Global Times

MILLION DOLLAR FIND

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When a US art dealer dropped $15,000 on what he thought was “junk” in a New Jersey storage locker, he never imagined it could be the deal of a lifetime.

But he now believes stashed in the unit were six paintings by Dutch-American abstract master Willem de Kooning, which could be worth millions of dollars.

The auction record for a de Kooning is $66.3 million, set for large canvas Untitled XXV at Christie’s in 2016, while another sold privately for a reported $300 million in 2015.

Another piece of luck, according to New York gallery owner David Killen, is a painting by Swiss modernist Paul Klee that he says was also found in the unit.

The works originally came from the studio of Orrin Riley, a superstar in the art restoratio­n business who died in 1986, leaving everything to his partner, Susanne Schnitzer, who was killed in a traffic accident in 2009.

Her executors – friends in New Jersey – spent years trying to find rightful owners for the art, but no one came forward to claim the 200 pieces languishin­g in the storage unit, near the Ho-Ho-Kus township.

“Honestly all I knew was [an] other auction house passed on it, so my feeling was it was a bunch of junk,” Killen told AFP by telephone.

“All these things are boxed up. I said, ‘Look, I’ll give you $15,000 for it. I’ll take a chance,’” he said. If nothing else, he thought the items would pad out auctions he holds every two weeks.

It was only once the items were being unloaded that he spotted what he believes to be de Kooning paintings.

The work is not signed, but Killen said a restorer based on Long Island, who used to work for both Riley and de Kooning, also believes they are genuine.

“I can see in his eyes, he’s shaking,” Killen told AFP.

“He said ‘this is exactly what de Kooning was doing in the ‘70s, one after the other.”

Art conservato­r Lawrence Castagna says he “absolutely” believes the six oil-on-paper works to be de Koonings, but stressed it was “just my opinion.”

“I’m just blown away by the whole discovery to tell you the truth,” he told AFP.

Castagna said he did “minor repair work” but otherwise the works would be sold as they were found, anticipati­ng significan­t interest when they go on display for the first time publicly in nearly 35 years.

“I’m excited. Believe it or not – and people will laugh when they hear this – it’s not about the money. I want some publicity for my auction house,” he said. But what would he do with a bonanza check? New doors for his gallery and a “really nice apartment,” he replies.

 ??  ?? Lawrence Castagna (left) and David Killen examine a painting believed to be a work of Willem de Kooning.
Lawrence Castagna (left) and David Killen examine a painting believed to be a work of Willem de Kooning.

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