logo
In Wes Anderson's film The Phoenician Scheme, real masterpieces get a starring role

In Wes Anderson's film The Phoenician Scheme, real masterpieces get a starring role

Straits Times8 hours ago

NEW YORK – At the end of Wes Anderson's new caper The Phoenician Scheme, there are some unusual credits.
In addition to the cast and crew, the artworks featured in the film are listed, complete with ownership details.
That is because the pieces on-screen are not reproductions. They are, in fact, the actual masterpieces from Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Rene Magritte and other well-known artists.
In the past, the 56-year-old American film-maker has faked a Kandinsky and a Klimt. Here, he went for the real thing.
'We have a character who's a collector, who's a possessor; he wants to own things. And we thought because it's sort of art and commerce mixed together this time, we should try to have the real thing,' Anderson said via a voice note.
What he ended up with was impressive. The fictional collection of businessperson Zsa-zsa Korda (played by Benicio del Toro) includes Renoir's Enfant Assis En Robe Bleue, which was once owned by Hollywood icon and screen legend Greta Garbo, and Magritte's The Equator.
There is also a selection of works from the Hamburger Kunsthalle in Germany that includes pieces from the 17th century.
Getting a collector or an art institution to hand over a painting worth millions of dollars to a film production is not an easy task. The negotiations fell mostly to Mr Jasper Sharp, a curator who had worked with Anderson and his wife, Juman Malouf, on their 2018 exhibition at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria, where Mr Sharp is based.
'A film set has vast amounts of light, heat, no climate control, very lax security and people running everywhere with booms, lights and props,' Mr Sharp said in a video interview. 'The walls that (the paintings) will be hung on are made of plywood sometimes. There are less desirable places to hang art, but this was certainly a challenging environment in terms of me trying to persuade (people) that they maybe want to lend an object.'
To offset concerns, the production hired a conservator and a registrar to be on set overseeing the paintings. There, in a darkened, fenced-off corner, a security guard watched over the pieces and made sure they would not be exposed to more light than necessary.
'I felt, to have any real conviction in being able to ask somebody to lend an object, we needed to have that sort of support network to assure them that the works would be handled exactly as if they were lending them to a museum,' said Mr Sharp, who explained that this network included insurers, art handlers and shipping services.
Still, even with his connections, some of his initial outreach was met with 'howls' of laughter and hang-ups.
His search was both creative and practical. After discussing with Anderson what would make sense for Zsa-zsa, a domineering man who prides himself on owning masterpieces, Mr Sharp contacted museums and collectors in the vicinity of the set at Studio Babelsberg in Potsdam, Germany.
Mr Sharp considers the Old Master selections from the Kunsthalle more in the 'best supporting actor' category of the art in Zsa-zsa's abode compared with the Renoir or the Magritte, which draw your eye.
Anderson said he thought Juriaen Jacobsz's 1678 painting of dogs fighting over meat was 'an encapsulation of part of what our story is about'. (The film is very much Anderson's exploration of capitalism.)
But Zsa-zsa does not just collect classical still-life works and paintings of animals. Mr Sharp said he suggested to Anderson that perhaps the character owned some impressive art from the film's period setting – to show his keen sense of taste, specifically a work of surrealism.
Mr Sharp reached out to collector Ulla Pietzsch, who had never heard of Anderson but was interested in the project.
'I wasn't surprised when Wes settled on Magritte,' Mr Sharp said. 'If you think about where Wes grew up in Houston, The Menil Collection has, if not the greatest collection of Magrittes in the US, very close to that. So, he has been looking at Magritte for a long time.'
Mr Sharp noted that The Equator is not the most recognisable of Magrittes – there is no bowler hat – but it is enigmatic.
Anderson, meanwhile, envisioned that a Renoir would hang in the bedroom of Zsa-zsa's daughter Liesl (Mia Threapleton). Mr Sharp found one in the collection of Mr David Nahmad.
'I think it was maybe even in the script,' he said. Knowing that the elder Renoir painted his son Jean as a small child, 'somehow I thought Renoir might have painted somebody in this family, maybe Zsa-zsa'.
The loans from Hamburger Kunsthalle remained on set for about a month, but the Magritte was in and out in a day, and the Renoir stayed just a night.
Production designer Adam Stockhausen said in an e-mail that he and set decorator Anna Pinnock had full-sized mock-up prints made to roughly place the art and try multiple positions.
'Once Wes finalised the placements, the conservators brought in the art and we swopped with the mock-ups,' he said.
Mr Sharp visited the set only once – the day the Renoir was present – but he said he felt the stars of the film were deferential to a portrait of Renoir's nephew that they were able to acquire on loan. This revealed itself in a conversation with Puerto Rican actor del Toro.
'He confessed it made him and everybody quite nervous to have this here, in a good way,' Mr Sharp said.
Observing the dynamic between the stars and the star artwork gave Mr Sharp insight into the reasons Anderson had pursued the actual paintings.
'It changed the energy and atmosphere on set as it would do if you lived with an object like that,' he said.
As soon as The Phoenician Scheme wrapped, Mr Sharp started to suspect that it would not be the last time he and Anderson embarked on a project of this nature. The film-maker, he said, agreed.
'It's really hard once you've done this for the first time to put it back in the bottle,' Mr Sharp said. NYTIMES
The Phoenician Scheme is showing in Singapore cinemas.
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CNA938 Rewind - Of intimacy coordinators & female rage in Turner Gable Kahn's 'The Dirty Version'
CNA938 Rewind - Of intimacy coordinators & female rage in Turner Gable Kahn's 'The Dirty Version'

