Eugène Secrétan

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File:Monsieur Eugene Secretan art sale catalogue Sedelmayer Paris 1889.jpg
Catalogue of the celebrated Collection of Paintings, by Modern and Old Masters, and of Water-Colours and Drawings, formed by Mr E. Secretan, sold at Sedelmeyer's Galleries, Paris, July, 1889
File:Ancienne usine Tréfimétaux – Dives-sur-Mer – Calvados – France – Mérimée PA14000076 (1).jpg
Secretan's residence near his factory in Dives-sur-Mer, today a protected national monument

Pierre-Eugène Secrétan, (1836, Saulx – 1899, Dives-sur-Mer), was a French industrialist and art collector.

Biography

According to the Museum of the City of New York he was a French copper industrialist who made his fortune in copper production and who donated 60,000 kilos of copper in the 1870s to make the Statue of Liberty.[1] He later lost his wealth in the [[{{{1}}}]][] when his "Société industriel et commerciale des métaux" went bankrupt after an attempt to corner the market on copper.[2]

After the copper crash in March 1889, he sold his extended art collection in the Paris gallery of Charles Sedelmeyer after printing and publicizing a catalogue in French and English to attract American investors. He timed the sale to coincide with the peak of the Exposition Universelle (1889), exhibiting the Eiffel tower, which attracted many wealthy Americans. A French-American bidding war during the auction on L'Angelus, a work by the popular French painter Jean-François Millet of the Barbizon school, forced the price up to a record-breaking amount of 553,000 francs by Antonin Proust, who was bidding for the Louvre.[3][4] Proust only had 180,000 francs however, and after spending a day trying to save the work for France, he called James F. Sutton of the American Art Association to buy it from him for 552,000.[3] The provenance of the work reflects that Secretan owned the painting from the time it was first shown in 1865, and the American Art Association from 1889.[5]

Other works from this sale on 1 July 1889 can be found in many American museums today.[6][7]

With the proceeds from this sale, Secretan, an expert in metallurgy, paid his creditors and restarted his work in copper by making a deal with an English company and founded a factory in Dives-sur-Mer called "Elmore's French Patent Copper Depositing Company".

Notes

  1. The Statue of Liberty: The Museum of the City of New York, by Cara Sutherland, 2003
  2. The History of Foreign Investment in the United States to 1914-45, by Mira Wilkins, Harvard University Press, 2004
  3. 3.0 3.1 Eiffel's Tower: And the World's Fair Where Buffalo Bill Beguiled Paris, the Artists Quarreled, and Thomas Edison Became a Count, by Jill Jonnes, 2009
  4. Albany Evening Times, July 5th, 1889 on Fulton history
  5. Muséé Orsay collection catalogue inventory nr. RF 1877
  6. Rubens painting from the Eugène Secrétan collection sale in the Detroit Institute of Arts according to the RKD
  7. The Havemeyers: Impressionism comes to America, by Frances Weitzenhoffer, 1996

References