• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers
Wall Power
BMW
Marion Maneker Marion Maneker
Welcome back to Wall Power. I’m Marion Maneker. Happy 80th birthday to Larry Gagosian. And to Paloma Picasso, who turned 76 yesterday. I’ll have more on their collaboration to show unseen works by her father during Gagosian’s final show at his 980 Madison Avenue location. At the same time, Gagosian is christening his newly renovated Chelsea space with a new look at Willem de Kooning. I’ll tell you all about these in detail below the fold.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
BMW
BMW
The first steps towards a masterpiece starts with a dream. The all-electric BMW i7 – the evolution of brilliance. Learn more at BMWUSA.com
But first, here’s Julie…
Julie Brener Davich Julie Brener Davich
  • A Zwirner family affair: The art-and-fashion pop-up at the MZ Wallace store in SoHo this week is a Zwirner family-and-friends production. Mom Monica Zwirner’s accessories brand, known for its signature quilted nylon bags, and the Zwirner kids’ online art marketplace, Platform, are both showing collabs with artists in the Zwirner orbit. On view through next Sunday, the first Platform pop-up at MZ Wallace is showcasing original paintings by Silas Borsos, but what caught my eye is the latest offering of artist objects from the David Zwirner stable: a $475 silk scarf by Elizabeth Peyton featuring her 2009 painting Twilight; a $45 kite by Nate Lowman displaying two of his hurricane Doppler paintings; and a $275 bolster pillow printed with the late Noah Davis’s untitled painting of two girls asleep on a sofa, from the MoMA collection. Davis painted the canvas in summer 2015, a month before he died, and it closed out his emotional retrospective at the Barbican Gallery. Next month, Platform is launching an edition of eight patinated bronze bowls by Louis Eisner. Other upcoming artist objects are from Michaël Borremans and R. Crumb. For its part, MZ Wallace is celebrating the launch of the latest in the brand’s artist series, a collection of pink bags printed with multimedia artist Sara Cwynar’s peony photograph. The previous bag collab was with artist Cynthia Talmadge.
Boucher Anteroom, The Frick Collection, New York. Photo: Joseph Coscia Jr.
Boucher Anteroom, The Frick Collection, New York. Photo: Joseph Coscia Jr.
  • What’s upstairs at the Frick?: The Frick’s four-year, $220 million, Annabelle Selldorf–led renovation has made space for about 400 more paintings and objects—ceramics, furniture, enamels, medals, and timepieces from Europe and Asia spanning the 16th to 19th centuries. The Frick family’s former residence on the second floor, containing 10 rooms and five passages, is now open to the public, along with the grand marble staircase that leads up to it. The rooms were designed in the early 1910s by pioneering American decorator Elsie de Wolfe. When Henry Clay Frick’s house became a museum in 1935, the upstairs rooms were closed and repurposed, and the eight François Boucher panels in his wife’s boudoir were moved downstairs. (Adelaide Frick’s dressing room had most recently been used as the museum director’s office.) The highlight of the second floor is the reinstated Boucher Room. The panels are back in their original location, as is the 40-panel parquet de Versailles wood floor and marble hearth and hearthstone. In the corner is a built-in cabinet containing about 25 pieces of turquoise Sèvres porcelain gifted in 1934 by the Fricks’ daughter, Helen Clay Frick.In the matching powder-blue anteroom are two Turkish-style console tables topped with Qing dynasty vases and covered jars. Marie-Laure Buku Pongo, the museum’s associate curator of decorative arts, told me, “We realized over the years that several Chinese porcelains bequeathed by [the Fricks’ son] Childs Frick were very good (some of them have imperial marks), and because we now have more space, it gave me an incredible opportunity to display more Chinese porcelain.”Next door, in what used to be a butler’s pantry, is a small gallery dedicated entirely to clocks and watches. Many of the pieces on view there, including 13 pocket watches from the 16th-19th centuries, come from a 1999 bequest of some 40 timepieces from Winthrop Kellogg Edey. The clocks include an almost-2-foot-tall, late 17th century mantel clock by André-Charles Boulle, called a tête de poupée (doll’s head clock) because of its shape. “While clocks have long been displayed in the first-floor galleries, they were often overlooked as visitors gravitated toward a Vermeer, a Rembrandt, or a Turner,” said Pongo. “It’s wonderful that these intricate objects now have their own space.” The Ceramics Room houses the collection of French faience ceramics bequeathed by Sidney R. Knafel, and the small Du Paquier Passage is named for the collection of Viennese Du Paquier porcelain gifted by Melinda and Paul Sullivan. There is also a room dedicated to the collection of Renaissance portrait medals assembled by Stephen K. and Janie Woo Scher. They not only gifted some 450 of these commemorative medals, described by the Frick as essential to the development of Western portraiture, but also established a center at the Frick for studying them. All of these collections are promoted as the best private collections in their category in the world.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
BMW
BMW
The first steps towards a masterpiece starts with a dream. The all-electric BMW i7 – the evolution of brilliance. Learn more at BMWUSA.com

