MAASTRICHT, HOLLAND — Ahoy, FrontBurnervians. I’m coming to you live from TEFAF, the world-renowned art and antiques fair held in Holland. I arrived here at the showcase early this morning before the doors opened for a VIP reception and had free reign of this huge exhibition/sale and watched the dealers as they set up. Miro, Henry Moore, Rembrandt are on the wall; Martha Stewart and Camilla Parker Bowles are in the Hall. I hear through the chardonnayvine that the Howard Rachofskys from Dallas are somewhere close by. I’ve just finished feasting my eyes on a $30 million Van Gough (The Child with an Orange) that has not been on the market for almost a century, a watch designed by Andy Warhol, and Vincent van Gogh sur son lit de mort, a rare etching made from the drawing of VG on his deathbed by Dr. Paul Fedinand Gachet. Spooky and intense, and a bargain at $25,000 euros. Or, as the dealer said to me, “the price of the greatest rarity.” Overheard before the doors opened: “I’ve been trying to work a million dollar deal with him and I can’t reach him on the phone” and “For the next two hours I am only interested in making money…the rest of the art world can f***k off.” But my favorite came from some dandy British collector in yellow silk pants, purple blazer, and neon green eyeglasses. He took a platter of Dover sole from a server, pushed a hair off his forehead and said, “Dear, how many Warhols do we have? Perhaps today we can pick up one or two more.” Hmm, they’re playing my tune. Gotta zoeken.
Oh Nancy!! I so wish I was there. Pick me up a Degas would you, thanks.
No prob, which one. There are so many.
So, the dandy was Marty Courtland, yes?