Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's art collection goes up for sale; Gustav Klimt, Seurat works among 150 pieces
What united Allen's eclectic trove, those who know him say, was his passion for each artwork.

"I'm always trying to figure out where the future's going," Allen said in an interview for the 2016 exhibition "Seeing Nature," which featured works from his blue-chip collection. "So maybe that's why I find landscapes interesting. It's as if they are windows onto different realities. In the Klimt, you can feel the stillness and the calmness and the eternal nature of a forest. Or you can have an artist trying to capture a volcanic eruption, which is not still at all.
"When you look at a painting," Allen continued, "you're looking into a different country, into someone else's imagination, how they saw it."
The Klimt is one of more than 150 artworks from Allen's estate that will be sold at Christie's on Nov. 9 and 10 in an auction valued at more than $1 billion (with the proceeds going to philanthropy, as Allen directed). While the sale was announced in August, now, for the first time, the auction house has begun to divulge what those treasures are.

Even when the cloak of secrecy is finally removed, rarely does it reveal a collection as varied and expansive as Allen's, reaching across 500 years of art history.
The inventory shows not only that Allen - who died in 2018, at age 65 - scored some obvious blockbusters, like the Klimt, which is estimated to sell for more than $90 million, or Georges Seurat's "Les Poseuses, Ensemble (Petite version)," in excess of $100 million. He also collected works by women, such as an untitled Agnes Martin from 1999-2000 (estimated at $4 million to $6 million); Louise Bourgeois' "Black Flames" ($1.5 million to $2.5 million); and Georgia O'Keeffe's "White Rose with Larkspur No. 1" ($6 million to $8 million).

But he was primarily driven by strong aesthetic responses and historic appreciation - "the way a work came together, what physical and emotional experience it provoked," said Pablo Schugurensky, who served as the director of art collections for Vulcan Inc., Allen's investment company, from 1998 to 2005.
"It was a personal collection," Schugurensky added. "He knew what was in it and he knew why he had acquired it. He enjoyed living with art and visiting it."
In the interview for the "Nature" show -conducted by Mary Ann Prior, director of Vulcan's art collections from 2014 to 2016 - Allen recalled being drawn to making and looking at art as a child. "We had a book about Picasso, late in life, doing ceramics, painting, constructing funny hats out of paper for the kids who were around, and making sculptures," he said. "I remember looking at that book for hours as a kid, being fascinated by it.

Allen described how his father read the newspaper after work under the family's print of a king holding a flower by Georges Rouault, and was fascinated by Chinese and Japanese ceramics. ("He would take a vase and turn it in his hands and just look at it for 10 minutes.") He remembered how his parents collected work by modern artists associated with the University of Washington, including Boyer Gonzales, Ambrose Patterson, Viola Patterson and Walter F. Isaacs.
On a trip to London in the early 1980s, Allen visited the Tate, where he saw his first Roy Lichtenstein, John Everett Millais' "Ophelia" (1851-52) and works by Monet. He was also influenced by his friends, including the media mogul David Geffen, himself an avid collector.

Having always been drawn to the Impressionists, Allen's first major purchase was Monet's "Water Lily Pond" (1919). He then brought to collecting the inquisitiveness that fueled his other endeavors, including software, education, music, sports teams and diving. Allen branched out from Impressionism into African art, Aboriginal art and art from New Guinea. He built an extensive collection of antiquities - glass, ceramics and sculpture. He amassed items from pop culture, science fiction, costume history and military history.
Allen constantly wanted to educate himself, to discover talent and content.
"It could be by Antony Gormley, it could be by Eric Fischl," Allen said. "I love David Hockney's work, although now he's probably more famous for his work in the 1960s and '70s, but I love his later works as well."
To some extent, Allen brought a businessman's rationality to his collecting, assessing whether a painting was likely to appreciate. Other times, his heart led the way.
"There's the aspect of collecting that becomes almost compulsive," he said in the "Nature" interview, recounting how he chased "a jewel of a painting" by O'Keeffe: "l'd been wanting for years to get a landscape by her."
"Years ago there was a van Gogh self-portrait that he supposedly painted for his mother, and the bid price just got too high - I think it was something above $75 million," he continued. "Now it's probably worth far more than that, but you have to be very careful not to get caught up in a bidding war."

At the same time, Allen was not drawn to digital art, seeing it as something that looked "almost too perfect."
Allen regularly lent his works to museums and gallery shows to share his enjoyment with a broader public. "Sometimes when you live with art, you stop seeing it in the way that someone fresh to it sees it," he said. "l want to be able to give people the same kind of eye-opening experience l had when l first went to the Tate over 30 years ago."
Often impresarios like Allen end up isolated by their quirky combination of skills and their outsize success. Allen - who died of complications of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma - seemed to personally commune with his paintings, as if they were keeping him company.
"Each artist has his own unique view of reality that has to do with his inner state and his inner eye, so he brings you to seeing the world the way he saw it," Allen said in his interview. "The way he's trying to express it could be mysterious or enigmatic or elusive. Or it could be celebrating the beauty of certain scenes or the chaotic nature of things, the strange nature of things."
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