
Larry Gagosian with Negar Azimi
Larry Gagosian is the kind of person about whom everybody has an opinion, though little is actually known. Rumors swirl around him like wind on a djinn. He only dates tall black women. He's secretly a Rosicrucian. He is a great friend to widows and children. He was married once for five minutes. He drives a Ferrari. He was friendly with Kurt Vonnegut. He loved Leo Castelli, and vice versa. He has the personality of a swordfish. (This last, courtesy of an interviewer in the Financial Times.)
Until recently, at least, he was loath to give interviews.
We know a few things. Gagosian is sixty-seven years old, the son of Armenian émigrés: a housewife who was once a minor actress (she appeared in an Orson Welles production) and an accountant who worked for the city of Los Angeles. He loved � loves � jazz. He majored in English literature at UCLA, did a brief stint at the William Morris Agency, made some money parking cars. Not long after, he started selling posters on the street for extra cash � and not long after, never looked back.
He might well be the most powerful man in the art world. Certainly the unabashedly commercial, supersized art world that we live and work in today owes much to Gagosian. He was one of the first to make his galleries more like museums, the better to present big, museum-quality shows (like a memorable 1988 exhibition featuring Roy Lichtenstein's tongue-in-cheek Picasso paintings, or another, in 2009, of late Picasso). He is famous for his eye, and for his shrewdness. His artists have included Andy Warhol (Gagosian is credited with creating the posthumous market for Warhol), Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jeff Koons, Cy Twombly, and Mike Kelley. He has surrounded himself with enviable specialists � scholars like Robert Pincus-Witten and John Richardson, brainy aesthetes like the late Robert Shapazian. And his market prowess is undeniable: in 2006, he brokered the sale of Willem de Kooning's Woman III (which had made its way out of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in circuitous, film-worthy fashion) for $137.5 million, the highest price to date for any painting. The critic Peter Schjeldahl has said of him, �SHe's like a shark or a cat or some other perfectly designed biological mechanism.�
Today there are twelve Gagosian galleries, from Beverly Hills to London to Hong Kong. The latest, in Paris, sits in a 1950s airplane hangar; access appears to be reserved for the .0001% who own private jets.
In early November of last year � it was Election Day � I met Gagosian at his mostly white offices at 980 Madison Avenue in New York City. Having arrived early, I was told to take a long walk, and made my way around an exhibition of Twombly photographs � sweet things, faded and nostalgic � along with a suite of his late paintings � bright and huge and lush, almost vaginal, bursting with life. After some minutes of lolling about as collectors strolled by and the gallery's security guards timed their smiles accordingly, I was ushered into a hallway and then another hallway stuffed with two pretty young assistants and finally to his office. A mottled Lucio Fontana canvas hung on the wall. I sat beside a well-heeled member of Gagosian's public relations team (she insisted on supplementing my recording device with her own). Having expected someone with the attention span of a gnat, I was somewhat rattled by how friendly and focused he was.
Gagosian is at least six feet tall with closely cut gray hair and steel blue eyes. The emperor's suits are probably⬦ expensive. He is laconic, and boasts a gratuitously everyman manner that may or may not be disingenuous but which seems charming for a man whose biographies have yet to be written. His primary mode is sanguine self-assurance undercut by occasional (but vivid) impatience. For the whole of some forty-five minutes, he trained the formidable ammunition of his eyes on me, only occasionally rebuking me for my muffled delivery.
Negar Azimi
We share Robert Shapazian in common. He and I became close back
in 2000 or 2001 and traveled around together a bit. I had been
in Cairo working with the photographer Van Leo, and Robert was
so interested in photography, as you know.
Bidoun actually did an interview with him in our first
Interview issue eight years ago (click to read: Anna Boghiguian and Robert Shapazian
in Bidoun #8).
Larry Gagosian
Did you ever go to Africa with him?
Azimi
I did. We went to Mali for the photography biennial in Bamako.
And he came to visit me in Cairo. He was the first person I knew
to use antiseptic hand cream⬦
Gagosian
He was germphobic.
Azimi
Totally. He was particular. We would go to fancy restaurants and
he would order fruit salad and then pick at it⬦ [Laughter] How
did you two meet?