Frank Lloyd Wright’s $3M Lamp to Be Sold at Sotheby’s

Frank Lloyd Wright, Double Pedestal Lamp. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby's
Frank Lloyd Wright, Double Pedestal Lamp. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby's
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Dana-Thomas House in Springfield, Illinois, the first commission for which the architect was given free rein, boasts the “the largest collection of site-specific, original Wright art glass and furniture,” including a rare double-pedestal lamp that sits in the dining room. According to Sotheby’s, “the lamp distills the essence of the architect’s core design principles into a single object.” Only two of the lamps were ever made, and Sotheby’s will be auctioning the other example, currently part of a private collection, in the May modern evening sale. The lamp carries an estimate of $3 million—not much more than the $2 million it sold for more than 20 years ago. As Sotheby’s head of design, Jodi Pollack, put it, “It’s like owning a perfect little house—by none other than Frank Lloyd Wright.” If the lamp sells, it will be a new record for a Wright-designed object. The previous record was set two years ago, when the Wolf family collection sold a Francis W. Little House ceiling light for $2.9 million. And now to the main event…
Gagosian Plays the Hits

Gagosian Plays the Hits

To mark the end of an uptown era and the revitalization of his downtown flagship, Larry Gagosian has launched exhibitions of Pablo Picasso and Willem de Kooning, two artists he has shown many times before.
Marion Maneker Marion Maneker
Larry Gagosian turned 80 yesterday, but he’s not looking to wind things down. Instead, Gagosian seems to be gearing up to make the most of what suddenly seems like a potentially resurgent and revitalized art market. After unexpectedly losing the lease on his flagship Madison Avenue gallery space when Bloomberg Philanthropies pushed them out, Gagosian renovated his 24th Street gallery, adding office space for some of those displaced, and improving the flow and integration of the exhibition spaces. (We will have to wait to see what goes in the renovated street-level spaces at 980 Madison.) Then he commissioned two exceptional shows that return to winning themes from his long career as an art dealer: a new look at Willem de Kooning and a rare glimpse of Paloma Picasso’s holdings of her father Pablo Picasso’s work. As Gagosian points out, this will be the 21st Picasso show at a Gagosian gallery, and the sixth solo show for de Kooning. The reasons should be obvious. Both titanic artists produced a range of work in a variety of styles. They are also two artists whom wealthy collectors tend to get fixated on enough to spend nine figures on their work. Gagosian knows his audience, and he understands that, in sales, having an opportunity to start a conversation is as valuable as having something to sell. Which is why we’re seeing two big shows of two very famous artists with nothing officially for sale. These shows are about impressing potential buyers and building an appetite for the artists’ work. And for the rest of us, they im are an opportunity to see these important artists in a different context.

A Fresh Look at de Kooning

Cecilia Alemani, the director of the High Line, who previously curated Tetsuya Ishida: My Anxious Self for Gagosian, told me that the only instruction she’d been given for Willem de Kooning: Endless Painting, was to come up with a fresh take. Not an obvious choice to curate a de Kooning show—Alemani is known for her work with contemporary artists—it was unlikely that she would produce anything but a new way of framing the Dutch master. The show contains the most expensive de Kooning painting ever sold at auction—Woman as Landscape, from 1954, which made nearly $70 million in 2018, as well as the record-setting sculpture Clamdigger, from 1972, sold for nearly $30 million in 2014—but it isn’t about the money. Since de Kooning was so successful early on, during abstract expressionism’s emergence, much of his best work has been in museum collections since the middle of the 20th century. And the remaining few very high-value works owned by far-sighted collectors, like David Geffen, have sold privately for eight- and nine-figure prices to collectors like Steven Cohen and Ken Griffin, all guys likely to be listed as favorites in Gagosian’s iPhone. You won’t see those here, but you’ll see something that may be better.
BMW
BMW
Alemani wanted to focus on de Kooning’s recurring use of different forms, often drawn from the human body. Among the abstract expressionists, de Kooning presents a problem, since so much of his work, from the Woman series on down, is also figurative in some way. Alemani took this theme much further. Starting with the painter’s largest and most accessible body of work—the paintings from the 1980s, when he was slipping into dementia and painting proved a lifeline—Alemani has arranged work in a constant counterpoint or conversation with the artist’s own past.
Installation view of Willem
de Kooning: Endless Painting, Gagosian Gallery, New York. Photo: Courtesy of Gagosian Gallery
Installation view of Willem de Kooning: Endless Painting, Gagosian Gallery, New York. Photo: Courtesy of Gagosian Gallery
As we walked through the show, Alemani pointed to various shapes that echoed body parts, including the W-like shape in Woman on a Sign II, from 1967, that defines the figure’s “bottom,” as Alemani delicately put it, that could also be seen undergirding the massive 12-foot-tall, 21-foot-wide bronze Standing Figure, first made in 1969 and scaled to monumental size in 1984, visible through the gallery doorway. The result is, indeed, a fresh look at de Kooning. Even if you don’t respond to Alemani’s emphasis on body parts like elbows, knees, mouths, and eyes—and, yes, even bottoms—which connect to de Kooning’s earlier interest in cubism and surrealism, the show is an almost-comprehensive sampling of the artist’s career.

