Date: Fri 06-Mar-1998
Date: Fri 06-Mar-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
windsor
Full Text:
Windsor Sale
With 15 Cuts
BY LAURA BEACH
NEW YORK CITY -- Chair by chair, shoe by shoe, the nostalgic residue of the
Twentieth Century's most famous celebrity romance was dismantled over nine
days in the longest sale in American history. Between February 19 and 27,
Sotheby's swept clean the Paris home of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor,
selling 40,000 items for a stunning $23,355,838.
Wallis and Edward, their initials forever intertwined in their signature
cipher, "WE," were at last pried loose from the souvenirs and royal relics,
haute couture and bijouterie that filled their lives during 33 years of
glamorous exile in a Louis XVI-style villa on the fringes of the Bois de
Boulogne.
Ordered by Mohammed Al Fayed, who acquired the villa and its furnishings
following the Duchess's 1986 death, the Windsor sale aroused mixed feelings
among an American public fixated on fame but embarrassed by the lack of
privacy afforded the dead. Al Fayed's plans to donate proceeds to charity,
wrote Time magazine essayist Roger Rosenblatt, did "not change the basic
invasive nature of these events."
Sotheby's nine-day New York preview in New York was unintentionally lurid. As
was the case with the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis sale, two floors of the glass
and stone salesroom at York and 72nd Street were dedicated to the recreation
of seven rooms from the Windsors' Paris home. At a private gathering on
February 9, Sotheby's staff seemed to outnumber the sparse crowd, which
drifted through stage sets cluttered with objects but devoid of either emotion
or much artistry. Printed on gauze and oversized photo blowups, the Windsors'
spectral figures hovered in the distance.
"Owing to the silence of English newspapers, there are millions of English
people who never discuss her because they have never heard of her," London
correspondent Janet Flanner wrote of Mrs Simpson in The New Yorker magazine
shortly before Edward's 1936 abdication. From the beginning, the love story
had a peculiarly American ring. To the British, Wallis may have been a tramp
who brought down a king. For Americans, hers was the rags to riches tale of a
poor girl who married the world's most eligible bachelor, an impressive
accomplishment, even if in three tries.
Perhaps it's no surprise, then, that the Windsor trove sold overwhelmingly to
Americans. More than 80 percent of the lots will be divided among buyers from
50 states. The remainder will be scattered among 49 countries from Australia
to Qutar.
From Sotheby's vantage, the $23.5-million celebrity sale was a success second
only to the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis sale, which grossed $34.5 million on
6,000 objects and attracted a record 100,000 absentee bids. The $5/7 million
Windsor estimate seems calculated to attract bidders. The firm is rumored to
have banked on gross receipts of $12 million.
Much of the couple's largess had already been spoken for. In 1987, Sotheby's
auctioned the Duchess's jewel collection, the material measure of Edward's
love, for $50 million. Valuable antique furniture was given to Versailles, and
New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art got first pick of the Duchess's
celebrated wardrobe. We will never know what momentum was lost when Al Fayed
postponed the Windsor sale from September to February following the August
death of his son, Dodi, and another Windsor outcast, Diana, Princess of Wales.
Organizing the sale required help from 15 specialist departments in the United
States and abroad; conducting it absorbed Sotheby's entire New York staff.
Buyers were diverse, ranging from celebrities, curators, and collectors to
children and even a four-year-old pug named Maggie.
"We've had some amazing prices tonight," said Diana D. Brooks following
Session I, a black-tie, by-invitation-only affair attended by 1,200. To loud
applause, Sotheby's president and CEO knocked down a boxed slice of the
Windsors' wedding cake for $29,900. Its romance hadn't staled for the San
Francisco couple who described their purchase as "absolutely surreal."
More "absolutely surreal" sales followed, explainable only as the pop
obsession with the contemporary equivalent of saints' relics. British
paranormalist Uri Geller, who bends spoons with his mind, acquired an English
silver medicine spoon for $1,955 (est $1/1,500). Geller owns 5,100 spoons,
which he affixes to a 1977 Cadillac that he uses for charity fundraising. Not
to be outdone, the parent company of Ripley's Believe It Or Not Museums
acquired eight silver jacks for $12,250. The American-made boxed set was given
to the Windsors by newscaster Edward R. Murrow.
Having survived the 1970s narcotic haze of Andy Warhol's Factory, former
Warhol star Brigid Berlin bid on a porcelain pug figurine to $6,325. "I must
have the biggest collection of pugs in New York, literally hundreds of them,
but I don't have anything that's blue," explained the actress, joining a
public bout of pug mania.
Childless and estranged from family, the Windsors lavished love on a series of
pets of different names but similar appearance. Pug paintings, photographs,
collars, silver bowls, jackets, and figurines strongly appealed to American
bidders, including actor Paul Winfield and writer Tina Santi-Flaherty. Eleven
pug pillows sold for a combined total of $37,375; a needlepoint pillow fetched
$13,800; and a portrait of the Duke with pug Dizzy made $18,400.
But in the commercial world, the surreal can make uncommon sense. Franklin
Mint, a Philadelphia manufacturer of tender-hearted collectibles that are sold
through women's magazines, will presumably reproduce a circa 1936 silk
commemorative handkerchief printed with a facsimile of Edward's abdication
speech. Franklin Mint, which paid $25,300 (est $2/300) for the hanky, bought
aggressively at the Jackie and Diana sales as well.
