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The drawing room of Mrs. Charles Wrightsman's apartment at 21 St.
James's Place, London, England. Bearing vivid evidence of her associations with
interior decorators Henri Samuel, Stephane Boudin, Daniel Hamel, and others,
its contents were sold at Sotheby's New York on 28 April 2010. Image by
Fritz von der Schulenberg/Interior Archive, courtesy of Sotheby's.
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NOTE: This post originally appeared on An Aesthete's Lament on 12 April 2010. Auction estimates have been updated with hammer prices.
Design
groupies across the globe have been distracted in the past few weeks by the
latest Sotheby's catalogue to be pushed
through the mail slot. Small wonder, given its contents. Entitled
"Property from the Collection of Mrs. Charles Wrightsman: The London
Residence," it is a 276-page paradise, allowing a long, lingering glimpse
into one small corner of the world of America's most discerning collector of
18th- and 19th-century European furniture, paintings, and decorative arts,
the philanthropist Jayne Wrightsman. The sale takes place at Sotheby's New York on 28 April [2010].
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Jayne Wrightsman in her Palm Beach, Florida, residence in 1956. |
The
Michigan-born, California-bred widow of a brilliant Oklahoma oilman, Mrs.
Wrightsman is one of those women for whom the word "socialite" is a
label whose inaccuracy verges on rudeness. She is rich, yes, and has dressed
beautifully and entertained with finesse for more than six decades, in the grand
manner that has all but died out. And when it comes to collecting she is not
the only person of her position to live surrounded by important objects but I
would argue she has purchased them more seriously and with more care than her
peers. Few individuals in modern times have managed to hang on their walls
paintings and drawings by Rubens, Vermeer, Canaletto, Tiepolo, Guardi, Van
Dyck, Georges de La Tour, and Caspar David Friedrich, to name just a few. Or to
have acquired books and sculptures of astonishing rarity.
Churlish observers
might snipe that major-league collecting is done solely to impress others.
Trust me: Jayne Wrightsman has been exquisitely perceptive in her spending.
Anyone with sufficient capital and the desire to buy a brand can purchase a
painting by Jacques-Louis David, but it takes a real connoisseur to snap up the
French artist’s sensational 1788
double portrait of the Lavoisiers, accurately described "one of
the great portraits of the eighteenth century." (She and her husband donated it to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1977.)
Frankly I’d love to see the paintings Jayne and Charles Wrightsman declined
over the years; that would be an important lesson in choosing quality over
quantity.
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Lot 132: a Louis XVI giltwood bergère à oreilles with five legs, circa
1760. Made by maître ébéniste Nicolas Heurtaut, it is upholstered in green
velvet appliquéd with a blaze of peacock-feather-pattern silk. Estimate
$20,000—$30,000. The chair ultimately sold for $37,500.
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Not
long after Jayne Larkin's marriage in 1944 to Charles Wrightsman, the brunette beauty with
the wide houri eyes decided to collect the best examples of ancien-régime art
and cabinetmaking and thoroughly immersed herself in those subjects, an elegant
autodidact among lettered scholars. The skepticism that surely greeted this
daunting pursuit—after all, she possessed only a high-school diploma—soon
faded, eventually vanishing altogether as her familiarity with 18th- and
19th-century European masters grew to formidable levels. She read widely,
listened carefully, and befriended all the right experts: Bernard Berenson,
John Pope-Hennessy, Kenneth Clark, Sir Francis Watson of the Wallace
Collection, James Draper of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and French
decorator Stephane Boudin, among others. As American interior designer Kitty Hawks once noted of Jayne Wrightsman, "My mother [Slim Keith] admired two
things about—the things she learned and her discipline."
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Lot 162: a Louis XV-style white-painted canapé designed and made by
Maison Jansen, circa 1950. It is upholstered in ruby-red silk velvet.
Estimated to bring $5,000—$8,000, it sold for $20,000.
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As
a result of that determination Mrs. Wrightsman has long more than held her own
among blue-chip curators. She has also generously shared the spoils. The
Wrightsman Galleries for French Decorative Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she
serves as an emeritus trustee, exist because of her largesse and vision, the
glittering and highly popular parade of exquisite French period rooms getting
better every year, again with her keen involvement. Important works of art
displayed throughout that august institution are Wrightsman gifts as well; type
her surname into the museum's search engine and hundreds of works can be
viewed. She put her self-education to good use for the nation too during the
celebrated restoration of the White House in the early 1960s, advising the new
First Lady as well as quietly funding aspects of the headline-making project,
which was overseen by the Wrightsmans' interior decorator at the time, Stephane
Boudin, a man whose rooms blended historicist erudition with handmade
passementerie.
