Charles Pollak at home in his newly-opened Manhattan gallery in
the Fuller Building
NEW YORK CITY - As captain of the Brown University crew,
Charles Pollak was called "Lightnin" by his fellow oarsmen, a
nickname that may follow him into his new career as an antiques
dealer. Though his gallery in Manhattan's Fuller Building only
opened in August, the 25-year-old South Carolina native and former
Olympics hopeful recently shot to the top of his profession when he
was tapped to exhibit at the 2006 Winter Antiques Show.
"We're really excited to be adding a young, articulate dealer who
is passionate about his calling. Charles is entering his
profession at the highest level with a real commitment to
quality. I can't wait until the young collectors meet him," says
the Winter Antiques Show's executive director Catherine Sweeney
Singer. Also enhancing the show's American core in 2006 will be
new exhibitor David Wheatcroft, an established source for
American folk art. Pollak and Wheatcroft are filling places
vacated by Gary Young and William Guthman, both retiring, and
Barry Friedman, who is taking a leave of absence.
With a mild, engaging manner and a youthful enthusiasm much
welcome in a field that some fear is graying, Pollak seems suited
for the job. For one, the lanky, 6-foot, 6-inch-tall American
furniture aficionado makes a highboy seem less of an extravagance
than a necessity. He stands eye level to the bonnet of the circa
1745-90 Massachusetts high chest of drawers, one of about a dozen
choice pieces he currently has on display.
Like much of Pollak's stock, the Queen Anne highboy, a "best," is
ex-collection of Israel Sack, Inc. A nearly identical example,
also retailed by Sack and once in the C.K. Davis collection, is
illustrated in Albert Sack's Fine Points of Furniture.
"I want to be known for integrity and discretion, for my passion
for the material and my focus on quality," says Pollak, who
acknowledges Albert Sack as his mentor and chief role model.
As an undergraduate at Brown, Pollak studied American history and
fine art, simultaneously discovering two great Providence
resources: Pendleton House at the Museum of Art, Rhode Island
School of Design, and the John Brown House. He poured over Israel
Sack publications before meeting Albert Sack at Northeast
Auctions two years ago. Still busy buying and selling from his
home in Hillsborough, N.C., the 90-year-old dealer took Pollak on
as an apprentice.
The two went on the road together, to museums and private
collections, and Pollak bought with Sack's advice. A circa
1800-20 shelf clock in a beautifully inlaid case is one trophy
that Pollak bagged on his own. "I found it myself and brought it
to Albert to show him," Pollak says proudly.
"Albert taught me about the beauty of line and form, about the
significant place of American furniture in our history. Albert
learns something new everyday. That's a huge lesson for me," says
Pollak. The dealers were together in January 2005 when Sotheby's
knocked down to Sack a ball and claw foot Newport tea table made
for Nicholas Brown, almost certainly by John Goddard, for
$8,416,000. The price is the second-highest ever paid at auction
for a piece of American furniture.
"Charles is a passionate young man with the right spirit to
succeed in this business. I am happy to work with him in any way
that I can," Sack, who will be exhibiting solo at the
Philadelphia Antiques Show in April, says of his now-independent
protégé.
Pollak's other great inspiration was his parents. His father,
Peter Pollak, is a real estate developer whose projects range
from the Greenbrier Sporting Club in West Virginia to the Turks
& Caicos Sporting Club in the British West Indies. His
mother, Suzanne Williamson Pollak, is the author of two books on
entertaining. In 1996, the senior Pollaks and their four children
moved from Hilton Head to nearby Beaufort, S.C., where they
purchased a 1787 Federal home that had been, among other things,
a Civil War infirmary.
The Pollaks lovingly rebuilt the exquisite home, illustrated in
the October 2000 issue of Town & Country, restoring
its rare tabby exterior and returning original paneling to its
ballroom. Along the way they were bitten by the collecting bug,
something they passed along to their son.
Under the banner of "American Masterpieces," Charles Pollak
Antiques and Fine Art's debut advertisement appeared in The
Magazine Antiques in September. The montage included a pair
of Seymour side chairs featured in Robert D. Mussey's definitive
book on the Boston furniture makers, and photographs of
Monticello and Louis Armstrong. The chairs, exhibited at the
Peabody Essex Museum in 2002, once belonged to Sack clients Mr
and Mrs Robert Lee Gill.
In addition to fly fishing, the dealer, who lives in Battery Park
City in lower Manhattan, loves jazz.
"I don't collect American furniture. I don't want to compete with
my clients," says Pollak, who still finds time to row, sometimes
with his 6-foot, 8-inch brother Christopher, four years his
junior and now taking a year off from Brown to serve as a pilot
in the Marines. Like another famous dealer in American furniture,
Charles Pollak is a twin. His sister, Caroline, his senior by ten
minutes, earned her master's degree at Brown and is a teacher.
From his small office in the suite of rooms he shares with Art
Finance Partners, Pollak - simply dressed in a black Lacoste
shirt, matching black khakis and a mildly daring pair of striped
socks -wields his cellphone with the assertiveness of any
under-30 executive.
"I'm working with young buyers such as yourself, as well as more
seasoned collectors," he tells one caller. After hanging up, he
turns and says, "When I make a deal, I like everyone to win.
That's why I've had great results.
"Everyone has been so helpful," continues Pollak, acknowledging
the support he has received from the Americana field's top
dealers, auctioneers and curators. Fresh from a lecture at
Sotheby's, furniture scholar Robert Trent happens to be in the
gallery that day. "Robert has very kindly looked at some pieces
with me," Pollak explains.
Charles Pollak says he plans to remain on the seventh floor of
the Fuller Building, down the hall from Leo Kaplan Modern, in one
of New York's most prestigious addresses for art. He will
continue his emphasis on American masterpieces.
"My focus is on quality antiques of any period or price, from
William and Mary to Federal. Later on, I'd like to handle
paintings," says the dealer, whose current inventory includes a
Boston-area William and Mary walnut ball foot, slant lid desk,
circa 1720-35. Israel Sack, Inc, sold the desk to Ralph Carpenter
in 1952.
"I've always wanted to be in sales, but antique American
furniture is my passion," says Pollak, who has managed to combine
the best of both.