Kenzo Takada’s Art and Furniture Collection to Be Auctioned

AN ECLECTIC MIND: The personal possessions of Kenzo Takada are to go under the hammer at an auction in May, less than a year after his death from coronavirus-related complications.

Artcurial said Tuesday it would offer more than 600 lots from the airy Paris apartment where Takada spent the last 15 years of his life. Decorated with the help of architect Ed Tuttle, it exemplified the designer’s East-meets-West aesthetic, with Asian and pre-Columbian art rubbing shoulders with Art Deco furniture and contemporary art.

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The apartment, with a view of the Eiffel Tower and the Lutetia hotel, was located in the neighborhood of Saint-Germain-des-Prés above the offices of K3, the luxury homeware and lifestyle brand Takada introduced last year, almost 50 years after founding fashion brand Jungle Jap, which later became known as Kenzo.

Among the star lots in the sale, scheduled for May 11, will be a wood figure of a horse dating back to the Han dynasty, estimated at 20,000 euros to 30,000 euros; a third-century torso of a Buddha expected to sell for 10,000 euros to 15,000 euros, and a crystal chandelier valued at 4,000 euros to 6,000 euros.

The auction also includes a series of 13 photographs by William Eggleston, estimated at 20,000 euros to 40,000 euros, and some 60 lots of home wares including Baccarat crystal carafes and glasses engraved with Kenzo’s emblem. It will feature a selection of his paintings, with estimates starting at 1,500 euros.

Artcurial will recreate the interiors of the apartment in a physical exhibition, set to take place from May 7 to 10. A separate online sale will feature some 100 items of clothing designed by Takada.

“The Kenzo collection brilliantly reflects the eye of this genius designer and decorator who was in love with civilizations and knew how to perfectly blend different cultures,” said Stéphane Aubert, auctioneer and associate director of Artcurial. “This sale will be the opportunity for a final tribute to this multitalented artist.”

Takada died in October 2020 at the age of 81. The designer left his namesake fashion brand in 1999 after it was acquired by LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, but he continued to support the brand under several creative configurations, and remained a popular and bubbly figure on the Paris fashion and social scene.

See also:

Kenzo Takada Dies at 81 of COVID-19-Related Complications

Inside Kenzo Takada’s Flamboyant Birthday Bash

Felipe Oliveira Baptista Takes Over Creative Direction of Kenzo

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