Source:
Wynn to Close Gallery
Word around the Las Vegas art
community is that Steve Wynn is closing the
gallery at Wynn Las Vegas.
A source close
to Wynn said this week that the resort owner
is planning to shut the doors of the Wynn Collection.
Gallery
Director Melissa Doumitt said Wednesday that
"rumors are flying" regarding the
gallery and its closing, but would not confirm
any details.
Instead,
Doumitt referred calls to Denise Randazzo, Wynn
Resorts vice president of public relations,
who said, "There's no public announcement
of the gallery closing."
When
asked if there will be a formal announcement,
Randazzo said, "We don't know. There has
been some talk of possible changes ... We have
not made any decisions yet."
Patrick
Duffy, Las Vegas Art Museum board member and
a prominent local collector with partner Wally
Goodman, said he has heard the rumors.
"People
are talking," Duffy said. "It's the
conversation around town.
"It
would be very sad for the art community. On
the other hand, Mr. Wynn is such a great art
supporter, so he could still support art somewhere
in the community," Duffy said.
"He
understands the merit of art in the community.
(He and wife Elaine) are gracious people. They've
supported the Las Vegas Art Museum."
The
Wynn Collection features 16th- to 20th-century
masterworks, including Pablo Picasso's "Le
Reve."
Wynn
was the first to bring fine art to the Strip
when he opened the Bellagio Gallery of Fine
Art inside the Bellagio in 1998. The $300 million
collection continued growing, and a $7.5 million
expansion was added in 1999.
In
2000 Wynn sold Mirage Resorts to MGM Grand and
took his personal collection with him to the
Desert Inn, where a portion of it was displayed
during renovations. It reappeared in The Wynn
Collection inside Wynn Las Vegas.
More
recently, Wynn acquired Johannes Vermeer's 1670
painting "A Young Woman Seated at the Virginals."
The piece was bought anonymously for $30 million
at Sotheby's London on July 7, but turned up
in Wynn's collection.
Shortly
after, the Wynns were again listed on ARTnews
magazine's list of Top 10 collectors. The list
is based on actively collected works over the
previous year, and the couple have been on the
list since 2001.
Wynn
is known as a passionate art collector who is
frequently buying and selling masterpieces.
On Oct. 7, The New York Times reported his sale
of Vincent van Gogh's "Peasant Woman Against
a Background of Wheat" (1890) and Paul
Gauguin's "Bathers," (1902) to another
major collector, Steven Cohen.
Some
sources are saying that Wynn is closing the
gallery so that he can use the location as retail
space. Randazzo said she had not heard that.
Either
way, she said, "We will always have an
art in the community involvement. Mr. and Mrs.
Wynn are supportive of the arts."
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