Maybe so. Industry buyers scooped up John Alexander's paintings, for
instance, in recent shows at Jan Turner's and Earl McGrath's galleries.
Alexander "happens to know a lot of people in the industry," says Turner,
who sold nearly half of Alexander's $22,000 to $40,000 paintings to industry
people "in this so-called slow period." Among the buyers, says Turner, were
"China Beach's" Dana Delany and Robin Williams.
Music supervisor Joe Jarrell, 27, talks about one day buying art from Thomas
Solomon, who has been selling "cutting edge" art from assorted garage-based
galleries locally since the fall of 1988. (Solomon used the pool at director
Paul Mazursky's house a few years ago for a Christmas exhibition of
waterproof art.) "People in the entertainment industry are interested in art
that doesn't hit you over the head," Solomon says. "They're educated, go to
museums, read art magazines, and are interested in art history."
Many younger people are also buying photographs, which are often less
intimidating, less money comparatively, and more familiar to movie people
than other art forms. Photography dealer David Fahey estimates that at least
30% of Fahey/Klein's customers are in the industry, and says such people
bought half the photographs in last fall's Irving Penn show -- at $1,500 to
$20,000 apiece.
"People in arts-related industries tend to be in the avant-garde and are
more forward thinking," Fahey says. "Even collecting classical photography
has only been very popular the past 20 years. They're catching the wave
early on."
Now, dealers and artists alike are talking movies. Perhaps following in the
tradition of the late Andy Warhol, artists David Salle and Robert Longo have
both indicated interest in film-making. Dealer Volpe is currently developing
one film on the legendary art dealer, Joseph Duveen, and another on art
thefts.
Glimcher's example has obviously not gone unnoticed. The dealer/producer
says arts sales have resulted from his movie contacts, and younger dealer
Stuart Regen candidly pegs his involvement as an associate producer on
Hemdale Pictures' "Bright Angel" to the potential of new business.
Regen, who figures half of his business is entertainment industry people,
opened his gallery in West Hollywood partly because so many industry people
lunched in the area. And he got involved on "Bright Angel," he says, "in
part because I knew it would introduce me to people in the movie industry
who may not know my gallery or may not go to galleries period."
Due at MOCA in early 1992, meanwhile, is "Art and Film," a show examining
"the crossovers, coincidences and fusions" of modern art and films from 1895
to 1970. The exhibition has received funding from Warner Communications.
And producer Corman, who is active in the County Museum's Modern and
Contemporary Art Council, says he recently proposed that the council put
together a show of favorite artworks from industry collections as a
fund-raiser. "Many people would come who might not necessarily step foot in
a museum otherwise," Corman says. "It would show the community the
sensibilities of people in the entertainment business."
WHO IS COLLECTING WHAT? A SAMPLER
Bill Cosby: African-American art, Shaker furniture
Douglas Cramer: contemporary masters (Jasper Johns, Frank Stella, Roy
Lichtenstein)
Diandra and Michael Douglas: Indian art, furniture
Harrison Ford: late Impressionist (Edouard Vuillard and Pierre Bonnard)
Richard Gere: photography (Henri Cartier-Bresson, Joel Peter Witkin)
David Geffen: contemporary art (David Hockney, Sam Francis, Johns)
Larry Gordon: American Arts and Crafts and early 20th-Century American
paintings
Dennis Hopper: Modern and contemporary (Marcel Duchamp, Ed Ruscha,
Jean-Michel Basquiat)
Lyn and Norman Lear: contemporary paintings and sculpture (Robert Graham,
Robert Rauschenberg)
Madonna: Frida Kahlo paintings, photography (early 20th-Century masters),
Pablo Picasso
Steve Martin: Hockney, Franz Kline, Helen Frankenthaler
Daniel Melnick: Emerging and contemporary (Lichtenstein, Ellsworth Kelly)
Jack Nicholson: Impressionist and Modernist paintings and sculpture, Arts
and Crafts, Art Nouveau
Michael Ovitz: Modern (Picasso, Joan Miro, Jean Dubuffet) and contemporary
(Lichtenstein), African art
Joel Silver: Frank Lloyd Wright houses, Teco pottery, Arts and Crafts
Steven Spielberg: Norman Rockwell, Disney cels
Sylvester Stallone: Old masters and contemporary art (Francis Bacon, Anselm
Kiefer)
Fran and Ray Stark: Impressionist (Claude Monet) and modern paintings and
sculpture (Aristide Maillol, Henry Moore), contemporary art
Barbra Streisand: American furniture, Art Nouveau, Art Deco, Arts and Crafts
Times librarian Dorothy Ingebretsen contributed to the research in this
article.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The Daily Telegraph
May 10, 1990, Thursday
Pg. 23
$7m for de Kooning
Godfrey Barker
PALISADE by Willem de Kooning, 1957, topped Sotheby's Spring Contemporary
Art Sale in New York when it sold for an under-estimate $ 7.15 million
(about £4.4 million) on Tuesday night to the Chicago dealer Richard Gray.
