Billionaire Forbes puts Napoleon III art collection up for auction

Deutsche Welle
4 Min Read

American publisher Christopher Forbes has brought his Napoleon III collection of 2,000 art objects back to Paris for auction. It has allowed the Emperor into the Opera Garnier for the first time.
A box was built for Napoleon III, the President of the Second French Republic and Emperor of the Second French Empire, at the Palais Garnier Opera House in the center of Paris. But he never took his seat, as he was dethroned in 1870 and the house only opened five years later.

So it was fitting that his portrait, and that of his wife, Empress Eugenie, were at the entrance to the reception when the Christopher Forbes collection was presented this week to collectors and members of the Imperial family.

The collection of 2,000 art objects, paintings, sculptures, manuscripts, photographs and other historical souvenirs is the world’s largest unique private collection. The lifetime’s work of Christopher Forbes, Vice Chairman of the Forbes US business media group, is being presented for auction next weekend in Fontainebleau, south of Paris.

Introducing the collection, auctioneer Jean-Pierre Osenat said his team had been overwhelmed at the size of the collection when it arrived from Forbes’ New Jersey home. “We watched in amazement as all these containers arrived, bringing these objects back to France,” Osenat said. Bringing them up the staircases of the Opera Garnier had also been a challenge.

The lesser-known Napoleon

Forbes said he had searched for an auction house which would take on the entire collection – and not just the most valuable items. “It was the reason I brought the collection to Osenat,” he said. “In many ways I appreciate the smaller items as much as the great paintings.”

It was a sentiment reflected by descendents of the Emperor’s family who attended the reception. “The Empress Eugenie was my father’s godmother,” one family member said. “It is wonderful to see all these objects in such a setting. It is a wonderful collection.”

For many years it was Napoleon III’s uncle, Napoleon I, who had been held in French history. But Napoleon III has been rediscovered for the achievements of his 20-year reign during which he brought in universal male suffrage, the beginnings of a social safety net, recognition of workers’ rights, industrialization, the creation of the railway network and major ports – as well as the modernization of Paris.

Forbes also paid tribute to the patience of his wife, Astrid, who had foregone purchases as he accumulated Napoleonic art over the years. Now, in their house where Napoleon III once reigned supreme, there is a Lenbach pastel of her great, great, great uncle, Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, hanging over the mantlepiece.

The Christopher Forbes Napoleon III Art Collection, which also includes the Wedding Certificate of Emperor Napoleon I and Empress Josephine, is to be auctioned in Fontainbebleau, Seine-et-Marne, on March 5 and 6.

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