~This
story was previously published in
Chicago Tribune Printers Row Literary Journal (2014).
"How much did
you say again?" Davis Javits had heard the number perfectly clearly. He
didn't doubt his hearing; it was his imagination that he mistrusted.
The heavyset man
seated across from him grinned, unconsciously straightening the lapels on his
obviously expensive suit. He casually leaned back in his chair, about as far as
he could without tipping over. "One million, two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars." He'd said it as "one-point-two-five million"
the previous time, but took the question as a lack of understanding. When that
second response was met with only a quiet stare, The Suit leaned his girth
forward, opened his metallic briefcase, and removed a strapped-together stack
of bearer bonds that totaled the quoted amount. He handed the bearer bonds to
Davis, who examined them in silence for so long that The Suit half expected him
to bite one to verify its validity, like a cartoon version of a
nineteenth-century merchant. "Satisfied?" The Suit asked, leaning
back again.
Davis Javits drew
a breath and looked around his gallery. The man in the suit was the only thing
inside the whole former field house that carried even a coincidental smell of
success. That uninspiring reality started with Davis himself, with his
thrift-store clothes, hand-me-down shoes, and generally scraggly appearance. He
liked to think that his beard — a thick but untrimmed mess that didn't quite
connect with his sideburns, leaving an uncomfortable gap on each side — gave
him a vaguely hipster look. He also thought it was cool how his hair, which
didn't grow as long as he would like and was thinning a bit in front and on the
top of his dome, bunched up in the back and always seemed to have a natural
bedhead look. In reality, he looked more like a newly homeless man or a college
student who'd recently ceased to care, although his hygiene suggested better
than either of those scenarios.
Not quite thirty,
but not far from it either, Davis Javits didn't lack for work ethic. His art
had been a lifelong pursuit, a hobby he'd chosen to make his career when he
found he lacked the qualifications for any other appealing option. He'd gotten
in on the found-object art trend long before it became overexposed, and
continued to toil away at it despite a complete lack of financial reward. When
he failed to find success, acclaim, or even acknowledgement in the medium, he
refused to alter his basic style but doubled down on quantity. He decided he
simply wasn't coming up with enough pieces, and began to work at an almost
superhuman pace, producing a new work of art nearly every day.
He'd discovered
his affinity for found-object art back in elementary school, when he would
spend almost every recess alone, collecting sticks and rocks from the fields
and fashioning them into eccentric trinkets he tried to peddle at class
fundraisers or through door-to-door sales to townspeople, many too concerned
about looking cheap in front of their neighbors to refuse. Until The Suit
arrived, those sales for a few dollars each represented the most lucrative
stretch in the art career of Davis Javits.
His gallery was an
abandoned school gymnasium he'd rented back when his finances were in better
shape, when he took a few thousand dollars of inheritance money his great uncle
had expected him to spend toward a college education and instead invested it to
fund his theoretical career. The building had seen better days, with several
contradictory coats of paint visible through cracks in the wood, and more than
a little rust showing on the hinges. The gallery had started out as a barn but,
like many such buildings in eastern Indiana, it had been repurposed several
times. It endured stints as a speakeasy, a munitions storage facility, a town
hall, and ultimately as a basketball court for several area high schools before
each built their own. When he learned the building's history, Davis Javits felt
it fit his own extremely well. Before the small inheritance, he'd scraped by
financially as a bartender at an often-empty dive, a checkout clerk at a gas
station, and a greenskeeper at a third-rate golf course. The landlord didn't
really use the field house anymore, and gave him a good deal. When the
building's rightful owner died, Davis and his monthly rent somehow got lost in
the paperwork, and he saved even more money when he decided to live there too.
For three years, he'd slept on a mattress in the old visitors' locker room,
using the showers there and storing his few possessions in the vacant lockers.
That way he could work to the point of exhaustion anytime he wanted, then
collapse for as long as he needed to recharge.
As he looked
around his makeshift gallery, contemplating the magnitude of The Suit's offer,
Davis Javits started to consider how much money his existing collection could
bring in if a single piece was suddenly worth more than a million dollars.
Every wall in the field house was lined with art. Every corner held stack upon
stack of completed pieces. Every locker in the abandoned home locker room
overflowed with supplies, with incomplete scraps of incomplete ideas. A good
percentage of the building's square footage was filled with raw materials yet
to be put to use or, more accurately, in need of repurposing. The ability to
stock up with virtually no overhead was one of the advantages of practicing
found-object art, so the parts of the building not visible to the public looked
like a cross between a city dump and the aftermath of a small, localized
hurricane. Finally, Davis thought, it had all amounted to something. Something
far more financially viable than he'd ever imagined. "Thank you," he
told the fat man, extending his hand. "It's a pleasure to do business with
you."
* * *
Davis didn't know
this, but The Suit had first noticed him about two weeks before he sat there
with his briefcase full of bearer bonds. He'd seen the thin man scrounging
around an oversized dumpster in back of his marketing firm's office. The firm
shared the dumpster, and the alley where it sat, with both a construction
supply company and a hardware manufacturer in the same complex. Davis used to
stop by that alley pretty regularly, because experience had taught him that the
construction folks would dump massive amounts of usable material at least a few
times a week. When The Suit first noticed him through an office window, he was
throwing an assortment of found items into a shopping cart. It was a large haul
— about a dozen paint cans, part of a former ladder, a broken table, partial
sheets of drywall, a bent metal frame, some pieces of two-by-four. The Suit
took immediate interest in what he assumed was a homeless man, and rushed
downstairs to try to intercept him for a brief talk before he left.