The price, something of a pale shadow of the $ 20.9 million bid, though not
yet paid, by the Japanese dealer Shigeki Kameyama in November 1989 for de
Kooning's Interchange of 1953, prompted speculation that the Contemporary
Art market had come off the boil. That was confirmed by the failure of
Sotheby's big picture of the night, de Kooning's Woman as Landscape of 1954,
a key work for which $9 million-$12 million was hoped. Since prices have
risen by an astonishing 2,000 per cent since 1984, a cooling down of the
market, if it is now finally upon us, is a healthy sign. Sotheby's took $
55.8 million for 83 pictures, with 31 per cent unsold. This is a high figure
given the excess this market is used to; but it implies a much more
judicious approach to buying than has been seen for several years. Francis
Bacon's Papal Study for Portrait, 1957, fetched $ 5.5 million, and his
Portrait of Lucien Freud, 1968, made $ 3.63 million. Best of the 10 artist's
records set was $ 5.5 million for Cy Twombly, a leap of three times on his
previous highest price, given for the 15ft long Untitled of 1971, a
wall-length of doodling in white crayon on brown canvas but possessed also
of a certain haunting beauty. Another, smaller Untitled of 1968, a dance of
swirling circles, made a similarly low estimate of $ 3.85 million. Ambitious
climbs in price were made by William Baziotes, Germaine Richier, Morris
Louis, Frank Auerbach (a record $ 660,000 for his gloomy Mornington Crescent
1966), Ad Reinhardt, Larry Rivers, Donald Sultan and Richard Diebenkorn (all
pushed to new highs).
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Los Angeles Times
March 17, 1996, Sunday, Home edition
Calendar; Page 61; Calendar Desk
ART NOTES; AUCTIONS SPRING INTO
SPRING
Suzanne Muchnic
If spring is just around the corner, New York's auction season can't be
far away. The first indication is a preview of Sotheby's May sales,
Wednesday through Saturday at the firm's Beverly Hills showroom. Among
choice Impressionist and modern pieces available for viewing are two
paintings by Jean Dubuffet from the estate of Lita Annenberg Hazen, wife of
film producer Joseph H. Hazen and sister of publishing magnate Walter H.
Annenberg. The exhibition also features a Claude Monet landscape, "Antibes,
Vue du Plateau Notre Dame," and Willem Kooning's 1954-55 painting "Woman
as Landscape," consigned by actor Steve Martin.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
San Francisco Chronicle
Friday, March 15, 1996
Leah Garchik's Personals
Leah Garchik
-- ``Woman as Landscape,'' a 1954 painting by Willem de Kooning, will be
auctioned at Sotheby's in New York in May, when it is expected to fetch
``several million'' dollars. The work is owned by Steve Martin, who wouldn't
comment on why he is selling it.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Los Angeles Times
March 17, 1996, Sunday, Home edition
Calendar; Page 61; Calendar Desk
ART NOTES; AUCTIONS SPRING INTO SPRING
Suzanne Muchnic
If spring is just around the corner, New York's auction season can't be far
away. The first indication is a preview of Sotheby's May sales, Wednesday
through Saturday at the firm's Beverly Hills showroom. Among choice
Impressionist and modern pieces available for viewing are two paintings by
Jean Dubuffet from the estate of Lita Annenberg Hazen, wife of film producer
Joseph H. Hazen and sister of publishing magnate Walter H. Annenberg. The
exhibition also features a Claude Monet landscape, "Antibes, Vue du Plateau
Notre Dame," and Willem de Kooning's 1954-55 painting "Woman as Landscape,"
consigned by actor Steve Martin.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram
March 16, 1996, Saturday Final AM edition
News; Pg. 20
PEOPLE WATCH
Steve Martin, 50, says his "midlife crisis [is] in full throttle" following
the recent split with girlfriend, Anne Heche, 25, and last week's marriage
of ex-wife Victoria Tennant to entertainment lawyer Kirk Stambler. "I've
been sorting out what it means to be a bachelor," the actor says in April's
Esquire. "I've had these incredible revelations on how completely stupid
I've been with women. " Says he's taken to reading Men Are From Mars, Women
Are From Venus.
