[CPProt.net] Sotheby's Pre-Auction Euphronios Transcript
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Sotheby's Pre-Auction Euphronios Transcript
Wednesday, 11 January 2006, 4:51 pm
Article: Suzan Mazur
photos:
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0601/S00076.htm
The Sotheby's (Pre-Auction) Euphronios Transcript
Sotheby's Experts Discuss Hunt Euphronios Sale (1990 Taped Interview)
By Suzan Mazur
One of my ancient coin clients had recently been defeated after a
long stay in the U.S. Senate. John Tunney, a Democrat, was very
interested in making money. When I asked him [in 1980] if he'd be
interested in lobbying on Bunker [Hunt]'s behalf [for a Fed bailout
following the Hunt brothers' attempt to corner the silver market
which led to a price collapse and Wall Street brokers sinking along
with their bankers who'd put up hundreds of millions of dollars in
loans], he was suprisingly receptive. . . . In the weeks that
followed, John Tunney met with the Fed chairman, Paul Volker, a
number of times. . . . [The] Fed approved the loan and Congress did
nothing to halt it. Bunker got his $1.3 billion. John and I pocketed
commissions exceeding $6 million each. Remarkably, throughout the
silver crisis, Bunker and Herbert continued to spend literally tens
of millions of dollars on coins and antiquities gathered by me via
Bob Hecht, Jiri Frel [former Getty museum curator], and a worldwide
network of sources. . . . They even bought their own pieces by
Euphronios, a krater and a kylix. Both were obtained through Bob
Hecht and bore the shadows that all of Hecht's items carried.
- Bruce McNall, Fun While It Lasted
Caption: Herbert, Athena & Bunker
In the 1970s oil boom years, before Mu-ammar al-Gaddafi nationalized
Bunker Hunt's oilfield and the silver market collapsed, he and
brother Herbert amassed a quarter-ton of ancient coins and some
astonishing pieces of ancient art. These were put up for sale in New
York on June 19, 1990 to appease the Internal Revenue Service and the
Hunts' various creditors, and raised more than $20 million. The Hunts
bargained for a 60% commission over the benchmark figure on total
sales.
I had arranged for a private preview of the auction pieces with
Sotheby's experts two weeks earlier, June 4, as part of my coverage
for an article for The Economist magazine. Following are excerpts
from my taped interview of that preview.
There is discussion on tape of the fragmentary krater (vase) painted
by the Athenian master Euphronios as well as a kylix (cup) -- his
earliest existing work. Both were on Sotheby's block, June 19, 1990,
as lots #5 and #6, respectively. It is astonishing how many experts
internationally viewed, studied, wrote descriptive pieces about, and
exhibited the objects without raising questions that might have
stopped Sotheby's sale. Click here: Scoop: Antiquities Whistleblower
Oscar White Muscarella
The kylix is currently in pieces in a cardboard box in Rome after
laundering in America's ancient art market, as Vernon Silver of
Bloomberg first reported. It was purchased at the auction by Italian
art dealer, Giacomo Medici, who's now appealing a 10-year sentence
for trafficking antiquities.
Click for big version
Shattered Euphronios Kylix
The contested krater and kylix are part of the controversy
surrounding the antiquities trial underway in Rome involving dealer
Bob "Slugger" Hecht and former Getty curator Marion True -- each
accused of trafficking looted ancient art.
True has appeared to testify and Hecht has told Italy's lawyer
Maurizio Fiorilli that he will answer charges in court mid-January or
early February.
************
June 4, 1990 -- Sotheby's
David N. Redden, Sotheby's Vice Chair (then EVP):
David N. Redden, Sotheby's Vice Chair (then EVP): I know they [Hunt
brothers] had an interest in history and I know that that is one of
the sources of their collecting interest. I think that Herbert Hunt,
particularly. . . First of all, they consciously chose noncompeting
areas to collect in because they're quite close - the two brothers.
As Bunker chose Greek and Roman coins - the extension of Greek and
Roman is essentially Byzantine coins, which is what Herbert chose.
Bunker took Greek vases; Herbert took Greek and Roman Bronzes. He's
always had a particular interest in bronzes actually from the days of
some interest in Western American Bronzes. . . .
I also know that Bunker Hunt had a coin collection since he was a
child. Herbert Hunt inherited that coin collection when Bunker Hunt
went off to boarding school. So there was a childhood background in
collecting.
Suzan Mazur: What kinds of coins did they collect?