Gagosian
I�"m pretty sure I met him here at the gallery on Madison
Avenue. He came to my attention as a collector of Duchamp and
Warhol, and we�"d always been involved with Warhol. I think I
sold him some paintings. But we didn�"t really become close
friends, I was just aware of his collection and his ambition as
a collector. At a certain point we had a mutual friend, Daniel
Wolf, who was really close to Robert and was involved in
photography � as you probably know, he had a great photography
collection. He knew I was working on this gallery in LA and I
hadn�"t really settled on a staff or director, and Daniel
suggested that Shapazian would be a good guy to talk to. I was a
little surprised because I�"d always thought of him as kind of a
well-to-do, not terribly⬦ employable collector. But Daniel put
us together and Robert warmed to the challenge of the gallery
and we ended up having a long association. He worked for the
gallery for ten years or longer, I can�"t remember exactly. A
significant period of time.
Azimi
He had this super-ironic and wry sense of humor.
Gagosian
Yeah, he was hilarious. Very funny. And really smart. He was
terrific. It was great to have such an eccentric, brilliant guy
in the gallery.
Azimi
I have to say, Robert being of Armenian origin⬦ I have a lot of
interesting Armenians in my life, and it's left me thinking that
there's something really peculiar about your diaspora �
Gagosian
My what?
Azimi
Your diaspora. I know that you supported Arshile Gorky, for
example.
Gagosian
Well, we�"ve done several Gorky shows. We�"ve been the primary
gallery for the Gorky family for many years and � yeah, as an
Armenian American, I was understandably very proud of Gorky, one
of the great artists of the twentieth century, one of the
pioneer abstract expressionists, who happened to be Armenian. He
had a very sad personal story in many respects � with his
immediate family and then, you know, the genocide in Armenia,
which took his mother and many of his relatives. He had kind of
a sad life as an artist; I mean, he ended up dying of cancer
after his studio burned to the ground, and his wife left him⬦
which is kind of understandable, because it really kind of fell
apart for him. He was a great artist with a very moving personal
story.
Azimi
I heard that you and Cy Twombly had talked about possibly going
to Armenia together at some point.
Gagosian
We did. Very sadly that didn�"t happen. But Cy had a particular
connection to Gorky, who lived in Virginia on and off. Cy did a
drawing � I wish I owned it � there was a wonderful drawing I
think from the 1980s where he wrote on it �SMy people eat
stones” or something like that, and it was a direct reference to
the Armenian genocide. I don�"t know who said it, originally �
it might have very well been Gorky who uttered that phrase. Cy
was born in Virginia, as you know, he had a studio there, and
the Shenandoah mountains⬦ there was a series of works on paper
and paintings by Gorky called Virginia Landscapes. So
there was this kind of connection from different points. And
there was the work Gorky did, particularly his mature work,
starting in �"42 to when he died � you can see that Cy must have
been influenced in some ways by a certain freedom in Gorky's
work. There was kind of a break with European art, which would
come to be one of the foundations of abstract expressionism.
Azimi
But his life ended so quickly.
Gagosian
He was a young man in 1948 when he hanged himself. And if you
look at the other abstract expressionists � Rothko hadn�"t made
any of his signature paintings, Franz Kline hadn�"t made one
yet, Barnett Newman had just begun tentatively⬦ so if you look
at it that way, it's very interesting. Pollock had just started
to do the very first drip⬦ Gorky finished when they were just
starting, so it's kind of an interesting timeline, the
timeline's very interesting. I�"m sure if he�"d lived longer, if
he hadn�"t had such a tragic death, he undoubtedly would�"ve
gone on to do many more great works.
Azimi
Cy also had a relationship to the Middle East that was kind of
special.
Gagosian
What?
Azimi
Cy Twombly also had this relationship to the Middle East �
Gagosian
Yeah, he was a traveler. Cy used to travel a lot in the Middle
East in the Fifties and Sixties.
Azimi
To Iran.
Gagosian
Afghanistan, Iran. He used to romanticize that part of the
world. But then there were the changes that took place and it
became more difficult to travel there⬦
Azimi
And less free.
Gagosian
It became less safe. There was freedom of travel, you know. I
think a lot of people enjoyed travel in that part of the world
in a way that you can�"t really now.
Azimi
People used to drive!