MARKINGS
Woman as Landscape, a 1954 painting by Willem de Kooning, will be auctioned
at Sotheby's in New York in May, when it is expected to fetch "several
million" dollars. The work is owned by Steve Martin, who wouldn't comment on
why he is selling it.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The Daily Telegraph
May 6, 1996, Monday
Art Sales; Pg. 14
A woman in fear
Laura Stewart
A WOMAN rising from an abstract fiery background by Willem de Kooning leads
the multimillion dollar auctions of contemporary art in New York this week.
Painted in 1954-55, Woman as Landscape, estimated to fetch $6 million at
Sotheby's on Wednesday evening, comes from a series painted by the Dutch
abstract expressionist between 1950 and 1955. The difference here is that
the monumental female figure seems more terrified than terrifying, as she
appears in most others of the group.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
artnet.com
Magazine News
to market, to market... the marriage of emmerich & sotheby's
Judd Tully
Was Sotheby's anemic $13.4 million sale of contemporary art last May 8
(against a bullish pre-sale estimate of $23 million to $31.4 million) a
factor in the formation of Emmerich/Sotheby's, the just-created confection
starring art-world veteran André Emmerich?
It depends on who you talk to. "No," says Diana D. Brooks, Sotheby's
president and CEO, who also navigated the lame May 8 sale that saw a trio of
multimillion-dollar lots--Willem de Kooning's Woman as Landscape, Franz
Kline's Andrus and Jasper John's Gray Painting With Ball--sink with barely a
hand raised. "In fact, we've been talking with André since February,"
emphasized Brooks.
"Sotheby's is making an effort to shore up its image after the May debacle,"
countered one prominent private dealer who likened the alliance to Sotheby's
diplomatic hiring last year of ex-Museum of Modern Art director, Richard
Oldenberg, as a largely undefined ambassador-at-large. Oldenburg has a big
title as chairman of Sotheby's America but has hardly made a wave since he
came on board a year ago April.
****
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Los Angeles Times
February 1, 1994, Tuesday, Home edition
Calendar; Part F; Page 3; Column 2; Entertainment Desk
L.A. COLLECTIONS ON DISPLAY
Christopher Knight
Among the smaller surprises in the Roy Lichtenstein retrospective at the
Museum of Contemporary Art is the number of works -- including some of the
best -- that come from Los Angeles collections.
More than 15% of the show, or 14 of 91 paintings and sculptures, has been
drawn from local holdings: Betty Asher, Eli and Edythe Broad, Douglas S.
Cramer, David Geffen, Steve Martin, the estate of Marcia Weisman and MOCA's
own Panza Collection.
Together with two Lichtensteins from the Panza Collection not on view, and
counting the great 1963 "Cold Shoulder" that is a promised gift to the
County Museum of Art from Robert Halff of Beverly Hills, an estimable array
of the artist's work is owned locally.
With 12 dating from the 1960s -- capped by the great 1963 fighter-pilot
canvas, "Okay, Hot-Shot!," from the Geffen collection -- those combined
holdings are especially rich in paintings and sculptures from Lichtenstein's
most consequential period.
It only seems right. After all, not only are several of those collectors
prominent in the entertainment industry, Los Angeles also seems an apt home
for an art wittily conversant with the strange machinery of mass culture.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Los Angeles Times
February 1, 1994, Tuesday, Home edition
Calendar; Part F; Page 3; Column 2; Entertainment Desk
L.A. COLLECTIONS ON DISPLAY
Christopher Knight
Among the smaller surprises in the Roy Lichtenstein retrospective at the
Museum of Contemporary Art is the number of works -- including some of the
best -- that come from Los Angeles collections.
More than 15% of the show, or 14 of 91 paintings and sculptures, has been
drawn from local holdings: Betty Asher, Eli and Edythe Broad, Douglas S.
Cramer, David Geffen, Steve Martin, the estate of Marcia Weisman and MOCA's
own Panza Collection.
Together with two Lichtensteins from the Panza Collection not on view, and
counting the great 1963 "Cold Shoulder" that is a promised gift to the
County Museum of Art from Robert Halff of Beverly Hills, an estimable array
of the artist's work is owned locally.
