The Surrealist World of Rosalind Gersten Jacobs And Melvin Jacobs
The Jacobs had a romantic, storybook life immersed in art, retail and fashion.
Could two people have been more connected?
Rosalind Gersten and Melvin Jacobs were young retail buyers at Macy's and Bloomingdale's, respectively, when they met randomly at a party. They had a secret romance and eloped six weeks after their first date because, in the '50s, it was forbidden to marry someone from the competition and Macy's and Bloomingdale's were archrivals back then. Then Rosalind brought Melvin into her circle of artist friends.
"Their sensibilities were really aligned in terms of how they saw the world," said their daughter, Peggy Jacobs Bader.
Roz, as she was known, rose up the ranks of Macy's, becoming a senior vice president and national fashion director, and Mel, as he was known, rose to co-chairman of the former Federated Department Stores (then Bloomingdale's owner), and subsequently chairman and chief executive officer of Saks Fifth Avenue. Jacobs ran Saks during one of its headiest periods of growth and managed the business for awhile with a heavily stacked team of prominent executives that included Arthur Martinez, Burt Tansky and Philip Miller.
"My parents were both self-made.
They came from humble beginnings," said Jacobs Bader during an interview Monday. "They were both creative merchants. My mother's grandmother was a couture dressmaker working in her town house on the Upper West Side. My father's family were furriers and his brother ran a shoe store. Retailing was in their blood."
They also shared a passion for
Surrealist art and, over the years, accumulated an extensive collection, which they kept entirely on display at their home, never in storage. Mel passed away in 1993; Roz in 2019.
On Saturday, May 14, Christie's will present "The Surrealist World of Rosalind Gersten Jacobs & Melvin Jacobs," a collection of fine art, sculpture, photography and jewelry from European and American artists – 77 lots total – in a live single-owner sale. There is an accompanying online sale of the collection containing fine art, photography, posters and ephemera, with 84 lots.
In total, the sales are expected to realize in excess of $20 million. The highest value lot is Man Ray's beguiling
"Le Violon d'Ingres," a 1924 photograph of his lover and muse Kiki de Montparnasse. According to Christie's, it has an estimated value between $5 million and $7 million, the highest of any single photograph in auction history. The artist held onto the original until 1962 when the Jacobs became its custodian.
Though the works by Man Ray are at the heart of their collection, the Jacobs also owned six works by René Magritte, including the enigmatic gouache "Eloge de la Dialectique," valued between $2.5 million and $4.5 million, and the "L'autre son de cloche" oil painting estimated between $4 million and $7 million.
Another of the collection highlights is Vija Celmins' meticulously rendered "Mars," estimated at between $1.8 million and $2.5 million, as well as Marcel Duchamps' "Feuille de vigne femelle," seen taking in between $500,000 and $800,000.
There's also "American Girdle," a mix media painting by gallerist and artist William Copley, depicting red, white and blue girdles that were sold at Bloomingdale's. When the Daughters of the American Revolution protested them, Bloomingdale's stopped selling the girdles but before the girdles disappeared, Copley got Jacobs to send him some so he could paint them.
In 1954, Roz attended the opening of a Broadway musical called "The Golden Apple." The composer, Jerome Moross, was her friend and also a friend of Copley's and his wife, Noma, an artist as well. They lived in Paris and came to New York for the opening of the show.
When Ross introduced Roz to the Copleys, she mentioned she was about to embark on her first buying trip to Paris, and they said they'd love to see her there. Roz, who was buying for a row of designer shops inside Macy's called "The Little Shops," phoned the Copleys upon her arrival in the city, and they invited her for dinner. Among the guests was Man Ray and his wife.
"That's what started everything," said Jacobs Bader.
Roz became part of a coterie of artists and art lovers that included Max Ernst, Dorothea Tanning, Marcel Duchamps, Man Ray, as well as the Copleys, who gave Magritte's "Eloge de la dialectique" to Roz as a birthday gift. It became the beginning of the Jacobs' collection.
"My mother always used to say, she thought surreally," said Jacobs Bader. "Surrealism just made sense to her, but a lot of it had to do with humor, the twists of what we consider reality. I had some