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WHAT HAPPENED AT BONWIT TELLER?
When the Biden victory was called that Saturday morning, my wife started crying and for many hours couldn’t stop. I had to explain to one person at the hospital that she was not in pain, but there were tears of joy. I was wrong!
Penelope told me later that when she heard Trump (I will never capitalize his name) was on his way out, she was reliving what he did to her and her institution 40 years earlier.
It was June 5, 1980, and Penelope called me totally frantic, “Get your camera and meet me at the Robert Miller gallery. My colleague’s gallery was right across the street from the Bonwit Teller department store, which was being demolished to make way for Trump Tower.
Built in 1929 by the Stewart Company, it was meant to be the last word in elegance in the French-inspired Art Deco style. Bankrupted following the Wall Street crash, the Stewart store was purchased by Bonwit Teller, who engaged the well-known architect, Eli Jacques Kahn, to redo the building in an updated American style. The entrance was modernized with a 20x30-foot bronze grill, but two 15-foot-tall figural Art Deco relief sculptures remained at the top of the façade. Penelope felt that the two elements were a wonderful illustration of New York’s architectural transition from 1920s Art Deco to what was to become known in the 30’s as the Modern style.
At that time, Penelope was the curator in the Metropolitan Museum’s Department of 20th Century Arts, building the decorative arts (today known as Design) collection. When she learned that Bonwit Teller was going to be torn down by the new owner, Donald Trump, she contacted his staff. Getting him a serious appraisal of $200,000, which could have served as a tax deduction, she also offered great PR for his debut as a developer in Manhattan. She vividly remembers the personal meeting where he agreed to donate the grill and reliefs to the museum, saying, “It will be a great deal!”
The entrance grill disappeared first. Penelope was told that it had gone to a salvage yard in New Jersey, so the Met sent out a truck and registrar’s crew, but the salvage company knew nothing about it. Lately, it has been rumored to be in the Trump Tower dining room, which, at a couple of stories high, could accommodate it.
The story is included in a book by Michael Kranish and Marc Fisher called “Trump Revealed,” published by Scribner in 2016. It was revived in the NY Times and Washington Post and even made it to our local paper, the New Mexican, when Trump posed as a defender of history and culture after Charlottesville.
Back in 1980 Trump, using a technique we have unfortunately come to know well, contacted the press as a “Mr. Baron” of the Trump organization, making up stories that ranged from their having had had the sculptures appraised by three art experts who had found they had no artistic merit, to it would have cost too much to take down the reliefs, to someone on the street below might have been hurt during their removal.
Today, it is just more of the same!
































