Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Warhol's Angel.

Famous figures and art, two entities closely tied together and the kudos of one helps the other. However, besides or because of this close relationship things can soon splatter and turn sour and without any strokes of luck, legal proceedings can occur. 

Which is what happened when Ryan O'Neal, that all American good-looking film star was taken to court by the University of Texas over the ownership of Andy Warhol's Farrah Fawxcett portrait and a signed napkin.  

Both O'Neal and the University of Texas presented strong emotional cases as to why they should keep the multi-million dollar valued Warhol; from the University of Texas expressing how much Fawxcett loved the institution to O'Neal, who was the one-time lover of the beauteous Charlie's Angels actress' Fawxcett, testifying that he spoke to the painting (unconfirmed wherever the painting spoke back).  

Read below as to how this saga has now concluded its '15 minutes of fame'. 

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Ryan O’Neal finally has Farrah Fawcett for keeps.
The actor and on-off-again lover of ’70s siren Fawcett has settled a contentious lawsuit with the University of Texas at Austin over a portrait of the late actress by pop icon Andy Warhol and a drawing on a cloth napkin also inscribed by the artist.
After nearly three years of litigation and more than $1 million in costs, the university has quietly dropped its appeal and settled a lawsuit with O’Neal, conceding a Los Angeles jury’s December ruling that he owned the portrait of Fawcett.
The napkin drawing, which the Los Angeles County Superior Court jury determined to be owned equally by O’Neal and the university, will be sold at auction according to the agreement, with proceeds split between them.
The agreement was reached May 7 but became known only Friday after McClatchy filed a Texas open records request this week.
It is, effectively, a total victory for O’Neal, who will get $25,000 in court costs from the university as part of the agreement. He gave emotional testimony at the three-week trial in Los Angeles County Superior Court, saying he talks to the painting, which hangs over his bed at his Malibu home, and that he wanted to keep it for his and Fawcett’s son, Redmond O’Neal. The actors never married, but were together for many years.
Fawcett, a Texas beauty from Corpus Christi, attended the University of Texas at Austin in the 1960s before moving to Hollywood to pursue a modeling and acting career. A star of the popular ’70s television show “Charlie’s Angels,” Fawcett died of cancer in 2009 and left all her artwork to the institution in her living trust.
Her love for the university was part of the reason the school fought so hard for the artwork, even though there were two nearly identical Warhol portraits of Fawcett and the university already had one of them.
“We worked hard to honor the wishes of our donor and will always seek to honor donors’ wishes,” Gary Susswein, spokesman for the University of Texas at Austin, told McClatchy. “In so doing, we also sought to secure a piece of art that has cultural significance and is valuable in our academic, educational and outreach missions. At this point in time, though, this agreement is the appropriate resolution.”
O’Neal’s attorney, Marty Singer, didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The napkin, held by the university, shows split hearts with the inscriptions “to Farrah F. and Ryan O.” and in a corner, a heart with the words “Houston Texas” in it. (They were at a dinner in Houston when Warhol grabbed a napkin and drew on it.) It’s signed, “Andy Warhol.”
During the trial, experts for the university valued the napkin at $3,500. Susswein said there was no date yet for an auction for the framed 20-by-20-inch napkin. The colorful portrait of Fawcett, which shows her with bright green eyes and eye shadow and red lips, was valued at $12 million. But both may well be worth more after the publicity from the trial.