By Dr. Jeffrey Lant
Author’s program note. March 25, 2012 the Boston Globe ran a story
about the auction of treasures from the estate of the late Reverend
Peter Gomes, the well known Harvard minister who died young (just 68),
February 28, 2011. Gomes was a certified pack rat who searched the
ordinarily unpromising antiques shops of Boston and New England in
search of the elusive “finds” that make a collector’s life so
satisfying — or so frustrating.
Gomes was out early and late in hot pursuit of — what? — he couldn’t
say in advance, no collector can, but he’d know it when he saw it. I am
an obsessive collector myself, and I am writing this article in the
hope not merely of understanding collectors in general, but myself in
particular… for I’ll be darned if I can figure out why I who have so
much spends so much time and treasure collecting — more! Perhaps this
article will help you; I certainly hope it helps me!
“You can’t take it with you.” (1936).
We all know this well-known saying, but I long ago reached the
conclusion that it most assuredly doesn’t pertain to bona fide
collectors. Just how we make the transport and presentation arrangements
in heaven (much less in that other place), I cannot say. But I do know
this: every single collector I know (serious or otherwise) believes they
most assuredly get an exemption. For if it all (every last baseball
card, match box or movie star autograph) cannot go… why then we have
some serious explaining to do, what with all the trouble (to say nothing
of the expense) we’ve gone through to acquire everything that is now
mine, mine, all mine. For you see, the more we collect the more others
believe us to be (and certainly say right to our faces) that we are mad
as a hatter. (That reference, by the way, is from “Alice in
Wonderland”, and if you had an autographed first edition (1865) in your
collection it would be worth a packet… but I digress.)
Equally if you had the autographed sheet music to Cole Porter’s most
famous tune “Night and Day” (1932) that, too, would be a great find and a
worthy acquisition. However, for right now, I recommend you go to any
search engine and listen up. I selected this incidental music because
collectors never stop looking, participants day and night in the great
hunt and always know “you are the one” when they find their next “must
have” acquisition. Porter would have understood; after all, he was a
strenuous collector himself, of the silver cigarette case variety.
Important things you should know about collectors.
There are things you really need to know about us collectors. First,
things that alarm and distress more pedestrian people positively make us
giddy and thrilled. I mean things like death, economic turmoil, wars,
revolutions, even garden-variety mayhem… we positively thrive in
circumstances which depress others. When, for instance, a great empire
falls with massive misfortune for millions, you can be sure its
bibelots, artifacts, and what-nots will, in short order, pop up in the
royal and imperial “yard sales” held at the world’s greatest auction
houses, names like Sothebys, Christie’s, Dorotheum, et al. We collectors
positively thrive on other people’s miseries; it’s what we do.
We have to say, of course, (and we must deliver these sentiments with
as much sincerity as we are able) that we regret such catastrophes…
but, in truth, that’s generally a little white lie. This lie was very
much apparent at Gomes’ estate auction. Gomes had spent a lifetime
acquiring items from the overrated antiques stores of Beacon Hill, Essex
and Groton… items his many friends, former students, congregants in
Harvard’s Memorial Church… even readers of his books and sermons …
picked through with avidity, enthusiasm, and a jaundiced eye. For such
people, collectors all, a demise, however untimely, means pure,
unadulterated bliss… unless they fail at the auction to secure the
things they “had” to have.
Scrutinizing you and your possessions.
Collectors love meeting others who collect the same kinds of things…
but not for the reasons you suppose. Collectors want to meet you and
visit chez vous not to swap tips, bond, or brainstorm. By no means. They
wish to see and minutely scrutinize and peruse what you’ve got that
they, hopefully sooner rather than later,would like; indeed must have.
Thus, when husband calls wife to “see Dr. Lant’s marvelous portrait by
Lawrence of Lord Shaftesbury” and lauds it over much whilst taking out
his pocket diary the better to take notes, you must understand that he
is thinking there is only one thing between where this highly desirable
object now resides and its potential new home… and that thing is you.
Make a hasty excuse about why such creatures must be shown the door and
at once, for they cannot possibly wish you well. Absolutely no collector
is or ever will be that magnanimous. After all, you’re not. And neither
am I!
Close mouthed before… unendingly voluble forever after.
I aver that collectors would all be suitable for the CIA and all
other “spook” organizations. Why? Because we can most assuredly be
discrete with information. Consider this: When I was a young man working
on my first book (“Insubstantial Pageant: Ceremony and Confusion at
Queen Victoria’s Court”) I was the first American ever admitted to the
Royal Archives at Windsor Castle. Thus, I was able to walk across to
Eton, its famous school, and a High Street well stocked in those days
with antiques stores. And there I applied my specialized knowledge to
the flotsam and jetsam on display in these stores… scoring, I am pleased
as punch to tell you, bulls-eye after bulls-eye; to name but one
satisfying “steal”, the acquisition — and for just about 50 cents each
–of a pleasant quantity of rare hand-colored royal prints in mint
condition; now worth thousands. I have them to this day and whenever I
have the need to gloat review them with the greatest possible glee. I
tell you this now, decades after the fact, because it cannot help my
erstwhile colleagues and fellow sleuths. When this event was taking
place, however, nothing, absolutely nothing would have caused me to be
so indiscrete. And so it is with all collectors…. secret as the grave
whilst in the process of acquiring; the exact reverse, a positive
Niagara of self-praise and egotism, once acquisition was secured…
self-praise and egotism available anywhere, anytime lavishly applied —
whether asked for or not.
Provenance, or Marie Antoinette emptied this stone from her plum-colored slippers as she went to the guillotine.
Collectors collect for many reasons but to one-up friends, family and
the ill-educated and credulous is clearly the most important of these.
Here provenance is absolutely crucial, that is to say who possessed and
may actually have used the object in question. Be clear on this:
collectors always want the most detailed and exalted provenance
possible. Thus to have a cracked plate from the Siberia service of the
Empress Catherine of all the Russias is more desirable and socially
elevating that a complete place setting from the 3rd Prince Regnant of
Moldava… or an entire and immediately useful service for 12 owned by
your next door neighbor. And be clear on this as well: not only do you
want such absolutely essential historical reference… but you must learn
to say it with hauteur, panache and such exquisite intonation that you
must surely be noble yourself. Parbleu!
But enough of these insider secrets. I’ve got important work today…
yes, for the benefit of my burgeoning collection. And if you think I’ll
share a single syllable about the work at hand, think again. Mum’s the
word… that is until I get the this or that I’m after now. And when I get
it, prepare to be impressed… and say so… over and over again. I deserve
it.