CNA

time2 hours ago

  • CNA

CNA938 Rewind - Of intimacy coordinators & female rage in Turner Gable Kahn's 'The Dirty Version'

CNA938 Rewind Play 29 mins In 'Culture Club', Melanie Oliveiro speaks with American author Turner Gable Kahn who'll discuss her debut novel, 'The Dirty Version'. It's an enemies-to-lovers book about a romance author and intimacy coordinator who are thrown together to write spicy sex scenes for a TV adaptation of her novel. Kahn will talk about the various issues brought up in the book which are typical of many contemporary romance novels; the female gaze and toxic men; and the research she did into intimacy coordinators.

‘Ninth cousins, various times removed': Pop star Madonna and Pope Leo XIV are related
‘Ninth cousins, various times removed': Pop star Madonna and Pope Leo XIV are related

Straits Times

time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

‘Ninth cousins, various times removed': Pop star Madonna and Pope Leo XIV are related

Madonna is reportedly related to Pope Leo XIV, according to American historian Henry Louis Gates Jr, the host of US documentary series Finding Your Roots. PHOTOS: AFP American pop queen Madonna is reportedly related to Pope Leo XIV, who was elected head of the Catholic Church in May. According to American historian Henry Louis Gates Jr, the host of US documentary series Finding Your Roots (2012 to present), the 66-year-old American singer and 69-year-old American pontiff have been found to be 'ninth cousins, various times removed', reported The New York Times. The team behind the show had traced the religious leader's roots through a distant maternal relative born in the 1590s. Pope Leo, whose birth name is Robert Prevost, is also ninth cousins with various celebrities, including Canadian singer Justin Bieber and American actress Angelina Jolie. He is also related to former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. In response to the news, Madonna posted a photograph of herself and her 94-year-old father Silvio Ciccone on Instagram Stories on June 16, saying: 'Silvio! We're related to the Pope!' Madonna's response upon finding out that she and Pope Leo XIV are related. PHOTO: MADONNA/INSTAGRAM The singer was born and raised in a Catholic family and attended Catholic schools. Throughout her four-decade career, Madonna has made headlines for heavy references to Catholicism, most notably in her controversial Like A Prayer (1989) music video. It included scenes of her going to a church where she dances in front of burning crosses and with a wax saint, which led to sharp criticism from the Vatican then. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Anne Burrell, chef and Food Network television star, dies at 55
Anne Burrell, chef and Food Network television star, dies at 55

Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Anne Burrell, chef and Food Network television star, dies at 55

Anne Burrell at her restaurant, Phil & Anne's Good Time Lounge, in New York on Aug 25, 2016. PHOTO: AN RONG XU/NYTIMES NEW YORK – Anne Burrell, an American chef and television personality known for her kinetic swoop of blonde hair and an energy to match, died in Brooklyn, New York, on June 16. She was 55. 'Anne was a beloved wife, sister, daughter, stepmother and friend,' her family said in a statement, which did not mention a cause of death. 'Her smile lit up every room she entered. Anne's light radiated far beyond those she knew, touching millions across the world. Though she is no longer with us, her warmth, spirit and boundless love remain eternal.' Burrell spent years working in Italian restaurants in Manhattan, including Savoy Restaurant and Felidia Ristorante, before ascending to household fame on US cable channel Food Network. She began as a sous chef on reality cooking series Iron Chef America (2005 to 2018) to American celebrity chef Mario Batali, but her distinctive swagger made her stand apart from even the effusive Batali, prompting the network to offer her a show of her own. That show, Secrets Of A Restaurant Chef premiered in 2008 and ran for nine seasons until 2012. Burrell remained a staple of Food Network, hosting the hit show Worst Cooks In America (2010 to present) and appearing regularly on network favourites like Chopped (2009 to present) and Food Network Star (2005 to 2018). In a statement, a spokesperson for Food Network said: 'Anne was a remarkable person and culinary talent – teaching, competing and always sharing the importance of food in her life and the joy that a delicious meal can bring.' Burrell and her business partner Phil Casaceli also briefly ran Phil & Anne's Good Time Lounge, a Brooklyn restaurant that she described as 'funky, cool and homey'. It closed in 2018, less than a year after opening. Anne W. Burrell was born on Sept 21, 1969, in Cazenovia, New York, and followed a love for the late American chef-author Julia Child all the way to Italy, where she attended the Italian Culinary Institute for Foreigners. When she returned to the US in 1998, she was hired to work at Felidia Ristorante, where she met the famed chef Lidia Bastianich. American chef Claudette Zepeda, who competed alongside Burrell on Food Network show House Of Knives (2025), said the latter had her fair share of 'phoenix moments' in which she had to rise from dark times, including stepping out from underneath the shadow of Batali, who in 2017 was accused of sexually harassing women who worked for him. 'Coming out as her own human being and her own autonomous competitor was a huge moment for her,' Zepeda said. 'Everyone just put those two together and assumed there was complacency. Having to come out of that world and forge her own path as her own person - as Anne Burrell - wasn't easy for her.' But Burrell had an intensity that made her a force to be reckoned with both on and off screen. 'She was the most competitive person ever,' said American chef and television personality Scott Conant, who was her co-star on Worst Cooks In America. 'I beat her on Worst Cooks once for a special. My team beat her team. She didn't talk to me for three months after that, she was so angry.' That relentless spirit won her admiration from the young cooks who competed on her shows, Conant added. 'She was unapologetic and defined herself and told her story through food.' Burrell is survived by her husband Stuart Claxton, a marketing executive whom she married in 2021; her mother Marlene Burrell; her younger sister Jane Burrell-Uzcategui; and her stepson Javier Claxton. Burrell brought her perfectionism to two bestselling cookbooks, Cook Like A Rock Star: 125 Recipes, Lessons, And Culinary Secrets (2011) and Own Your Kitchen: Recipes To Inspire & Empower (2013). Suzanne Lenzer, a food stylist, cookbook author and Burrell's collaborator on both cookbooks, said: 'She had a strong voice. And strong opinions.' 'She hated pepper,' Lenzer recalled. 'She said it was a spice like horseradish. Why would you put pepper on everything?' Burrell made an exception for pasta carbonara. 'She didn't even like it in carbonara,' Lenzer added, 'but knew it had to be in there because it's traditional.' NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store