Transcript

Simon de Pury: Actually while I was passionate about art for a long time, I became a collector quite late in life. I only became a collector in my mid thirties. But I was perfectly content before to be surrounded by great works of art in my professional career, and I did not feel the need to own them. It’s only once I made myself the first step to spend what, for me, was quite a bit of money on my first meaningful acquisition – from that moment on I was hooked, and it was no longer enough to be surrounded by great art. I needed to own it. And so I suffered then. I caught the bug that all our clients have. They all suffer from the same disease. It’s the most wonderful illness in the world; totally incurable. And as many different shapes and forms to that illness as there are different collectors.I started with a tiny auction house in ... called Kornfeld where they were handling great works on paper – prints and drawings. And from the very beginning I was able to physically handle works by Picasso, by Monk, by Toulouse Lautrec – by some of the greatest 19th and 20th century artists. And as it was a tiny company, I did everything. I was writing the invoices, doing the packages, holding the works, doing the auction, looking over the shoulders of Mr. Kornfeld while he was preparing the catalogs. After that I moved to Sotheby’s in London where I was part of the evaluation department. I was given a car and a map of England and Scotland, and I was driving around all the time and visiting furniture clients. And I was giving evaluations on English furniture. Then I moved to Sotheby’s Monte Carlo and then opened the Sotheby’s Geneva office. While working for Sotheby’s I got to know ... who was in the ‘70s and ‘80s the biggest collector worldwide. He was collecting from old master paintings right up to contemporary art – from carpets, to furniture, to medieval works of art – right across the board. And he asked me to become curator of his collections. So I moved to Nagano in Switzerland, the ..., and I ran his collection which was open to the public. I organized a lot of exchange exhibitions with then Soviet museums – the ... in St. Petersburg; the Pushkin in Moscow and so on. So that was a phenomenal opportunity for me. And then after that I went back to Sotheby’s as first Managing Director of Sotheby’s Europe, and eventually chairman of Sotheby’s Europe, Chief Auctioneer, and spent 11 more years at Sotheby’s when I . . . when I went back there. Recorded on: 2/7/08

 

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Simon de Pury: When did you start collecting art?

The first time de Pury plunked down money for art, he got the collector's disease.

Simon de Pury

Simon de Pury

Chairman, Phillips de Pury & Company

| In History

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