Gagosian
They used to get in a car and drive to Damascus. It's hard to
imagine now, when you look at the news and you see what's going
on. Regardless of how you view the Arab Spring. Certainly it's
become a more complicated part of the world.
Azimi
I was in Abu Dhabi the first year or second year of their art
fair where you gave a talk. You were really frank about your
professional history and how you got to where you are. And I
just wonder if you could tell me a bit about that moment? When
you started out. What was your visual world like at that moment?
I mean, were you interested in visual culture?
Gagosian
To be honest with you, I wasn�"t really interested in art. I had
never thought about having a career in art and didn�"t really
understand the art world or⬦ I was an English major in college.
It was really kind of a fluke. I started selling posters because
I thought I could make more money that way than parking cars.
Simple as that. I saw somebody else selling posters and I
basically just copied their business. It was a total lack of
imagination. Of direction, really. It was just like, I could
sell posters instead of just parking cars, so I was parking cars
and selling posters and making more money and it just led me to
a kind of wonderful life as an art dealer. There wasn�"t a plan
to get into the art world; I didn�"t see this as an entry point.
It was not a professional decision � if I�"d seen somebody else
selling something, I might�"ve sold that. I was very lucky that
it turned out to be a career path.
Azimi
What were those first posters you sold? I mean did you also try
to psychologize what people liked to put on their walls?
Gagosian
What?
Azimi
Did you think a lot about what people liked to put on their
walls? There must have been a fair amount of psychology �
Gagosian
Not selling posters. It was just like,
get them to buy it. You know � ask for twenty dollars
and be prepared to take anything north of ten. It was a street
business. It wasn�"t about psychology.
Azimi
But were they reproductions of canonical works of art?
Gagosian
They were not reproductions of works of art. They were really
what we call schlock. Cheap posters of bad paintings. I mean, it
was not what you�"d find in the poster shop at the Whitney or
the MoMA. You would buy the poster for fifty cents. It wasn�"t
really a poster, it was a cheap print.
Azimi
That you framed.
Gagosian
That you put a frame on. You buy the print for about a dollar,
the frame would cost you two, three dollars, and then you try to
sell it and make a profit. And I�"d make a couple hundred bucks
a night, which was a lot of money.
Azimi
And were you selling to college students or �
Gagosian
Anybody who walked by. Young people⬦ I mean, somebody who wants
something they thought was attractive to put on their wall and
they don�"t have a lot of money. People have to hang something
on the wall, I guess, so this was kind of the bottom of the
barrel. [Laughs]
Azimi
Right. I mean, we always joke that the Iranian diaspora in LA �
they all have posters of Van Gogh's flowers, like some �
Gagosian
No, no, don�"t make any cultural connections.
Azimi
Okay. Not at all?
Gagosian
It was just something to sell. And then I started buying more
expensive posters, because the company I bought my posters from
made posters that would cost me, instead of a dollar, maybe
twenty-five dollars, fifty dollars. So then I could put a better
frame on it and sell it for a couple hundred bucks, and I�"d
make money faster that way. And that slowly got me looking at
art as⬦ You know, I wasn�"t really that much into art. I sort of
liked it. But I was really captivated by writing and poetry and
music, that's really what �
Azimi
That was your world.
Gagosian
Kind of. Those were my friends. We didn�"t talk about art, we
talked about writers. We talked about musicians. But once I got
into it, it really kind of took over; it pulled me in a very
strong way. And I enjoyed making a decent living. I didn�"t grow
up with money, so it was nice to be able to buy things and get a
better place to live, you know, all the things that come along
with a certain amount of success. And that was very seductive.
So it was two things: for the first time I�"m actually making
money. I was on my own, I was thirty years old, and then when I
had my first gallery I was like thirty-three, thirty-four, but
it was the first time I ever had any money and that was
exciting, to be honest with you, to be able to afford things,
take my friends out to dinner, whatever it was. And then I
really got interested in the art world, not just art but the art
world, and meeting artists. I started coming to New York, and it
was just good for me. It couldn�"t have been better.
Azimi
But could you have started out anywhere else besides LA? It
seems like there was a particular thing happening there.
