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The enigma of departure
d'Offay's mythic flight
Anthony dOffays recent and sudden
announcement of closure seems shocking, if characteristically mysterious,
after 36 years of meteoric rise. With an annual turnover of around
$35 million the doors will close before Christmas to the triad of
exhibition spaces which dOffay has built up since the l970s.
This means abandonment for the gallery expansion plans vented, and
for recently recruited new gallery staff, though few such question
marks hang over dOffays galactical array of artists,
at least about their future security.
As dOffay approaches
62, he and his wife Anne Seymour well deserve a different pace.
She joined him originally from the Tate Gallery, and together they
soared rapidly in the field of contemporary art, at a time when
museums were distinctly tentative about post-l950s work. Their evacuation
of conspicuous central urban space creates a meteor-sized void in
the current galleries landscape, and people wonder at the real motivation.
But surely the dOffays have chosen their moment, supremely
well paced as always. Perhaps they simply computed (a) age (b) market
saturation (c) the new mega-museum scene, and came up with a red
light: wise to step out before any cataclysm. Like old hand Thomas
Gibson (and Kasmin who cottoned on long ago) they decided dealers
no longer need actual real space, given a secure market segment.
A vision now emerges, in New York and London, of international art
brokerage pursued on the dealers floor, crammed with terminals
and mega-sales, all electronically pursued in virtual reality. Thats
enough, with the all-powerful but committee-driven mega-museums,
to clinch any deal.
Anthony dOffay once did Richard Demarco a kind of favour
(really Joseph Beuys was the giver). One Edinburgh Festival in the
1980s, Beuys, with Demarcos encouragement, selected broken
down poorhouse doors, sanctified them as a Beuys found-object,
with a red light attachment (red sold sign?). Then Douglas Hall,
at Edinburghs National Gallery of Modern Art, put them helpfully
on temporary exhibition. Director Johannes Cladders saw the doors,
and wanted to acquire them for his Moenchen-Gladbach Museum of Art
in Germany, Demarco was to get the full price, and Cladders
committee asked for a verification of the price. You guessed it,
a dealer had to do this. DOffay was invited to help. DOffay
willingly gave a proper (trade) valuation. All was philanthropic,
all the way to the bank. The intermediary do-gooders (Beuys included)
went off to the pub. But, wait a minute. Demarco got his life-raft
cash sum (you guessed it) but very net of dealer commission.
No waivers here in the sacred cause. Such is all-round philanthropy
and its ways in the world of art. Like the free lunch, the obligatory
gallery visit to Dering Street or the walk down Albemarle Street,
could soon seem as irrelevant as walking the dog. The gallery (broker)
website can be visited on screen. The date the Times covered
the event? Oh, yes
11 September
that was.
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