Author

Publication

1998 - Little, Brown & Co., Boston, Massachusetts

Language

English

Word Count

88,500 words, Guess

Page Count

354 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing192277
  • Goodreads1061661

Classifications

  • DDC381/.17/065
  • LCCHF5477.G74 S6745 1998

Description

In this account of the world's oldest and richest auction house, Lacey brings to life the personalities, ambition, and shrewd business dealings behind the glamour and glitz. From the socially ambitious parson's son Montague Barlow to the endlessly charming, brilliant, and amoral aristocrat Peter Wilson to the present owner, American shopping mall magnate A. Alfred Taubman, and his flamboyant lieutenant Diana D. Brooks, the managers of Sotheby's have learned how to dress their rummage sales for the rich in a glowing patina of scholarship, taste, and social distinction. Robert Lacey reports from the inside on such recent events as the auction of the personal property of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in 1996 and Mohamed al-Fayed's sale of the goods of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor in February 1998. He traces the history of the long and often bitter rivalry with Sotheby's only significant adversary, Christie's, the "other" auction house. He tells how top executives from the two houses compete in the wooing of wealthy widows and estate lawyers to grab the rights to the few artistic masterpieces left in private hands, and to uncover new categories of "collectibles" to tempt the appetite of a relentlessly consumerist world.

Subjects

Topics

AuctionsArt auctionsSotheby's (Firm)Sotheby's (London)Geschichte 1734-1998

Other Editions

  • Sotheby's: bidding for classLittle, Brown & Co.1998-01-01

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