Gagosian
I suppose New York would have been ground zero for art, but
maybe it was better not being in New York. I don�"t know. It was
good that I was in LA because I think LA is really, after New
York, the most important city for art. Maybe not for the
business of art � that might be London now, because of all the
money in London and the auction houses, so I think in terms of
the economics of the art world, I�"d say London is the second
city. But for the people who make art, for the artists and for
young galleries, LA is probably the second most exciting city.
Some people say it's even more interesting than New York, and
that's a conversation. I mean, that's a conversation, but
certainly it rivals New York.
Azimi
I guess it feels more like a community, because of the art
schools and the fact that a lot of artists teach.
Gagosian
Yeah, there's a lot of great artists that work in LA, and that's
been a constant since the 1950s.
Azimi
So what was that world like? Who was it? People like Chris
Burden, Baldessari⬦?
Gagosian
I�"ve never worked with John Baldessari, but I knew him
socially, we became friends, but I�"ve never dealt with his
work. But Chris is an artist I started working with early on,
right at the very beginning. And we still work together. Which
is nice, you know � it's nice to have that continuity. I think I
first showed Chris in 1977 or �"78, I can�"t remember which. One
of my very, very first shows of a single artist. We�"re really
proud of the long association. He's a great artist.
Azimi
Were there other people that sort of were pivotal for you at
that moment, where you thought, I really want to work with �
Gagosian
You mean artists?
Azimi
Yeah.
Gagosian
Well, Vija Celmins was a new artist⬦ We showed her prints � one
of my first shows was her prints and all of the lithographs that
she�"d made. I got them together and made a nice exhibition. But
yeah, you realize that what's important is to show the best art
you can, and when you�"re starting out you don�"t have the
access, you don�"t have the money, and you don�"t have the
knowledge, even. I mean, I realized early on what would make a
gallery interesting would be showing good art. Which is kind of
obvious, but⬦ Something that I�"ve always paid attention to is
to work with the most important artist that I could.
Azimi
Yeah. But you obviously have an eye, a good eye.
Gagosian
You have to have an eye if you�"re an art dealer.
Azimi
And I�"ve heard from �
Gagosian
Even a bad eye is an eye. [Laughs]
Azimi
At least it's distinctive. But I�"ve heard from a lot of people
who know you that you have a sort of photographic memory, or
just a really good ability to �
Gagosian
I don�"t have a photographic memory.
Azimi
No?
Gagosian
I have a select memory.
Azimi
Or a good visual memory?
Gagosian
Yeah, I have a good visual memory. I�"m good with faces, but
names � I get in trouble a lot, I can�"t seem to remember
people. People think I�"m rude. As a side comment, you know,
I�"m not being rude, I just kind of blank out.
Azimi
Yeah. You have a⬦ persona. Now, do you remember the first piece
of work that you bought for yourself? Something you just wanted
to have and live with.
Gagosian
I think one of the first things I bought was a drawing by Vija
Celmins that was eleven hundred dollars and I bought it from a
collector, a great collector in LA named Barry Lowen, whose
collection all went to the Museum of Contemporary Art in LA when
he died. He was a young man when he died, he had AIDS, and he
was a very good friend of mine. We used to do a lot of business
and became really good friends. So the Celmins⬦ I remember it
was eleven hundred dollars, and it's always out on loan, I think
it's at the Pompidou or something, but I�"ve kept that drawing
since the Seventies. That was one of the first. That was a lot
of money for me to spend � eleven hundred dollars for a drawing.
I really loved the drawing, and I knew when I bought it that
I�"d made a good buy, even though it was not cheap and Barry
Lowen got the proper price. I knew it would be worth a lot more.
Azimi
What's the drawing like?
Gagosian
It's a pencil drawing of the ocean.
Azimi
I asked you about Cy Twombly, but are there any other artists
that you felt really close to? I mean that you had either a long
relationship with or were intimate with or⬦ I�"m sure you�"re
close to all your artists, but �
Gagosian
Well, Richard Serra is an artist I�"ve worked with since 1982,
and he's somebody I�"ve had a long relationship with and worked
very closely with. It was nice when Cy and Richard were both
alive. Richard's one of the great living artists, and somebody I
enjoy working with.
Azimi
Would you do anything for him? I mean, if he built a sculpture
that didn�"t fit into your gallery, would you find a way to
accommodate it somehow?