David Redden: They were American coins, which is what many American
boys and girls of those days did [collect]. Bunker was interested in
some other areas too. He [Bunker] had a collection of sporting
paintings at one point. But these were the most substantial
collections and these were the only collections as far as I know that
exist still, because they've had to liquidate pretty much everything
they own.
Suzan Mazur: But they still have some money, don't they?
David Redden: Well, they certainly both have declared personal
bankruptcy - well they're out of bankruptcy now. They, I think, under
Texas law, whatever, they're allowed to retain a residence, a car and
then certain other assets at the discretion of the court.
Suzan Mazur: Money from the sale will go to them [Hunts] or to the
creditors?
David Redden: No the proceeds of this sale will go primarily to their
creditors, although they may get some residual interest in the sale.
I don't think all that's been worked out yet. It's not something
Sotheby's has obviously been a party to particularly. But the lion's
share of whatever happens here will go to their creditors, primarily
the IRS.
Suzan Mazur: Who do you think will be interested in the collection?
Who do you think some primary buyers will be?
David Redden: Clearly, anybody who's interested in antiquities or
ancient coins.
Suzan Mazur: Do you think we'll see these going to the Japanese?
David Redden: We took highlights of the collection to Tokyo and Osaka
[also to London, Frankfurt, Munich, Monte Carlo, Zurich, Geneva, Hong
Kong and Singapore]. The Japanese have not traditionally been major
buyers of ancient coins, although they have selectively been
interested in ancient works of art. And I think there will be some
interest from Japan, but I think the primary buyers will be American
and European. I mean it's not like Impressionist paintings.
[A Roman Bronze nude of a youth did go to a Japanese dealer for half
a million dollars with few, if any other bids; I noted that both
Hecht and his Atlantis Antiquities Gallery financier, Jonathan Rosen,
told me prior to the auction that the piece was a fake. It had
previously been exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum
of Fine Arts--Boston and at Andre Emmerich's gallery in New York.]
Suzan Mazur: Is there anything particularly intriguing about any
piece in the collection that has an incredible history?
David Redden: I'd like you to talk to the experts who are involved
with this but, in fact, yes. I would say there are a number of pieces
here that have some wonderful stories to tell one way or another. . .
.
One thing I should say so that you can put this in context, and that
is, these collections are truly astonishing. These are not run-of-the-
mill collections. They are the best of their kind. . . . I've been
getting reports back from our traveling exhibitions and apparently
the excitement amongst the collectors and some of the dealers and
cognoscenti out there is absolutely palpable.
Suzan Mazur: Particularly for the Euphronios vase.
David Redden: Well I think for everything. It depends who you talk to
because it depends what their interests are. But I had a gentleman
around here the other day who was there with the Greek Bronzes. And
he went berserk over the bronzes! Absolutely berserk over them!
There are other people, for instance, from Paris where we had a view
at the end of last week. The coins were absolutely besieged with
people! And our coin people said they were absolutely amazed because
we hadn't held a coin exhibition in Paris before.
We'd gone all over the place around there but we did one in Paris in
addition to one in Geneva, Frankfurt and London. And they said it was
astonishing how much interest there was.
Suzan Mazur: The Athenian coin [dekadrachm] resembles the Elmali coin
hoard [looted from Turkey].
David Redden: Which I don't know.
Click for big version
Photos by: George Obremski - Top left Silver Dekadrahm of Athens,
struck in 465B.C. at end of Persian wars, honoring the patron goddess
Athena shown here in crested helmet; owl on reverse side. The coin
sold for $480,000. Also pictured, a Bronze Hydria, 5th century B.C.,
referred to later in interview with Sotheby's antiquities expert
Richard Keresey.
Suzan Mazur: Which is the one there was a whole to do about on the
cover of Connoisseur (Ozgen Acar/Melik Kaylan, "The Hoard of the
Century", July '88).
David Redden: Oh yes that one I do know about. Yes. It's not from the
same collection. But it is the same coin - the Athenian Dekadrachm.
Except I believe - although ask the coin people -- the Athenian
Dekadrachm in the Bunker Hunt collection is the finest of them all.
But it's ironic because I guess there were 14 dekadrachm in the
world. When this one entered the Hunt collection, and therefore, was
of the highest rarity. And the hoard you're talking of, another eight
were discovered, which made it slightly less rare. On the other hand,
it's still the best, I believe.