"All my friends know I would rather shop than eat," wrote Wallis, whose days,
sadly, seem to have been occupied by little else. But what she did, she did
exceptionally well. On the international Best Dressed list for 40 years, the
Duchess, longtime Vogue magazine editor Diana Vreeland once said, "...had a
position and dressed to it."
"... Her tidiness is something neither she nor circumstances have ever been
able to control," Janet Flanner noted of Mrs Simpson in 1936. Her suits and
gowns were tailor-made by Dior, Mainbocher, Yves Saint Laurent, and Givenchy,
but it was her regal carriage and impeccable taste in accessories that made
her a photographer's magnet for much of her life.
As an acknowledgment of her influence and style, the Duchess's wardrobe
fetched $1,028,727 and drew representatives from the houses of Dior, Yves
Saint Laurent, Prada, Ralph Lauren, and Gucci. The top lot of the session was
the blue velvet "Lahore" gown made for the Duchess in 1948 by Christian Dior,
one of her favorite designers. The French couturier, who plans to display the
dress in a Dior museum in Normandy, purchased it for $26,450. Dior was
represented by Madame Katell le Bourhis, a vintage fashion consultant who
advises both the Met and the Louvre.
Some believe that the real fashion plate was Edward, an innovator like his
grandfather, Edward VII, who introduced the dinner jacket. Credited with
adding elastic to waists, zippers to flys, and adjustable length trousers to
safari garb, "The Duke of Windsor had style in every buckle on his kilt, every
check of his country suits," Diana Vreeland once said.
Designers bid actively on the Duke' wardrobe, which added another $773,145 to
the take. The Duke's wedding suit, a morning coat and trousers (est
$10/15,000), sold for $27,600 to Ciro Paone of Kiton, a manufacturer of
hand-tailored menswear in Naples, who plans to display it in his stores.
Another Italian firm, Brioni, currently James Bond's tailor, bought seven
lots, including a dark green double-breasted corduroy dinner jacket for
$112,500 (est $700/1,000). An English museum was the underbidder.
The Windsors' taste in decor was only slightly less stylish than their taste
in clothing. Though very little antique furnishing was offered, the auction
proved an important test for neo-traditional reproductions and a referendum on
the Windsors' decorator, Stephane Boudin and the Maison Jansen. A pair of
painted and silvered consul tables of circa 1940 fetched $244,500 (est
$20/30,000); a pair of Empire-style fauteuils, $145,000; and a Louis XV-style
bureau plat, $107,000. The latter was knocked down to American fashion
designer Tommy Hilfiger, who is furnishing a house Greenwich, Conn.
With several important exceptions, the Windsor property was not of great
artistic or historic value and therefore not of huge interest to museums. The
most significant public acquisition went to the National Portrait Gallery. In
a printed statement, the London museum said that it was the fame of the
painter and the notoriety of his subject that compelled it to bid $107,000 for
Gerald Brockhurst's 1939 "Portrait of the Duchess of Windsor," commissioned by
the Duke. The purchase was enabled by the Heritage Lottery Fund.
Other museum purchases included the private diary of the Prince of Wales, made
during a tour to Australia, New Zealand and the Colonies in the Atlantic and
Pacific. It sold for $3,737 to the National Library of Australia.
Edward spent the decades after 1936 in the company of the woman he loved and
relics of the life he'd lost. For the historically minded, it was to royal
memorabilia that the greatest value attached. Session opened with a cameo
portrait of the infant Edward in Queen Mary's arms at his christening in 1894.
Inscribed by the Queen, the oval albumen print in a gilt frame fetched
$27,600. A handmade figure of a chimney sweep given to the child by the Queen
sold by telephone for $74,000. A red morocco dispatch box stamped "The King"
fetched $65,750.
Portraiture accounted for some of the highest prices of the sale. The top lot
of the series was Sir Alfred Munnings' famous 1921 Royal equestrian portrait
of the Prince of Wales at age 27 on his horse, Forest Witch. An anonymous
bidder offered $2,312,500, a record for the artist at auction. The previous
record for the sporting artist is $1.21 million paid in 1987. Cecil Beaton's
stylish watercolor portrait of Mrs Wallis Simpson, 1936, which for years hung
in the Duchess's bath, crossed the block at $134,500. A Beaton gouache of the
same year, "Wallis Simpson Serving Cocktails," was knocked down for $178,500
(est $5/7,000).
"On this table King Edward VIII signed the Instrument of Abdication," read the
brass plaque on a simple Georgian desk that remained with Edward until the end
of his days. The table sold anonymously for $415,000, eight times its pre-sale
estimate.
In later years, Prime Minister Winston Churchill clashed with the Duke over
his unorthodox wartime sympathies. But in 1923, Churchill, then First Lord of
the Admiralty, had warm words for the Prince of Wales, to whom he sent his
six-volume history of World War I. The inscribed first-edition of Churchill's
The World Crisis sold to Texas collector John McCall for $145,000, about five
times the estimate. McCall also bought an inscribed copy of John F. Kennedy's
Profiles In Courage for $41,400.
Thus ends the story of Wallis and Edward. Sixty years after Edward's stirring
pledge, we read this as a cautionary tale. For the woman he loved, Edward lost
much. For the life they lived, the Windsors paid dearly.