Paloma’s Picassos

Using the same idea—a conversation across subjects and periods—in a different way, Gagosian has collaborated with Paloma Picasso for her own “fresh take” on the modern master. Building from a core of a dozen works that have not been seen since they were in Picasso’s studio—along with others that have not been exhibited in decades, and some borrowed works to illustrate themes—Picasso: Tête-à-tête, contains 50 works arranged in three galleries meant to provoke connections and revelations.
Pablo Picasso, Femme au vase de houx (1937). Photo: Courtesy of Gagosian Gallery
The show begins with one of Gagosian’s favorites: a bronze of a girl skipping rope, from 1950, an edition of only two. It stands guard before the gallery’s signature skylit square exhibition space, lined with more than a dozen figures, mostly women. The star attraction will be a 1937 Marie-Thérèse painting, but there are a number of interesting pairings here, including the slightly smaller Femme au vase de houx, also from 1937, and two other portraits of Marie-Thérèse. There’s also the fascinating pairing in one corner of two portraits of Picasso’s first wife, Olga, depicted in the neoclassical style in 1923 and in a cubist collage in 1918. Those works sit close to the amazing 1946 surrealist work Nu assis sur fond vert, borrowed from the Musée Picasso, Antibes. Gagosian’s Michael Cary, who once worked with Picasso biographer John Richardson, highlighted some interesting works in the second gallery: examples of Picasso painting sculpture to represent women, and paintings of women depicted as sculpture. It’s hard to describe, but the painting Tête trois-quarts gauche, from 1945, shows Françoise Gilot as a kind of metal sculpture with a painted head, a pole for a body, and solid metal half-round base. Flanking that work are two vitrines with metal poles welded to square bases upon which women’s faceted faces are painted on weather vane–like panels. If that connection doesn’t interest you, the same painting vectors toward a surrealist work, Visage de profil sur fond dégradé, from 1929. On the other side of the room are astonishing pairings, like Le Baiser from 1969 and Le Baiser from 1931. The first is a classic large late Picasso in grisaille; the second is a small, brightly colored work that would be hard to identify as a Picasso were it shown on its own without a label. (The figures look like two Muppets.) The same wall holds two still lifes, one borrowed from 1932, and the other from 1945, with a bronze skull from 1943 nearby echoing a skull in the second still life. Finally, in the third and most intimate gallery, we get to see Paloma’s most personal works, including a series of Paloma dolls her father made for her in 1952. Finally, there’s a drawing of a child in red crayon and a self-portrait of Pablo at the age of 16 that serve as a final reminder of Picasso’s immense and precocious talent as a draftsman, made all the more poignant by the personal connection.
 
Phew. That’s enough for today. I’ll be back on Tuesday with yet another big consignment announcement for the May sales. And that won’t be the end of it. There’s still more to come before we kick off the auction marathon that’s coming. Until then, M
Line Sheet
The ultimate fashion industry bible, offering incisive reportage on all aspects of the business and its biggest players. Anchored by preeminent fashion journalist Lauren Sherman, Line Sheet also features veteran reporter Rachel Strugatz, who delivers unparalleled intel on what’s happening in the beauty industry, and Sarah Shapiro, a longtime retail strategist who writes about e-commerce, brick-and-mortar, D.T.C., and more.
Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news. You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with . To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.
 
Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Art

Minjae Kim
Glenn Adamson • April 20, 2025
Hot Hand: Minjae Kim
The Korean-born furniture designer transcends sticky definitional debates about art and design to create some of the most memorable furniture you’ve ever seen.
claude monet Nympheas sothebys
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
A Tale of Two Auction Houses
This season, in London, Sotheby’s has most of the high-value, historical works—everything from Freud and Klimt to Monet and Rothko. Meanwhile, Christie’s is leaning into what’s hot: Rashid Johnson, Kaws, Richard Prince, Yoshitomo Nara, and more.
Yü-Ge Wang at Christie's
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
The Middle Market’s Big Shift
While the big money has returned, auction houses are reducing estimates for cheaper works to entice buyers and minimize their losses. Now, the latest data reveals a big shift is taking place in the middle market, too.


