Back from the dust! The
petrol-head's dream collection of Corvettes that lay forgotten in a hidden
garage for 25 years
·
Corvettes that were once part of
an artist's storied collection, but became dusty and fell into disrepair are
being restored
·
The collection includes
thirty-six sports vehicles that were released consecutively from 1953 to 1989
·
Artist Peter Max used to own the
vehicles
·
Max sold the cars to members of
the Heller family this summer, who will eventually sell the vehicles in an
auction
Corvettes that were once part of an artist's storied collection,
but became dusty and fell into disrepair are being restored.
The collection includes
thirty-six sports vehicles that were released consecutively from 1953 to 1989
and once belonged to artist Peter Max, The New York Times reported.
Max sold the cars to members of
the Heller family this summer, who will eventually sell the vehicles in an
auction, according to the newspaper.
+8
New start: Thirty-six corvettes,
known collectively as the Peter Max Corvettes, have been sold to new owners
+8
Historic: Pop Art figure Peter
Max owned 36 Corvette models, released consecutively from 1953 to 1989
+8
Original owner: Dennis
Amodeo originally won the Corvettes through a 1989 VH1 call-in contest - and
was contacted by Max about potentially incorporating the cars into his artwork
Dennis Amodeo originally won the
Corvettes through a 1989 VH1 call-in contest - and was contacted by Max about
potentially incorporating the cars into his artwork, The Times reported.
Hemmings Daily reported
on Max's purchase from Amodeo, stating 'Amodeo received $250,000 in cash,
$250,000 in Peter Max artwork and an agreement that if Max sold the collection
at a future date, Amodeo would get a portion of the proceeds, up to an agreed
upon cap of $1 million.'
Though Max began his plans with
the cars, they were placed on the backburner following various issues,
including a tax fraud case, according to the The Times.
Scott Heller, one of the Corvette
collection's buyers, assisted in transporting the Corvettes to the Flatiron
district parking after their original West 40th Street garage went on the
market thirteen years ago, The Times reported.
+8
Up for grabs: Members of the
Heller family, which purchased the Corvettes from Max, hope they are all
auctioned off together
+8
Secret treasure: The
cars have been in Upper Manhattan since 2010, after being kept in both the
Flatiron district then Prospect Heights
+8
Soot: Many of the cars are dusty
and have fallen into disrepair
The cars have been in Upper
Manhattan since 2010, following a stay in a Prospect Heights garage, according
to the news outlet.
The Times reported
that 'Scott Heller said that earlier this year he had offered to work with Mr.
Max, restoring the cars for sale and splitting the proceeds. Mr. Max rejected
the offer, he said. But Mr. Heller said that not long after, he was asked
whether he wanted to buy the cars outright.'
He reportedly bought the cars
with his two sons and his cousin Peter Heller, according to the media outlet.
+8
Time travel: The Corvettes span a
thirty-six year period of automobile design
+8
Sporty: Artist Peter Max used to
own all of the dusty Corvettes
The cars, many of which are
damaged, include a 1953 vehicle that was only one of 300 produced, as well as
vehicle from 1955 in which only 700 were produced, The Times reported.
Chris Mazilli, who is working
with the new Corvette owners, told the newspaper they are looking for all the
cars to be purchased together.
'The biggest thing for use was
rescuing the cars,' he told The Times. 'It was a good thing [the Heller family]
came along. And they’re going to do the right thing.'
Amodeo also told the newspaper 'I
would like to see them out there when they’re done. That would be nice.'
1 comment:
I love how the auctioneering companies hype up the auction by saying that the cars lay forgotten for 25 years, but of course they were never forgotten, they were left without any covering because no one wanted them because of the liability. They are damaged and were likely originally remaindered because of manufacturing flaws. VH-1 used them as a tax write-off, Max doesn't want them, and now Heller family wants to get rid of them. That's because the write-off is bigger than the investment will ever be.
But the auction company can't be bothered to be honest about any of this. Instead, they hype everything up to make a buck.
Post a Comment