Bear Stearns is gone, and now so is the portrait of fallen chief executive and company chairman Jimmy Cayne by Geoffrey Raymond, the artist who has painted Eiliot Spitzer, Jim Cramer (twice), Lloyd Blankfein and Dick Grasso. It was sold to the wife of a former Bear Stearns employee. She paid $12,000.
The multicolor painting of Cayne against a stark white canvas was on display outside Bear's midtown headquarters, on the corner of 47th St. and Madison Avenue. Raymond handed out colored Sharpie markers to passersby, asking them to sign the portrait. Bear employees got a red marker, shareholders a purple marker and everyone else got black.
"By my count, 189 annotations, the vast majority of which are in red--the color reserved for Bear employees," Raymond tells DealBreaker
The first annotation read: "Opening Bid: One Dimon." You can find it about two inches below the first T in the title. (Click the picture for a larger version.) The final annotation was inscribed around 3:30 p.m. yesterday. It speaks as if it were Cayne writing it himself, striking an almost wistful tone. "I had a good run," it reads. You can find it between the first T and the A in "Annotated."
Other comments were less friendly. "Hubris -- thy name is Jimmy!" one reads. Another says, "Now you know what BS stands for."
The buyer of the painting asked to remain anonymous. But since Cayne is himself a "former employee" of Bear Stearns, we suppose its possible his wife bought it.






Posted by guest , Jun 03, 2008 3:13PM
How does that dude feel about her blowing his entire severance package on one painting?
Posted by guest , Jun 03, 2008 3:48PM
I actually thought this painting was unbelievable. I heard teh Spitzer painting hasn't sold yet. Does anyone know how I can get in touch with this guy.
Posted by guest , Jun 03, 2008 4:18PM
they'll use it for target practice?
Posted by guest , Jun 03, 2008 4:36PM
Brooklyn Artists Gym
Posted by John Carney , Jun 03, 2008 4:37PM
Guest 3:48, email us and we'll put you in touch with him. Tips@DealBreaker.com.
Posted by Novice , Jun 03, 2008 8:29PM
It's like Francis Bacon's Innocent X, with a thousand inner voices driving, or representing, his insanity.
Perfect.
Posted by guest , Jun 04, 2008 11:57AM
Jerry Springer on acid.