Willem De Kooning
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
De Kooning’s $75 Million May
Even after the robust volume of sales in New York, there are clearly still plenty of serious buyers looking for de Koonings—and that wasn’t always a given.
Arthur Jafa
Dan Duray • April 20, 2025
King Arthur Holds Court
With a joint exhibit in Venice with his artistic hero, Richard Prince, Arthur Jafa sounds off on the power of scarcity, why we’re still chewing on Duchamp, and his loyalty to Kanye.
Art Basel
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
The Basel Squeeze
It’s still an honor for smaller galleries to show at Art Basel, but global expansion is putting pressure on them to bring exclusive works to the fair without publicizing their packing lists in advance. Now, some galleries are asking themselves whether they can even afford to participate.


Cybele Maylone - The Aldrich Museum
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Condition Report: Cybele Maylone, The Aldrich Museum
The director of Ridgefield’s overachieving contemporary art museum is turning her institution’s gaze to Connecticut artists, making a case for the Constitution State as something more than the land of finance bros and old WASPs.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Art

Nissan Skyline R34 GT-R
Jamie Lincoln Kitman • April 20, 2025
The Nissan Skyline R34 Named Desire
The collectible car market is finally moving past its beloved Boomer classics as a younger, Nintendo-raised generation chases high-performance Japanese rarities never meant for the American market. $2 million for a 20-year-old Nissan? That’s just the beginning.
De Bayser Sotheby's
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Sotheby’s Object Lessons
The latest design sales commingle art and design objects in a way that offers everyone a teachable moment: They educate art collectors on the potential value of design objects, while giving the design people a greater appreciation for high-dollar contemporary artworks.
Francis Picabia
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Picabia’s Final Frontier
The yacht-owning, sports car–loving artist Francis Picabia defied the odds in nearly all aspects of his life and career—and only now are his striking pinup works being taken seriously.


Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
May Auction Report: Rational Exuberance
Lured by the optimistic tailwinds from last fall’s Lauder auction, high-value supply came back to the art market in May, with sales totaling $2.5 billion. But the comeback may not be quite as roaring as it appears: Unimpressive hammer ratios reveal buyers’ willingness to pay, but not more than they have to.
Ab-Anbar Art Gallery, London
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Lifting the Fog on London’s Gallery Scene
In its sixth year, London Gallery Weekend isn’t just supporting nascent galleries and luring 50,000 art enthusiasts to town. It’s fortifying London’s place as a major art city.
Sotheby's auction bikes
George Nelson • April 20, 2025
Blazing Saddles
Through sales of ultra-rare bicycles and insider access to the Tour de France, Sotheby’s is recruiting a new class of clients from elite cycling’s swelling ranks of C-suite executives, collectors, and family-office principals.


Julian Schnabel Pace Gallery
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
A Separate Pace
The global gallery represents a wide range of artists, but there is something different about the four shows currently on view in New York.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Art

Caroline Seabolt, Ashkan Baghestani
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Condition Report: Sotheby’s Caroline Seabolt & Ashkan Baghestani
A joint interview with the heads of Sotheby’s day sales on the depth of last week’s sales, the importance of estates in driving them, and the enduring thrill of selling another Hopper.
Patrick Bongoy
Glenn Adamson • April 20, 2025
Hot Hand: Patrick Bongoy
Patrick Bongoy weaves, stretches, and manipulates the discarded rubber that afflicts Africa, transmuting waste not only to evoke environmental exploitation or his homeland’s painful colonial past, but to express the power of creative rebirth.
sotheby's auction painting Gerhard Richter
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Closing Time
A timely look at the market themes, top lots, and various peculiarities of a short, buoyant New York auction cycle that still seemed unusually long.


sotheby's Andy Warhol Sixteen Jackies
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
The Art Market’s Cut-Your-Loss Bounce
Beyond the billion-dollar single-night bonanzas and the movie-star promo spots, smaller sales are revealing a less sexy dynamic in the market: Collectors are exercising the freedom to sell without taking too big a loss—and their willingness to move on is creating liquidity that will fuel future growth.
Christie's art auction
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Christie’s Manic Monday
The May auctions continued in thrilling fashion at Christie’s last night, as feverish bidding pushed new records for the mainstays of modernism—Pollock, Brancusi, Miró, Rothko—and the art-hoovering skylords of finance dropped the G.D.P. of a small country on the Si Newhouse collection. So can we call that an art market triumph? Not so fast…
Sotheby's
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Sotheby’s Day Sales Smoke Signals
News and notes on the revealing trends surrounding Sotheby’s latest round of day sales, in which 93 percent of the 350 lots found buyers. Is this another sign of a market boom?


Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker • April 20, 2025
Sotheby’s $433 Million Pep Talk
The numbers from Sotheby’s last night were very strong—the Mnuchin sale totaled $166 million, and the various owners’ sale made nearly $267 million—but the market still hasn’t rebuilt the confidence necessary to see real momentum pick up again.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover