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De la Cote d'Azur au Texas
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10739 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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1 / 1986 |
1,627 Words |
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David Dillon F. Scott Fitzgerald might have created Wendy and Emery Reves,
but it's questionable whether he could have written a better
ending to their story than the one now being played out in
Dallas. |
Wyn-Nelle Russell, born 1916 in Marshall, Texas, heart of the states's deep piney woods, leaves home in the late 1930s for New York City. Hits it big as a runway model, appearing in the pages of Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. Marries and divorces band leader Paul Baron, then meets émigré businessman and anti-fascist publisher Emery Reves in the late Forties. Returns with him to Roquebrune on the Cote d'Azur, where they buy Coco Chanel's Villa La Pausa, transform it into a popular rendezvous for Winston Churchill, Konrad Adenauer and other public figures, and in their spare time collect art frenetically--carpets, crystal, Chinese porcelain, Renaissance iron work, Impressionist and post-Impressionist paintings and drawings. When Emery Reves dies in 1981, Wendy and her collection are pursued by museums on both sides of the Atlantic. After months of pondering and negotiating, she finally anoints the new Dallas Museum of Art, which she has never seen but which is only 150 miles from her old hometown. "Dallas has the growth possibilities, the money, and I'm from Texas," Wendy explained in announcing the gift. "Also, the museum isn't as filled with meat and matter as museums in other big cities. I cannot think of a more wonderful place to give it."
On November 29, the Reves Collection opened to the public, housed in six recreated rooms from Villa La Pausa that form the centerpiece of the DMA's new $6 million Decorative Arts wing. Appraised for $35 million, the collection doubled the value of the museum's holdings, and launched it into the (for Dallas) entirely new field of decorative arts.
"Dallas was quite weak in Impressionist paintings," said DMA Director Harry Parker. "We had not one painting by Cézanne, and in this collection there are
... (1999 of 9478 Characters)
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