[ Dr. Arnold R. Saslow, Director, Rare Coins & Classical Arts, told
me following the Hunt-Sotheby's sale that by the auction house
showing the coins all over the world "they finally got people - most
of them were on the phone, but some of them were sitting in the room -
to actually say: 'These are art. ' The one [Athenian Dekadrachm]
that sold for $480,000 is far inferior to the dekadrachm hoard from
[Elmali] Turkey which have sold for $250,000 [each]. Those are mint
condition."]
David Redden: Yes - [the collection has a representation of every
dekadrachm - 12] from the various city-states of ancient Greece.
Suzan Mazur: And what about the Euphronios vase? Do you know where
that's from? Where was it purchased?
David Redden: Well, I do know where it was purchased. Virtually
everything in the two sales was bought with the help of an agent
named Bruce McNall, who is the principal in a firm that deals in
antiquities and coins on the West Coast in Los Angeles called
Numismatics Fine Arts and Summa Galleries. He was the seller to the
Hunts, I think, of virtually every piece here in one way or another.
Suzan Mazur: Including the coins.
[McNall was Bob Hecht's partner in Summa. He was also the producer of
the film that launched the career of Matthew Broderick -- War Games.
And McNall owned the LA Kings hockey team besides being a high roller
in the coin business with Merrill Lynch; he went to jail in the 1990s
for overvaluing coins and later wrote a book Fun While It Lasted.
In 1988, McNall tried to sell at auction a number of coins found in
Emali, Turkey in 1984, which had been consigned to him by William
Koch, an oil heir and a trustee of the Museum of Fine Arts--Boston.
During the auction the Turkish government appeared, claimed cultural
patrimony and regained possession of the coins, which were said to
have been smuggled out of the country by the Turkish Mafia. McNall's
consignment included an Athenian Decadrachm which, for some reason,
had been withdrawn from sale; and six of the coins from the Elmali
hoard were at the time of the Hunt auction still said to be missing;
it was unclear how many were being held by Koch.]
David Redden: Yes. He [McNall] worked very closely with the Hunts in
putting together this collection and they all came through him.
Suzan Mazur: But you don't know where the vase was actually found?
David Redden: No. And, in fact, I mean. No. There's no way that one
knows. I mean one knows certainly about the one in the Metropolitan
Museum of Art. There's a lot of speculation about where that came
from. But again there was no conclusive proof of where it came from.
Otherwise it would be. . .
Suzan Mazur: Yeah, otherwise it may not be there. . .
David Redden: Because there were some allegations at the time that it
might have been a recent discovery in which case it would have been
illegally excavated. . .
[ Robin Riley-Ahrens (Sotheby's press) scores a well-timed
interruption, saying "the catalogue has a wonderful introduction
about the history of collecting antiquities that really puts it all
in perspective . . . it gives a historical overview starting from the
various vases Greek & Roman . . . really fascinating to read."]
David Redden: Also, all the antiquities including the two Euphronios
vases, and also all the coins in the evening sale on June 19th were
exhibited in museums all over the United States in the early 1980s in
an exhibition called "Wealth of the Ancient World"
[First at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas -- June 1983,
then at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts -- October 1983; Detroit
Institute of Art -- March 1984; Dallas Museum of Art -- April 1984;
and the High Museum in Atlanta --1985-86.]
David Redden: Good then. Have a look at your objects.
************
Click for big version
Click for big version
************
Richard Keresey, Sotheby's Worldwide Antiquities Director (then-
Antiquities Expert):
[Discussion opens with conversation about a "Greek" bronze hydria
(used to carry and pour water) from Herbert Hunt's collection with
rare two-lion combination on beaded vertical handle, one lion looks
over the neck wide-eyed with wavy mane, bared teeth, protruding
tongue, ears pricked; forepaws of lion-skin on handle base. Sotheby's
catalogue notes bronze vessels of this type survived because they
were "placed in tombs where they were often used as cinerary urns".
Sotheby's sold to a European buyer for $410,000.]
Suzan Mazur: . . . Is this East Greek, is it Lycian, what?
Richard Keresey: No, it's probably if anything West Greek. Certainly
Greek. I should think it's probably made in south Italy like I guess
many of these coins were - in the early 5th century B.C. I don't know
whether you could prove whether it was either Greek from the mainland
or Greek from the colonies or not. . . . The form is probably pretty
much standard form in pottery, but of course, the pottery was copied
into bronze. Bronze survivals are rare. Conventionally used for
scooping water out of a krater. You lifted it out with these handles
and poured it into the krater. . . .