Gagosian
We�"d probably try. You know, put it outside. [Laughs]
Azimi
Are there any others? I mean, it's a tough question but �
Gagosian
There are so many artists I enjoy working with. I just mention
Richard because I�"ve worked with him for thirty years and I
mention Chris because I�"ve worked with him even longer. I mean
I�"m not going to say which artists I�"m not close to �
Azimi
Of course.
Gagosian
But I enjoy working with artists. It's a real challenge and it's
a real responsibility, because you�"re responsible for their
livelihood, you know? Seriously. And they�"re just very
interesting people for the most part. They�"re usually pretty
smart. I just like the whole⬦ the relationship between the
gallery and the artist is a very interesting thing, different
with every artist. The gallery stays the same, in a way, but the
artist's relationship changes, so it's one of the things I
really enjoy. I like engaging with artists.
Azimi
If you had to have Thanksgiving with an artist or a collector⬦ I
mean, what's your comfort zone?
Gagosian
I�"m comfortable with both. I like being around collectors, you
know, because it's an occupational necessity, but also, I must
say � not to flatter any particular collector, but art
collectors are usually pretty interesting people. The fact that
they�"ve chosen to spend money on art⬦ I mean, people who really
collect, on an ongoing basis. Not just somebody who's decorating
their house, but somebody who's really engaged with art and
thinks about it, evaluates it, buys it, enjoys it, and talks
about it � that's what I�"m talking about. Somebody who's just,
�SAlright, I have some stuff on the walls” � those can be good
customers, but that's a different kind of thing. It's great
because as an art dealer you get access to people that are quite
fascinating, you could even say important people, that you
wouldn�"t have access to if you were in some other line of work.
You get a window into a world that probably isn�"t that easily
accessed.
Azimi
Were there any early collectors that you worked with that were
especially on your wavelength? Or you were very involved in the
building of their collections?
Gagosian
Yeah, a couple. Probably the three that stick out would be Eli
Broad, Si Newhouse, and David Geffen.
Azimi
I wanted to ask you a bit about �
Gagosian
This is going to go a long time if we�"re going to cover ancient
history⬦
Azimi
[Laughs] No, no, I just want you to be comfortable!
Yeah, no, I know, I know �
Gagosian
We�"re still back in the Seventies.
Azimi
Okay, I�"ll jump around a little bit.
Gagosian
You better jump around.
Azimi
I�"ll jump around.
Gagosian
We�"ll have to move this a little faster.
Azimi
Alright, alright, alright. But it's so good �
Gagosian
It might be good but I still have auctions starting this
evening.
Azimi
Sure, of course. Okay. So, your gallery has become
totally global. It's sort of everywhere, situated in vastly
different cultures. Do you think there's something about art
that has become global, in the sense that you�"re not selling
very specific things to Hong Kong versus Athens versus wherever?
Gagosian
Do we target certain types of artists for different parts of the
world? Not really at all. We basically show the same artists
everywhere. The artists we represent, the estates that we
represent � we try to make sense of it, and it's complicated
because with this many galleries you have to be very focused on
the work. With art � it's not like it's a global business like a
fashion business, where you can just keep opening stores, just
have more production and so on. Artists make work at the pace
that they make work and you can�"t ask an artist to crank out� I
mean, it�"d be nice [laughs] � but the reality is, you
have to be respectful of that, and it's tricky. It's very
demanding. But we don�"t really say⬦ in Italy, let's have an
artist that Italians would like. The market's more �
Azimi
Sophisticated, in a way.
Gagosian
The modern world is much more⬦ contemporary. People look at the
same things, you know, whether it's in Hong Kong or Athens. And
so we just work with the artists that we represent, and try to
juggle it all.
Azimi
And about Abu Dhabi � I�"ve followed that evolution a bit. And I
wondered whether you were aware of what was happening in the
Seventies in Iran, with the royal family, collecting �
Gagosian
Now I am. I wasn�"t aware at the time, though. I was kind of
oblivious to that sort of thing.
Azimi
I just wonder if you see any corollaries.
Gagosian
Well, yeah. I mean, hopefully, it ends better. But yeah, you
have a very wealthy royal family that's buying art � and I think
that's great, by the way, you know the Shah had a museum and
people could go look at the art, it's �
Azimi
Still there.
