From accidental bids to gallery-imposed display rules, these collectors reveal the most head-tilting stories behind pieces they now call their own.

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For all of the mystique surrounding art collecting, the reality is often more peculiar (and far more human) than market mythology would suggest. Negotiations can unfold in remote studios after hours or across auction platforms moving at breakneck speed. Sometimes the stakes are logistical (does the frame come with the painting?), other times philosophical (what happens when the collector sets the price?), and once in a blue moon delightfully absurd—like realizing the house an artist rented for vacation happens to be the one you’re buying.

For our latest collector survey, CULTURED asked the question: What is the strangest negotiation you’ve ever had with an artist or dealer?

Portrait of Esohe and George Galbreath by Melissa Alexander
Esohe and George Galbreath. Photography by Melissa Alexander and courtesy of the collectors.

George Galbreath

“One that stands out was with Paper Frank. We found ourselves in East Atlanta after 10 p.m. for a one-night-only studio sale. His studio was up a dark fire escape in an alleyway, which felt a little intimidating at first. But once inside, we saw a young boy with his mother buying one of his first pieces. The joy and excitement of that moment completely shifted the energy. What began as a nerve-racking experience turned into one of our most memorable art encounters.”

Portrait of Debraj Ray with Joan Miro's Lapidario at his New York apartment
Debraj Ray with Joan Miró’s, “Lapidario,” 1981. Image courtesy of the collector.

Debraj Ray

“There’s a Picasso etching that was a ‘click’ moment for me. It’s called Portrait of Marie-Thérèse. At one point in my life, I acquired a copy—it exists in multiple impressions, all etchings. Then, a few years later, when another copy came up at auction, I had it playing in the background out of idle curiosity—like how people look up what their house might be worth. At the moment the bidding passed the price I had originally paid, I suddenly became very interested. I thought, Let me see what’s happening here. I switched to the auction window and, without really realizing it, I clicked the bid button completely by accident.

Suddenly, the auctioneer says, ‘We have a new live online bid from New York.’ Everything was happening very fast. It’s not like there’s a big confirmation screen—you just click. Boom, boom, boom. I’d been lusting after Portrait of Marie-Thérèse for decades, and now I was about to have two of them. The auctioneer looked around the room and said, ‘Well, I have X [dollars]—does anyone want to bid?’ No one does. And then she says, ‘Sold.'”

Portrait of Robert Balentine
Robert Balentine. Image courtesy of the collector.

Robert Balentine

“I once bought a painting on auction at Christie’s, only to later discover that the frame was borrowed and wasn’t included, with no acknowledgement otherwise. It all worked out fine, but only in the art world can you buy the painting and still have to haggle over the frame.”

Portrait of Matthew Harris by Luca Khouri
Matthew Harris. Photography by Luca Khouri and courtesy of the collector.

Matthew Harris

“Once, a dealer insisted the artwork had to be displayed in a specific room in my home and offered to periodically check in to ensure it stayed there. Needless to say, that clause didn’t make it into the final agreement.”

Anita and Gerald Smith pose for a portrait
Anita and Gerald Smith. Image courtesy of the collectors.

Anita and Gerald Smith

“Our most unique negotiation was acquiring a Rick Lowe painting from Gagosian without seeing the piece in person. The painting was featured in the 2024 Venice Biennale exhibition. After acquiring, our family traveled to Venice to view the painting.”

Amitha Roman poses for a portrait at home
Amitha Raman with Rashid Johnson’s Bruise Painting (That Evening the Sky Fell), 2023. Photography by Georgia Nerheim and courtesy of the collector.

Amitha Raman

“One of the more unusual negotiations I’ve had was with Celine Mo at Dinner Gallery, who represented Baltimore-based artist Phaan Howng. I commissioned a painting from Phaan’s ‘Snakes on a Plain’ series and worked with Celine to license the image for a custom print on pre-rolled cones from my smoking accessories line. They were handed out during VIP day at NADA Miami right next to the booth featuring Phaan’s work. It’s not every day a piece from your collection ends up in a joint rotation at the fair.”