With 12 dating from the 1960s -- capped by the great 1963 fighter-pilot
canvas, "Okay, Hot-Shot!," from the Geffen collection -- those combined
holdings are especially rich in paintings and sculptures from Lichtenstein's
most consequential period.
It only seems right. After all, not only are several of those collectors
prominent in the entertainment industry, Los Angeles also seems an apt home
for an art wittily conversant with the strange machinery of mass culture. |
|
|
|
|

|
|
The Washington Post
Film Notes
Friday, May 4, 2001; Page WE50
Two Films Come to Hirshhorn
Desson Howe
ROBERT Dornhelm's 1999 "The Venice Project" presents tales of a Venetian
family in 1699, interspersed with footage from the 1999 Venice Biennale. The
film starts with Count Giaccomo (Linus Roache) in 1699, who's worried about
the waning of Renaissance influences. He orders his advisors to predict what
will happen to the world of art in the future. Flash forward to 1999, where
the Vienna Biennale is taking place. The film includes appearances by Hector
Babenco, Lauren Bacall (as a certain Countess Camilla Volta), Ben Cross,
Parker Posey and Dennis Hopper. John Guare, Steve Martin and others appear
as themselves. A free screening of the 86-minute movie takes place Friday at
8 at the Hirshhorn. And Thursday and May 11, filmmakers Vince and Shelly
Fremont will introduce "Pie in the Sky: The Brigid Berlin Story," their
documentary about Andy Warhol intimate Brigid Berlin. All shows are free.
|
|
|
 |
|
Los Angeles Times
February 7, 1991, Thursday, Home Edition
View; Part E; Page 10; Column 5; View Desk
ARTISTIC MERGER AIDS L.A. ART MUSEUMS
BETTY GOODWIN, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
There was a truce in the cross town rivalry if such rivalry exists between
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Museum of Contemporary Art, at
least for one high impact evening.
For the first time, the two cultural institutions merged resources, trustees
and patrons for a joint fund raiser. Tuesday's premiere of the romantic
comedy "L.A. Story" was held on neutral territory (the AMC Century 14
Theatres in Century City). Each museum netted about $50,000.
So how did it happen? "Steve came to me and Danny went to Richard,"
explained LACMA director Earl Powell III. Steve is Steve Martin, the movie's
star, writer and executive producer as well as a LACMA trustee. Danny is
Daniel Melnick, a producer and MOCA trustee. Richard is MOCA director
Richard Koshalek.
Not only did the merger work, but the key players promised more of the same
in the future. Melnick called it "a burst of ecumenicalism." LACMA trustee
Richard Sherwood deemed the whole thing "very logical." MOCA chairman Fred
Nicholas predicted "the beginning of a long, fruitful relationship." And
Koshalek declared, "Rusty and I are friends and have been friends and
continue to be friends."
The event turned into an only in L.A. mingling of art curators, trustees,
artists, actors, agents, producers and dozens of Hollywood publicists.
The mix included Ed Ruscha, Neil Simon, Billy Al Bengston, Cybill Shepherd,
Michael Douglas, Carl Reiner, Tom Hanks, Paul Mazursky, Oliver Stone,
Richard Gere, Mario Kassar, Renny Harlin, Laura Dern, John Lithgow, Alan
Levine, Brian Bosworth, Peter Norton, Richard Serra, Dan Aykroyd and the
inseparable Steve Martin (in white) and his wife and "L.A. Story" co star,
Victoria Tennant (in black).
Not surprisingly, the "L.A. Story" barbs about private museums and scenes of
Martin roller skating through LACMA's galleries elicited insider approval.
(Some, but not all, of the paintings were replaced with facsimiles during
filming, curator Howard Fox said.) Following the screening, the mass of
1,200 squeezed into the Century City Marketplace for a junk food frenzy,
which found Diandra Douglas downing pepperoni pizza, LACMA trustee Stanley
Grinstein swallowing his second pastrami sandwich, MOCA trustee Douglas
Cramer in line for a Johnny Rockets cheeseburger, LACMA board president Rob
Maguire inhaling gourmet potato chips, and "L.A. Story" star Marilu Henner
washing down French fries with Miller Lite. "French fries cooked in
vegetable oil are the only thing I can eat here," she said. "I'm a
vegetarian."
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Back to the Top |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|