Gagosian
To be honest with you, what's the difference between that � I
don�"t want to get into politics, but you know, the Rockefellers
bought art and they put it in the Museum of Modern Art and
people from all over the world can go look at it. So I think
it's great that you have a royal family in Qatar or in Abu Dhabi
�
Azimi
That has a public �
Gagosian
That has the means and the desire to build a great collection,
and then you share it with the world � or certainly, share it
first with your country and the people that live in your
country. But it's great. I think if you have the wealth to do
that, and assuming that people are being taken care in the other
aspects of their lives �
Azimi
Why not invest in it?
Gagosian
You know, why not? It enriches the country, I think.
Azimi
You mentioned that in college your world was more writing and
music. Is that still true? Like, what do you do when you�"re not
involved in⬦ this? I�"ve heard you�"re into jazz �
Gagosian
I work a lot. I spend most of my time working.
Azimi
Do you watch stupid movies?
Gagosian
Do I watch stupid movies?
Azimi
And also good movies!
Gagosian
Yeah, I like movies. Yeah, I like movies.
Azimi
Are there any directors that you�"re really especially into?
Gagosian
I like Roman Polanski. I like his movies, and⬦ I love Stanley
Kubrick. He's dead, but⬦
Azimi
Still great.
Gagosian
Two of my favorite directors.
Azimi
And music?
Gagosian
Uh⬦ music. I like jazz a lot. I just joined my very first board.
I�"ve never been on a board, but I just went on the board for
Jazz at Lincoln Center. I�"m very happy about that. Good jazz
has been a big part of my life, as far as my interest in music,
and⬦ It's kind of weird now with music, the way technology is,
with downloading and iPods and electronic distribution and it's
kind of � you miss something, I think.
Azimi
L ike the texture of vinyl, and⬦
Gagosian
Yeah, but not just the vinyl, I�"m not a vinyl junkie. It's more
that⬦ music has become so seamlessly distributed that it loses
some of its connection with people. I don�"t have any nostalgia
for vinyl, but it is nice when you really like to put on
something and listen to it, particularly with people that like
to listen to it. Now you come to my house, it's like, stick the
iPod in and turn it on. It's very convenient, but it also⬦
slightly numbs the experience, I think. I used to have a store
in my neighborhood in East Hampton where I used to love to go on
a Saturday and buy CDs and come back and listen to them. That's
not that long ago. The good side is, everything is more
accessible and maybe cheaper. But the personal connection
between the audience and the music in some ways is lost.
Azimi
Yeah, you said seamless, I think it's like an �
Gagosian
Do you agree with me?
Azimi
Yeah, it's like an elevator, I mean how music is everywhere, in
the atmosphere �
Gagosian
Yeah, there's no background.
Azimi
Just a couple more questions. I know that you invest a lot in
good catalogs. I mean, it seems like you really care about print
culture, and I just wonder if you have any favorite books? Or do
you read art magazines at all?
Gagosian
Very little.
Azimi
Yeah, they�"re pretty wordy right?
Gagosian
I honestly have to confess I don�"t read art magazines.
Azimi
Yeah, yeah, I think they�"re terrible [laughs], I mean
they�"re �
Gagosian
I don�"t think they�"re terrible, I just don�"t read them. I
read other kinds of magazines.
Azimi
L ike what?
Gagosian
I like magazines. Well, now I�"m reading a lot of design
magazines because I�"m building a house. I�"m building a new
house here in the city, so I�"m reading a lot of design
magazines trying to get ideas and things to feed to my
architect. So that sort of thing. And then I love cars � I�"m a
car junkie, not a big car collector but I love cars, so I read
car magazines. I read news magazines, occasionally. And I read
books a lot. I�"m more of a book reader.
Azimi
What are you reading now?
Gagosian
I�"m reading a book called Sutton.
Azimi
What's that?
Gagosian
It's about a bank robber named Willie Sutton who was almost a
folk hero. He never shot anybody, never used a gun. I wouldn�"t
have read it because I�"m not particularly interested in bank
robbers but the writer is a really, really good writer and it's
a very sensitive, wellwritten book. I recommend it. So it's not
like I�"m particularly interested in the topic but it's like a
character from our past that somehow relates to the present.
Azimi
Okay, I was going to �
Gagosian
Okay? Thanks.
Azimi
Oh, do you want to? Really?
Gagosian
Yeah, let's stop.