Susanne Syz poses for a portrait at home
Suzanne Syz with a portrait of her and Marc Syz by Andy Warhol, 1982; a Mae West Lips Sofa by Salvador Dalí and Edward James; and a lamp by Venini. Image courtesy of the collector.

Suzanne Syz

“Without a doubt, my portrait session with Andy Warhol. I had asked him to do a portrait of me with my son, and when he showed me the result, I was horrified—I didn’t recognize myself at all. I looked stiff, uptight… nothing like how I felt or wanted to be seen. But Andy was at the absolute peak of his fame. I didn’t know how to tell him directly, but I did. Still, he must have sensed something because a few weeks later, he called and said, ‘Come by, I’ve done a few more.’

He had made three new portraits, totally different: relaxed, lively, full of energy. And then he said, ‘Take them all.’ So I walked out with three Warhols for the price of one. That’s the kind of story you can’t invent and one of the reasons I always say collecting is as much about people as it is about objects.”

Allison Rose on her Aspen Farm with a donkey and miniature horse
Allison Rose at McCabe Ranch in Aspen. Photography by Trevor Triano.

Allison and Dan Rose

“One of the most unexpected moments happened with the artist Tara Donovan. We had just acquired one of her incredible ‘Drawing (Pins)’ pieces when we happened to meet her at a party in Silicon Valley. In conversation, I mentioned that my kids and I were moving to Hawaii so they could attend school on the Big Island. She lit up and said she was headed there too—on vacation—and had just rented Mark Zuckerberg’s house. I paused and gently let her know that Mark, whom my husband had worked with at Facebook for over a decade, didn’t actually have a home on the Big Island. After a brief moment of confusion, we realized she had rented the house my husband and I were in the process of buying! It was a surreal, hilarious twist of fate—and one of the most memorable ‘negotiations’ I’ve ever stumbled into.”

Steve Wilson poses for a portrait at home
Steve Wilson at home with Kehinde Wiley’s Akilah Walker, 2015, and Jackson Keith’s I’m the Brown Hornet, 2022. Image courtesy of the collector.

Steve Wilson and Laura Lee Brown

“We’ve had many unconventional acquisitions, but perhaps the most unusual was Some Pigeons Are More Equal Than Others by Julian Charrière and Julius von Bismarck. The work features a series of photographs of pigeons with brightly colored wings, necks, and bodies, alongside a contraption resembling a cross between a mailbox and a birdhouse. The conceptual piece suggests a pigeon could fly into the contraption and emerge spray-painted, with biodegradable, non-harmful paint. I loved the humor and wanted to buy the contraption and portraits. Initially, the artists refused to sell to us, believing our collection wasn’t prestigious enough; they preferred a recognized institution. The next day, a New York Times article by Patricia Cohen featured our collection. After reading it, the artists contacted us, eager to sell. The story was so unique that I couldn’t resist.”

Paul-Emmanuel Reiffers poses for a portrait at home
Paul-Emmanuel Reiffers with artwork by Pol Taburet. Photography by Stéphane Feugère and courtesy of the collector.

Paul-Emmanuel Reiffers

“It happened when I was 26, during a visit to Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne’s home with a group of friends. After walking through their garden, I fell in love with a pair of extraordinary Lalanne monkeys and decided I wanted to buy them. At the time, prices were far more accessible, but I was still young and intimidated—especially since there was no gallery acting as an intermediary.

When we all gathered around a garden table, I hesitantly asked, ‘What’s the price?’ Claude responded playfully: ‘Let’s do this—write down the price you’re willing to pay on a piece of paper, and I’ll do the same. We’ll compare.’ It was completely disarming but also incredibly poetic. I remember carefully writing down the maximum I could afford—without going overboard and or making myself look like a fool in front of everyone. We exchanged papers, and when Claude opened mine, she smiled and said, ‘I wrote the same thing.'”

 

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