Giuseppe Nahmad
Giuseppe (“Joe”) Nahmad (1932 – 23 November 2012) was an art dealer who specialized in impressionist, post-impressionist, and modern art. He amassed a multi-billion fortune in buying, selling, and collecting works of arts of 19th- and 20th-century artists.[1][2]
Giuseppe Nahmad | |
---|---|
Born | 1932 (age 90–91) Aleppo, Syria |
Died | 23 November 2012 Monte Carlo, Monaco |
Resting place | Jerusalem |
Occupation | art dealer |
Parent(s) | Hillel Nahmad Mathilde Safra |
Relatives | David Nahmad (brother) Ezra Nahmad (brother) |
Family
Giuseppe Nahmad was born in 1932 in Aleppo, Syria. His father Hillel Nahmad was a banker who founded Nahmad & Beyda in Syria. The Nahmads were citizens of Italy and Sephardic Jews who spoke French, Arabic and several other languages.[1] Hillel Nahmad opened a branch of Nahmad & Beyda in Beirut, Lebanon, after he and his wife, Mathilde Nahmad, moved there in 1948. They had eight children: four boys (Albert, Giuseppe, Ezra, David) and four girls (Denise Nahmad Amon, Jacqueline Nahmad Harari, Nadia Nahmad Chowaiki, Evelyn Nahmad Matalan).[3] In 1958, Albert, having expanded the family banking business to Rio de Janeiro, died in an airplane crash.[1]
In 1957, Giuseppe Nahmad settled in Milan where he started his art dealership. Two years later his parents and his younger siblings resettled in Milan. Giuseppe’s younger brothers, David and Ezra, joined the enterprise while still being teenagers in 1963. David and Ezra's own sons, both named Hillel, run galleries in New York and London currently.[4]
Giuseppe Nahmad never married and had no children.
Career
Nahmad discovered Lucio Fontana and commissioned paintings by Wifredo Lam. When prices were especially low in Paris and, for Nahmad, resale margins in Milan ranged from 50% to 100%.[4]
Nahmad and his brothers bought Picasso's 1955 portrait of his second wife Jacqueline in 1995 for $2.6 million. They held it for twelve years and sold it for $30.8 million.[4] In the 1970s, Nahmad bought several Picassos at prices from $40,000 to $50,000 apiece.[4] In the 1980s, Nahmad moved into the Japan market and continued buying art through 1989 downturn.[4]
During this period Ezra and David Nahmad opened galleries in New York City and London.
Controversy and media coverage
In December 2007, an article in Forbes quoted allegations that the younger Nahmad brothers habitually changed the terms of their deals at the last minute. David Nahmad denied the allegations. The same Forbes article credited the Nahmads with stabilizing the auction business by buying art in bulk even during – or especially during – market downturns.[4]"They are like a major brokerage firm in the stock market; the market needs a force like this to function," said New York dealer Jeffrey Deitch.[4]
In 2011, part of the Nahmad collection was first shown at the Kunsthaus Zürich. The exhibit generated some controversy as the museum was criticized for purportedly catering to the family’s broader business interests.[5]
Death
Giuseppe Nahmad died in Monte Carlo on 23 November 2012. He was buried on 26 November 2012 in Jerusalem, next to his parents and near his brother Albert. Most of his surviving siblings, and nearly all his nieces and nephews attended, though word of the patriarch’s death was not released to the media.
References
- Wullschlager, Jackie (November 11, 2011). "Lunch with the FT: Helly Nahmad" Financial Times. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
- Aspden, Peter (2012-12-21). "Art dealer who bought and sold with immaculate timing". FT.com. Retrieved 2013-02-07.
- h "Denise Amon, September 29, 2013, Beloved wife of Dr. René Amon". Chicago Tribune. October 1, 2013.
Dear sister of Jacqueline (the late Raymond) Harari, Nadia (Albert) Chowaiki, Evelyn (Enrico) Matalan, Ezra (Marie) Nahmad, David (Colette) Nahmad and the late Albert (Arlette) Nahmad and Joseph Nahmad
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value (help) - Adams, Susan (December 24, 2007). "The Art of the Deal". Forbes. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
- Brechbühl, Regula (October 13, 2011). "The Nahmad Collection: "An exciting experiment"" Archived 2013-02-15 at archive.today. Credit Suisse. Retrieved January 2, 2013.