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Lot 15: a pair of Régence-style benches upholstered in green velvet.
Mrs. Wrightsman purchased them in 1987 from French interior decorator Henri
Samuel. Estimate $1,200—$1,800; sold for $15,000.
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So
what was Mrs. Wrightsman's apartment in a 1960 building near Spencer House like until it was
recently dismantled and shipped to New York City to be auctioned off? In the
main it was sumptuous but spirited, luxurious but not stuffy. The comfortable
mélange of 18th- and 19th-century antiques that filled its rooms are dressed in
deep, bold colors (ruby, aquamarine, emerald); lush, occasionally quirky
patterns distracted the eye from the underfed moldings and low ceilings. I
honestly would give every piece of furniture I own, along with a few other
prized possessions, to win Lot 132, a French giltwood bergère clad in
pine-needle-green velvet appliquéd with a blaze of shimmering silk woven with
life-size peacock feathers, a Marie-Antoinette-ish leitmotif writ surreal.
Alas, however, it is the work of maître ébéniste Nicolas Heurtaut and is
expected to bring as much as $30,000. Nevertheless it is an inspiring example
of how a formal furnishing can be made chic yet funky by an inventive fabric
treatment. "Funky" is the last word anyone would associate with Mrs.
Wrightsman, but for a distinguished woman renowned for her taste, that
appreciation of peacock feathers is an endearing chink in her aesthetic armour.
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Lot 89: a pair of Louis XVI mahogany chairs, circa 1785, attributed to
Jean-Baptiste-Claude Sené. They are upholstered in leopard-spot silk velvet.
Estimate $8,000—$12,000; sold for $74,500.
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As the photograph at the top of this post illustrates, a panache of peacock
plumes the approximate size of a showgirl's headdress bursts from a precious
Regency blue-john urn in the drawing room. It's a stylish takeaway: as blogger
Emily Evans Eerdmans, in a recent post
about the forthcoming Wrightsman sale, pointed out, that entrancing fountain of
feathers is "a look that could be replicated albeit with a more humble
receptacle." In case you're interested, Lot 35 consists of about 500
individual peacock feathers (estimate $1,200—$1,800), while Lot 33 is a trio of
peacock feathers Mrs. Wrightsman picked up on a visit to Houghton Hall in Norfolk in 1975 and
placed in a small circa-1780 Louis XVI giltwood frame (estimate $2,000—$3,000).
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Lot 110: A near-pair of large George III urns made of blue john,
Derbyshire black marble, and alabaster. They are estimated to bring
between $12,000 and $18,000.
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Another
object I covet from Mrs. Wrightsman's London flat is Lot 162, a 1950s Maison
Jansen canapé covered in silk velvet the color of crushed raspberries. The
seriously saturated colour is so intensely fruity that one's mouth literally
water. What makes this sofa special to me is not just its highly collectible
maker or the lavish fabric but the meticulous quality of the upholstery.
Stuffed with traditional down and horsehair, it is perfectly plump, even
voluptuous, the courtesan curves of the cushions balancing the sinuous Louis
XV-style frame in a way that few upholsterers today get exactly right. The seat
cushion alone is nearly a foot thick and surely weighs 20 pounds. Traditional
skills like these are slowly disappearing, and our appreciation of them
diminishes apace. Jayne Wrightsman, however, knows exactly how a sofa, whether
18th century in origin or 18th century in style, should be properly
upholstered. After all she's dedicated a great deal of her life to learning
rather than just lunching and shopping. The ridiculous creatures on the
"Real Housewives" reality series should take note.
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Lot 179: an Italian chinoiserie six-panel painted-canvas screen,
mid-18th century, probably Piedmont. It was once owned by Belgian nobleman
Baron Paul de Becker-Rémy (1897—1953), whose former wife, Rénée, was one of the Wrightsmans' aesthetic mentors. Estimate $40,000—$60,000; sold for $134,500.
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Lot 282: a pair of Louis XVI-style low tables designed for storing
books. Supplied to Mrs. Wrightsman by French interior decorator Henri Samuel
in 1971, this practical and stylish design that deserves to be an
integral part of the decorating lexicon. Estimate $1,200—$1,800; sold for $7,500.
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