Transcript
Introduction
That was an excerpt from this long-form, two-part New Yorker profile that I'm going to talk to you about today. It's called The Days of Duveen: A legendary art dealer and his clients and is written by S. N. Behrman all the way back in 1951.
And before I jump back into the profile, I want to tell you how this came on my radar. A few months ago when I was researching and reading about Larry Gagosian which is the billionaire art dealer, that was Episode 325, I mentioned this theme that seems to appear over and over again, that there's always a blueprint. And so there's somebody doing something now and we're heavily influenced or got the idea from somebody that lived a long time before them.
And so Larry Gagosian's alive and operating to this day, but almost 100 years ago, Joseph Duveen built a career that Larry used as a blueprint. In fact, in that piece I'm reading from Episode 325 is that Gagosian isn't the first to pull this off. He's a big reader and one of his favorite subjects is the life of Joseph Duveen, the great art dealer who helped assemble the collections of Andrew Mellon, J. P. Morgan and other Gilded Age titans. There are several biographies of Duveen and Gagosian informed me that he has read them all.