Gallery sues landlord, claiming COVID-19 shutdown voids lease

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Gallery sues landlord, claiming COVID-19 shutdown voids lease
Roy De Forest. Installation View. © 2020 Roy De Forest Estate / Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy Venus Over Manhattan, New York.

by Colin Moynihan



NEW YORK, NY (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- In early March, the Venus Over Manhattan gallery mounted an exhibition of paintings, drawings and wall reliefs by Roy De Forest, the biggest presentation of his work in New York City since 1975.

But the show’s prospects may have been limited when Gov. Andrew Cuomo banned most gatherings and ordered nonessential businesses to close by March 22 to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

Now the gallery is suing its landlord, arguing that the governor’s actions provide a basis to end its lease, which it said started in 2011 at $54,000 a month, and recover its deposit of $365,000.

“As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, Governor Cuomo issued a number of executive orders, which by March 29, 2020, completely frustrated the very purpose of the lease,” a lawyer for the gallery wrote in a complaint filed last week in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, adding that the gallery therefore “considers the lease terminated.”

The dispute is between companies run by two prominent art collectors, both with significant business experience and neither averse to attention.

The gallery’s owner, Adam Lindemann, who once ran an investment firm, briefly set an auction record for Jean-Michel Basquiat in 2016 when he sold a painting by the artist at Christie’s for $57.3 million.

The gallery’s Madison Avenue building is listed as a property of the real estate company run, with a partner, by Aby Rosen. He has displayed several Picassos in his Manhattan home and, in 2014, riled some neighbors by erecting on his Long Island estate a 33-foot, painted bronze sculpture of a naked pregnant woman with an exposed fetus.

Venus Over Manhattan’s lawyer, Errol Margolin, suggested to Crain’s New York Business, which first reported news of the lawsuit, that the gallery was concerned about its inability to hold the kind of large, buzz-generating openings that entice art buyers. “When you have a gallery opening, you have 500 people,” he was reported to say. “If you have social distancing, how can you have 500 people in the future?”

Margolin said by email that the lawsuit involved “a dispute between a commercial tenant and a landlord” about whether a lease default had taken place. A representative for Rosen’s company, RFR Holding LLC, declined to speak about the suit.

The complaint filed by the gallery said it considers the lease to have been terminated April 1. On March 25, it added, the gallery informed the landlord that it was vacating the premises on or about July 1 and demanded the return of the $365,000 deposit.

On April 8, the complaint states, the landlord declared a default under the lease and on April 23 seized the deposit.

The gallery contends that it is entitled to end the lease based on two arcane legal doctrines: “frustration of purpose,” described in the complaint as when an unforeseen event destroys the reason for a contract; and “impossibility of performance,” which the complaint says allows performance of a contract to be excused if governmental activities render that performance impossible.

Joshua Stein, a commercial real estate lawyer not involved in the lawsuit, said frustration of purpose is one of several doctrines businesses have considered asserting during the pandemic as a basis to withhold rent or walk away from a lease.

But, he added, it could be difficult to convince a judge that frustration of purpose or impossibility arguments apply in the case of a citywide shutdown caused by a pandemic that at some point will presumably pass.

“The problem with claiming ‘frustration of purpose’ for a commercial lease is the subject matter of the lease does still exist,” Stein emailed, adding: “The fact that tenant can’t use the space for the intended purpose doesn’t make anything in the lease impossible.”

As the coronavirus has spread, galleries across New York City and elsewhere have had to accept that celebratory openings, where artists, critics and potential buyers sip wine and gaze at artworks, are, at least for now, a thing of the past.

In recent months, galleries have joined museums and art fairs in exploring creative ways to exhibit works online. Megadealer David Zwirner has built out space on its website to host shows by a dozen smaller galleries in New York and London. In Los Angeles, several galleries have organized and created a shared marketing website.

Venus Over Manhattan appeared to be using virtual displays as adroitly as any other gallery. Last month, Times critic Roberta Smith reviewed the show of De Forest’s work favorably, saying it “booms forth” from the gallery’s website. The complaint does not specify how the gallery’s closure has affected its sales.

Still, Venus Over Manhattan’s lawyer appeared to suggest that there would be little reason to maintain a gallery if a packed opening was not possible. The gallery’s lease provided for use of the premises for the display and sale of fine art, Margolin wrote in the complaint.

But, he added, “such use contemplated large groups of customers viewing the exhibits and attending exhibit openings.”

© 2020 The New York Times Company










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