Page 13 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
P. 13

涅槃寂静 | THE COLLECTION OF DAVID AND NAYDA UTTERBERG (LOTs 1-20)











            Although relatively small, the Korean celadon collection was   Because  I am  an academic,  I suspect  that  David granted  me
            distinguished by its superior quality; indeed, every piece was   slightly more access, principally by correspondence, to his
            a masterwork. Virtually all of the pieces had been purchased   collection than others. He kept museum curators, fellow
            from leading dealers in Japan, just as almost every piece had   collectors and most dealers at a distance for reasons of his own.
            previously been published. In addition, David, a stickler for   The research of the works in which he was interested might
            proper provenance,  acquired only pieces  with documentation   have been as enthralling for him as the beauty of the work of art.
            that evinced that they had left Korea before 1970.
                                                                Many  of  the  people  who  got  to  know  David  personally  were  art
            I last saw David early in 2005, when he attended the opening of   dealers. James Godfrey, a dealer specializing in Chinese art and now
            “Marks of Enlightenment, Traces of Devotion,” an exhibition   based in Cleveland, was living in Manhattan when he first met David.
            of Japanese painting and calligraphy from the collection of   They were good friends and spent much time together talking about
            mutual friends in Cambridge, Sylvan Barnet (1926–2016), a   Asian art, among myriad other topics. When David and his travel
            Shakespearean scholar, and his partner, William Burto (1921–  buddy, Glenn Vinson, came to New York for auctions in the 1980s,
            2013), which we mounted at the Fogg Art Museum.     Godfrey thought of them as “the odd couple.” Glenn, an attorney
                                                                with a Harvard law degree, was from Dallas but ended up in San
          Professor Yukio Lippit, at Harvard University, confirmed the   Francisco. He and his late wife, Joan, who was from Singapore, were
          significance of Utterberg’s accomplishments in the art field. He first   patrons of the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco—their collecting
          met David as a graduate student in the 1990s, in Tokyo, through   interests were on the Chinese and Southeast Asian side.
          the Cambridge collectors Sylvan Barnet and Bill Burto, and that was
          when he began to correspond with him to field questions about his   Precise and demanding in terms of his taste, David knew exactly
          collection:                                           what he wanted. According to Godfrey, he was an absolutely driven
                                                                collector, with high standards and very good taste.
            He never asked my advice for purchases, but over the years, he
            would occasionally write to ask questions about objects in his   He  had  two  sides  to  his  brain—the  business  side,  focused  on
            collection.  Gregory  Levine  and  I  borrowed  David’s  painting   his medical inventions, and the aesthetic side, directed toward
            Tenjin Visiting China for our 2007 “Awakenings” show at Japan   his art collection. He excelled at both. David gravitated toward
            Society, New York. I always felt that he had—and I still don’t   Goryeo celadons, but also moved on to other areas as his lifestyle
            understand why—one of the most under-recognized collections   changed. He decorated his apartments—first in San Francisco
            of East Asian art anywhere, with truly fabulous works. And it   and then  in Seattle,  where he overlooked the  harbor—with
            was never exhibited in full. So, this tribute in Impressions will   Ming-dynasty, as well as French art deco furniture and Chinese
            be one of very few public instances that preserve his legacy in   carpets.
            the art world.
                                                                  David, as a Westerner, early on came to understand the subtleties
            As you know, painting wasn’t the primary focus of his   of Korean and Japanese art. But he also happened to like
            collecting—to  me  it  was  Buddhist  objects  and  ceramics—but   Chinese furniture and carpets. His overall taste was restrained
            I was always struck by how remarkable his objects were. The   and classical. He did a lot of homework, which frustrated some
            ones that stand out to me include Tenjin Visiting China. This is   dealers—he was quite demanding, even persnickety, in his taste
            in my view perhaps the most significant example, and the earliest   and often seemed to know more than the dealer, which could
            dated one (1430). Not only is the inscription by Yoka Shinko   be intimidating. He tended to think that you could get the best
            intriguing in terms of what it says about the legend of Tenjin’s   things in Japan. On balance, he bought from the “right” sources:
            crossing to China, but the work itself is unusually well preserved   Tajima, Setsu and Yabumoto in Tokyo, Giuseppe Eskenazi and
            and beautifully colored. I think it must be by a yamato-e painter   Bluetts in London, John Eskenazi in Milan and London and
            or court artist of the period because of the remarkable handling   from Christie’s and Leighton Longhi in New York.
            of mineral pigments and the surety of figural depiction. Sylvan   He and Nayda were still going to Japan as late as 2015, before his
            Barnett and Bill Burto always regretted selling the work to
            David, and told me how painful it was to see the work in our   disease forced him into a wheelchair a few years later.
            “Awakenings” exhibition at Japan Society Gallery in 2007.
   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18