Richard Keresey: [Discussing Euphronios-signed fragmentary calyx
krater, circa 510BC.]
But you know, the incredible detail, the incredible confidence with
which he draws. That's his leg armor, for example, or the bottom of
his foot. The eyes which he's trying to show Kyknos dying with the
eyes rolled up [Kynos, son of Ares, god of war].
One of the things I love about Euphronios as a man is that he . . .
John Boardman who writes beautifully about these things because he's
an art critic seems to see in him. . .
Suzan Mazur: Did he write this [in the catalogue] or you wrote this?
Richard Keresey: I wrote this but here I quoted him. . . . Euphronios
and the other painters of his generation, Euthymedes, etc. seemed to
form a conscious movement. A kind of camaraderie of artists like we
might have in Paris in the 20s in the cafes. And on one of
Euthymedes' vases he signed his vase: "As never Euphronios" meaning
Euphronios never did this well. What that seems to suggest is that
they had a little bit of a friendly kind of rivalry.
[Keresey also writes: "Euphronios, among the greatest of Greek vase
painters, was--along with Phintias and Euthymedes--a pioneer in the
freer drawing which developed with the advent of the red-figure
technique. He signed at least six vases as painter, and later in his
career, ten as potter (mainly for Onesimos)."]
Suzan Mazur: You think that this particular vase will sell for how
much?
Richard Keresey: Our estimate is $400,000 - $600,000.
Suzan Mazur: What is the star of the collection, the principal piece?
Richard Keresey: Of the Bunker Hunt collection. See there are really
two separate collections.
Suzan Mazur: It would be this coin [the Athena coin]
Richard Keresey: and then I would say the Euphronios krater.
Suzan Mazur: The Euphronios krater.
Richard Keresey: Now the cup.
The details. That's right the kylix. It's funny. In the Greek pottery
field they call it a cup but the kylix is the more specific term for
this type of cup. This is a wine cup. There's always a wine cup.
That's right. But they're also gifted away to people. The kylix,
which is important. It supersonic in many ways.
This is signed by Euphronios. The signature is on the foot.
It's staggering to not only have a vase by Euphronios in the
collection but maybe all of it -- I'm not sure. There aren't that
many to start with. I mean we've never had a signed vase by anyone.
By any of the ancient artists.
This shows the death of Sarpedon (the Trojan warrior), which is the
same subject that's on the Met krater. And it shows it in slightly
different. I think it shows it earlier -- or later. Later. Later in
the narrative.
Suzan Mazur: [Sarpedon] is being carried away by the gods Sleep. . .
Richard Keresey: That's right. Thanatos and [Thanatos (Death) and
Hypnos (Sleep)]. Well, I'd just be reading, but it's here [in the
catalogue].
[ Background Conversation:
Riley-Ahrens (Sotheby's press): Ooouu, ooouu nah nah nah -- No. Let's
not do that!
Photographer George Obremski (who accompanied me to the interview,
trying to position an object to shoot): Can you hold that just a
second?
Riley-Ahrens: Okay.]
Richard Keresey: This is thought to be maybe to be the earliest work
by Euphronios.
[ Background: Sotheby's coin expert Mish Tworkowski: This might be
the most expensive photo session you Obremski ever shot!]
Suzan Mazur: And what was the date on that [kylix]?
Richard Keresey: 520 BC. . . .
Richard Keresey: This is an actual prize amphora that was awarded at
the Panathenaic Games in Athens. It's about this tall. They
awarded.these vases as prizes [designed to hold 10 gallons of olive
oil].
[The piece went at auction to New York dealer Ed Merrin for $190,000.
Merrin once told me for an Economist magazine story that he does it
all "for love." Corporate raider Asher Edelman (inspiration for
Michael Douglas' character Gordon Gekko in the film Wall Street) had
$10 million invested in Merrin Gallery at the time of the Hunt sale.]
On the front, they have a statue of Athena - a painting of the same
statue of Athena that's in Athens and on the back the competition to
which the prize vase is awarded. In this case it's a competition,
called the pyrrhic. Usually you see runners and you see wrestling. .
. Pyrrhic is named after a man - General Pyrrhus. . .
Suzan Mazur: And the horse is . . .
Richard Keresey: That's Pegasus. I don't know what the significance
of the horse is. Pegasus is on her shield. But this particular
painter - the Kleophrades painter also uses Pegasus on his shields.
