Page 10 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
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涅槃寂静 | THE COLLECTION OF DAVID AND NAYDA UTTERBERG





                David was attracted to Asian art from the beginning of his years in the   never in David’s vocabulary. He ran the race well and embodied
                Far East. He and Nayda, who was born in the Philippines, spent more   the words of Timothy 4:7: “I have fought the good fight, I have
                than half the year traveling to Asia and Europe. Around 1990, David   finished the race, I have kept the faith.”
                gave sixteen Korean early stoneware ceramics and several calligraphy   I know that people think of him as a loner. In fact, he was
                scrolls to the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco. In Seattle, David’s
                office was across the street from the Seattle Art Museum (SAM),   very private, formal and old school. He was also extremely
                where he served on the board of trustees from 1995 to 2001, when   snobbish by nature (we laughed about that—I’m the same way).
                                                                       David  was  very  careful  (his  mother  warned  me  about  that),
                Mary (Mimi) Gates was its director. David and Nayda gave the library
                of the Seattle Asian Art Museum, in Volunteer Park, an annual fund   reserved and totally formal. Yes, people found him intimidating.
                                                                       Everyone we know told me so. He did not want to socialize,
                of  thirty thousand dollars  for  three  years  (1995–97)—that  library   because he was not a “chit chat” kind of guy. For him, it was a
                was an important resource for him. He was forming a substantial
                collection of Buddhist painting and sculpture, as well as ink painting;   waste of time. Underneath all that, however, he was full of dry
                                                                       wit, humor and warmth—he never lost those gifts, even in his
                woodblock-printed Buddhist material; medieval Japanese ceramics;   last months.
                some lacquer; Korean celadons—and both Japanese and Korean
                folding screens, among other genres. The reminiscences recorded   Nayda confirms he was not interested in having others see his
                below  are excerpts from,  “David  Scott  Utterberg  (1946–2019):  A   collection; there were no group visits or seminars at his home. It was
                Very Private Collector,” Impressions 42 Part Two (2021), the journal   for the two of them to enjoy. Before he died, he advised her not to
                of the Japanese Art Society of America (www.japaneseartsoc.org):  give any of his collection to a museum. When one curator asked to
                                                                     visit him a few years ago, David warned him, “Don’t come if you
                Nayda, who was David’s confidante, explained his approach to   think I’m going to give anything to your museum.”
                acquiring a work of art. After seeing a piece at a gallery, he would go
                back home and do intensive research.                                 SHARED MEMORIES
                 Typically, he would not buy something on the spot. He had   Xiaojin Wu, Curator of Japanese and Korean art at the Seattle Art
                 his own library of about seven thousand books and could study   Museum (SAM), remembers that David preferred works that were
                 by himself. He never depended  on scholars when making a   minimal and elegant. In 2013, he was a lender to an exhibition of
                 purchase. As for calligraphy, he didn’t understand it, but he   East  Asian art  celebrating  SAM’s  eightieth  anniversary,  “A Fuller
                 would train his eye by looking at it and similar works for a   View  of  China,  Japan and  Korea.”  When  he  saw  the  museum’s
                 long time. At home, we would flip through pages of his books   thirteenth-century ink painting of a bull hanging at the end of one
                 together, without talking, just studying. David read all the time.   gallery, he said, “I’d trade anything for that.” He lent his beautiful
                 When we visited a dealer, he sat there without saying anything,   screen of spring azaleas and autumn grasses with calligraphy, by
                 for a long time. He would return nine months later and say,   Konoe Nobuhiro, to the museum’s 2015 exhibition “Calligraphic
                 “Do you remember that piece you showed me? I’ll buy it.” He   Abstractions.” Wu continues:
                 was very careful. His motto was: Don’t settle for anything less
                 than the best. He was never content with “It’s OK.” Also, he   He really had a sharp mind and eye (and sometimes tongue,
                 would weed out lesser things, labeling them with the comment   too) as well as a good sense of humor. He formatted his e-mail
                                                                       messages rather dramatically, making me think of a Zen koan!
                 “Ready to sell.”
                                                                       After I gave him a tour of the 2013 exhibition in celebration
                 He  collected  French  wine,  as  well.  By  1993,  he  had  three   of SAM’s eightieth anniversary, David wrote, “A great job and
                 thousand bottles in an off-site wine cellar. I still have seven   I’m very glad for the personal introduction. You are obviously
                 hundred bottles, each labeled by David: “Not yet ready,”   much harder working and enthused than 96% of museum people
                 “Almost ready” and “Ready.”                           I have met in my life and those are the crucial ingredients.” I
                                                                       don’t know how he came up with the “96%.”
                 He was similarly meticulous about his appearance and dressed
                 like royalty. He wore a tie for dinner, even in Hawai‘i. He never   I was most pleased that he came to see our renovated Asian
                 wore a T-shirt and didn’t own a pair of jeans or sneakers. That   Art  Museum  in  the  late  summer  of  2019,  before  we  finished
                 was  probably the  influence  of his  father,  who was  very  old-  installing the galleries. He was very happy with our renovation.
                 world European and always wore a bow tie.             Just a few weeks before David passed away, the Utterbergs
                                                                       pledged one million dollars to name a gallery in the Asian Art
                 In 2005, he was diagnosed with a form of myositis that affected   Museum. So, while there is no Utterberg art on the walls, we
                 his quadricep muscles and eventually put him in a wheelchair.
                 It was not a death sentence for him: His physicians told us that   now have a Nayda & David Utterberg Gallery.
                 everything else would be normal, but that he would be unable   Robert D.  Mowry, Alan J.  Dworsky Curator  of Chinese Art
                 to use his legs after the fifteenth year. That gave him all the more   Emeritus, Harvard Art Museums, and a consultant at Christie’s, New
                 reason to travel, visit the countries and museums he loved and   York, notes that David Utterberg, whom he first met in Seattle in
                 also eat at the three-star Michelin restaurants, singling out those   1991, had a deep understanding of Korean art, as well as a keen eye
                 that had ramps for a wheelchair. “Exhausted” or “tired” were   for its beauty, importance and rarity. Mowry remembers:
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