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  • RICK: Interesting-- actually, a little creepy too.

  • [chuckling]

  • Who did it?

  • It's by Pedro Friedeberg. RICK: OK.

  • CHUMLEE: Who's that?

  • RICK: He was a pretty big deal in the '60s and the '70s.

  • He was a surrealist artist, and surrealism

  • was like, anything goes, just add a hallucinogenic drug.

  • [chuckling]

  • [boogie music playing]

  • ARTHUR: It's a very whimsical piece.

  • It is made in 1960s.

  • I'm asking for $18,000 to $20,000 for it.

  • What I love about this piece is that I have not

  • seen another identical piece like it,

  • and I find it to be truly unique.

  • RICK: This is really intriguing.

  • How much do you want for it?

  • [nervous chuckle]

  • I was hoping for $18,000 to $20,000.

  • RICK: OK.

  • Is it signed by him anywhere?

  • ARTHUR: It definitely is.

  • It's right here in the back, by his neck.

  • RICK: All right, um--

  • [sighing]

  • --I know he's still popular.

  • ARTHUR: Mm-hmm

  • RICK: What this is worth, I have no idea.

  • It's really weird.

  • I think it will sell, but let me have someone take a look at it

  • if you don't mind.

  • Can you hang on for a few minutes?

  • - Absolutely. - All right.

  • I'm going to go make a phone call.

  • ARTHUR: Great.

  • RICK: Do you like it?

  • I think it would look perfect in your house.

  • RICK: It might, actually.

  • My house is pretty weird.

  • ARTHUR: I feel confident that the expert is going

  • to come in and re-evaluate the piece,

  • because I bought it in confidence

  • that the piece is original.

  • RICK: This thing is definitely unique.

  • I think it's one-of-a-kind.

  • But there is damage on this thing.

  • So I called up my friend Brett, and hopefully he knows a lot

  • more about this than I do.

  • BRETT: Pedro Friedeberg, all right.

  • He was a pretty eccentric man, and this is very

  • much indicative of his work.

  • He did a lot of kind of semi-functional art.

  • You know, he did the--

  • the chair that was in the shape of a hand, where

  • you actually sat on the palm.

  • He made the hand chair?

  • BRETT: He was the-- he was the hand chair guy.

  • I know he sold thousands of those.

  • RICK: OK.

  • BRETT: In the 1950s, everybody was

  • trying to paint with meaning.

  • And then he came along, and he created these works that

  • were kind of the opposite of that, that were almost

  • kind of deco in their feel.

  • I think he used to call it "anti-art for art's sake,"

  • and it-- it really caught on.

  • Now, Rick, I imagine you've got some concerns.

  • Yeah.

  • These cards are all faded out, so I

  • think this was by a window.

  • We have chips on it.

  • We have wax everywhere.

  • And I don't know if it's one of those art things

  • that you should have put the candles in,

  • or just had candles sitting in it without being lit.

  • What would something like this be worth with the damage?

  • You know, I don't think the damage is going to impact

  • an artist like Friedeberg.

  • It wasn't about being pristine when he composed his work.

  • It was kind of just the overall aesthetic.

  • That being said, from a value standpoint, a piece like this,

  • I think, with the condition and everything,

  • it would probably be in the neighborhood of $20,000,

  • somewhere in there.

  • It's a neat piece.

  • All right well thanks, man. I appreciate it.

  • BRETT: Rick, it was a pleasure.

  • I think this is a work that would do well in the shop.

  • This is an artist whose works have sold

  • at Sotheby's and Christie's, and to have a one-of-a-kind work

  • like this, not one that was mass-produced,

  • or done in the thousands, is quite rare.

  • RICK: So what would you realistically take for it.

  • I was hoping to get $18,000 for it.

  • That's not going to happen.

  • I would give you $8,000.

  • We can meet halfway.

  • Um, how about $15,000?

  • RICK: No.

  • There's no money in it for me then.

  • Literally, what is your best price?

  • The lowest I can go is $12,000, and that's the best.

  • It is a beautiful piece.

  • It is very unique.

  • Unique, I'll give you.

  • Beautiful, I don't know.

  • [chuckling]

  • RICK: I'll go $11,000.

  • In my head, anything beyond that makes zero business sense.

  • I can't.

  • RICK: If you change your mind. - All right.

  • All right, have a good one, man.

  • Thank you.

  • I feel a little disappointed that we were

  • not able to make a deal today.

  • I had my heart set on selling it.

RICK: Interesting-- actually, a little creepy too.

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典當明星。獨一無二的CREEPY ART WORTH A PRETTY PENNY (Season 12) | 歷史沿革 (Pawn Stars: ONE-OF-A-KIND CREEPY ART WORTH A PRETTY PENNY (Season 12) | History)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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