This is one of the prizes of Athens.
Suzan Mazur: Pegusus in general represented what?
Richard Keresey: Pegasus was the steed of Bellerophon.
Here's Pegasus. Bellerophon riding Pegasus. Bellerophon was the son
of Poseidon and the ancestor of Sarpedon.
All of these tasks that he was set to do he overcame brilliantly with
the aid of his winged steed, Pegasus. Who was also the offspring of
Poseidon [and Eurymede] with the Gorgon Medusa by his side. I hope I
got that right.
Suzan Mazur: I look forward to reading it. This is very exciting. . .
.
Robin Riley-Ahrens (Sotheby's press): Do you want to pop over and see
the Euphronios vase?
Richard Keresey: Yes. I think I've got the key to that room. . . .
Richard Keresey: [Discussing the Euphronios vase] There are some
incised areas on black-figure vases but not on this. . .
That's a Gorgon head. She [Athena] always has this head of a Gorgon
on her armor. There's another one on her shield here. Meant to
frighten you away. This is totally blank. They painted around the
terra cotta . . . over the terra cotta . . .
Richard Keresey: Here's the [Euphronios] cup.
Suzan Mazur: Quite a lot of wine.
Richard Keresey: A lot of wine. They mixed their wine with water. The
bubbles. . . He signed the foot on the other side.
. . . Usually they wrote over. I think that's what they did here.
Yes. He's written in red like his signature. But here these names are
in reserve [Sarpedon, Thanatos, etc.]
Suzan Mazur: And how much of this is reconstructed?
Richard Keresey: Pretty much what you can see. The crackled parts.
But again, fortunately, most of the main . . .
Suzan Mazur: The art work. Yeah.
Richard Keresey: is preserved.
Suzan Mazur: Is it heavy?
Richard Keresey: You can hold it..
[I pick up the Euphronios cup.]
Suzan Mazur: I'd better hold it with both hands.
Richard Keresey: They broke all the time I think in antiquity but
they always had repairers.
Riley-Ahrens: Where are the main restorers? In the States or in
Europe?
Richard Keresey: I think mostly in Europe.
Suzan Mazur: [Discussion shifts to Euphronios vase.] Are there
substantial restorations on this?
Richard Keresey: This is 75% restored. All of this is plastic. That's
why it's such a low estimate. What you're really estimating here are
the fragments. And people do love fragments. . .
[The Euphronios fragmentary vase went to Leon Levy at the Hunt
Sotheby's auction for $1.7 million. Levy was the late husband of
collector Shelby White, who is a member of the Met board of trustees.
According to Vernon Silver of Bloomberg, the Met privately negotiated
for the Euphronios wine cup through Sotheby's following the Hunt sale
for $742,000 to Medici. Medici said no to the Met offer. The cup was
shattered in a 1995 police raid of Medici's Geneva warehouse. Other
pieces with a Sotheby's label were found in the warehouse at the
time, including three more vases from the Hunt auction:
Click for big version
Attic Red-figure Stamnos, Siren Painter, circa 480B.C.
Click for big version
Attic Black-figure Kylix, Kallis Painter, circa 540-530B.C.
Click for big version
Attic Red-figure Kylix, Triptolemos Painter, circa 490-480 B.C.
Three images above- http://www.archaeology.org] . . .
Suzan Mazur: How can you tell that's Artemis [feet-only showing]?
Richard Keresey: Actually, I read it. I couldn't tell. She [Artemis]
is normally associated with other vases. In fact, I don't know how
you can tell this is Aphrodite [standing behind Ares, god of war].
One of the reasons is that it says Aphrodite. . . .
Suzan Mazur: And the auction of these pieces is at the same time or
before the coins.
Ahrens-Riley: June 19 will be the antiquities and then Greek and
Roman coins that night.
Richard Keresey: The coins continue the day after. And then the coins
will continue again. [2,800 Greek & Roman, 13,000 Byzantine and 8,000
Islamic coins]
Suzan Mazur: But there's nothing earlier than that.
Ahrens-Riley: The 15th [June] they go on view.
Suzan Mazur: I see. . . . Well this is very exciting.
*************
Suzan Mazur's stories on art and antiquities have been published in
The Economist, Financial Times, Connoisseur, Archaeology (cover) and
Newsday. Some of her other reports have appeared on PBS, CBC and MBC.
She has been a guest on McLaughlin, Charlie Rose and various Fox
television news programs. Email: sznmzr at aol.com
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