Unfortunately, the elevator was a little too slow, and the building's security
guard made him sign for a package that had just been delivered, so Davis Javits
was long gone by the time The Suit got to the alley.
With his usual
rapid pace of work, Davis took only about five days to repurpose the fruits of
that day's labor into more than a dozen works of art. He'd converted the paint
cans and broken chair into an uneven mobile, something of a back-alley homage
to Alexander Calder. He'd painted each sheet of drywall in a different bold
color, making careful use of his brushstrokes to subtly suggest patterns too
intricate to fully absorb on a first viewing, but which would reveal themselves
to any future patron who paid attention to them every day. Of all the works he
created, however, he considered his finest the massive angled cross he'd made
from the remains of the former ladder. By tilting the parts of the cross at
just enough of an angle, he hoped to convey the diminishing role of faith in
the modern world. He held the wooden boards together with a full roll of
packaging tape, reinforcing the angles with a few judicious nails he felt
matched the work's theme. To make it less austere, he inlaid the whole thing
with rocks he'd found in a paper bag left in a drawer of the broken table,
spacing them without a discernible pattern so they'd reflect the messiness of
modern life. Davis Javits often feigned modesty, trying not to let on to fellow
struggling artists how much he actually considered himself an unappreciated
genius. Even with enough self-awareness to know his tendency to like his own
work too much, he thought the cross was genuinely brilliant, one of the best
pieces he'd made to date. He said as much to the fat man in the pinstriped
suit, just a few days before the offer.
"I quite
agree," the man had said. "This is one of the finest pieces I've seen
in its genre." The Suit had shown up unexpectedly on a Wednesday, pulling
his sleek town car up the patchy asphalt driveway on a particularly rainy
afternoon. Davis had years earlier fashioned a sign advertising the gallery out
of a broken-down calliope he'd procured at the state fair, framing the sign's
rectangular shape with chasing lights. Placing it on the roadside in front of
the field house had enticed the rare visitor to stop by and briefly browse.
Visitors usually treated his gallery the way they'd treat any other roadside
attraction, as another giant ball of twine where they could stretch their legs
and feel like they'd seen a sight before continuing on to their destination.
The senior vice
president of corporate and multi-platform marketing — Davis had focused on the
title as soon as he saw the obviously expensive business card the man handed
him when he walked in — was a different case. He was motivated to buy.
Something in his body language signaled it to Davis, the way The Suit casually
strolled around the entire gallery on that rainy afternoon, carefully
inspecting the works on the walls as well as the free-standing pieces. At
first, Davis had to admit to himself, he'd assumed the man was simply wasting
time to avoid going back outside before the downpour abated. But the visitor
paused at literally every piece, looking at each intently and from multiple
angles, in the clear manner of a discerning collector.
After a while, a
form of faint terror struck Davis Javits. This man was actually looking to buy
something from him. And for all his experience and all his work, Davis had
absolutely no idea what to charge.
He had to make the
first offer; that much was clear. Otherwise, he assumed the marketing executive
— who clearly had far more experience with this kind of thing — was going to
lowball him and negotiate only up to what he was willing to pay in the first
place. As Davis was in a position to benefit financially from literally any
offer the man would make, he felt impotent when it came to guessing a price
that the other man would accept but would also be more than he wanted to pay.
The artist was terrified of setting a price so high the man would just walk
away, but only slightly less terrified of negotiating himself out of a
potential windfall. It felt mentally paralyzing.
Davis also realized
that this sale could be his entrance, while not to fame exactly, to the kind of
respect and recognition among the cognoscenti that he'd long sought. Like all
the other local artists he knew, Davis Javits worked every day with one eye on
a future break, the one sale or one exhibition or one review or one mention to
the right person that could change his years of artistic expression from an
all-consuming hobby into something resembling an actual career. If a
senior-level-multi-platform marketing executive liked his work, who better to
spread the word and promote him? The Suit would be working out of self
interest, after all. If Davis Javits became a next big thing, or a thing worthy
of any attention, whatever price his first real sale brought would become a
bargain in retrospect, and The Suit surely knew that. Davis wouldn't have to
exploit the man's connections, because he'd be smart to exploit them himself.
"Let me show
you some of my new collection," Davis had said, hoping to give the man a
hard sell without being too pushy. He led the visitor from the far wall, where
he had been checking out a series of faux tribal masks fashioned from
corrugated metal, and brought him to the side housing his most recently
repurposed pieces. "Each of these is designed to represent a different
perspective on the drudgery of our modern..." Davis began, though he
realized the other man was too engrossed in the work itself to listen to his
improvised tales of inspiration.
The Suit seemed to
like the Calder homage, as he watched each paint can travel its little ovular
orbit. He peered deeply at each of the color studies on drywall, taking the
most interest in the dark green one, which even Davis felt provided the best
variety of textures. As soon as he brought out the wooden cross, though, Davis
knew he had a sale. The man's eyes widened, and he examined the cross from
every side as Davis explained its postmodern take on theological relevance.
When the man had inspected it thoroughly and seemed satisfied, and they'd
exchanged their mutual assessment that this was an outstanding work, The Suit
asked Davis a question the young artist had never heard in that context before.
"How
much?"
Davis knew he
should have had an answer at the ready, as nearly half an hour had gone by
since he'd realized this man might actually buy something. He knew he had to
aim high but be willing to negotiate down, had to let this man know his work
was valuable if he was going to let The Suit build his reputation and enrich
them both in the process.
A number of
numbers raced through Davis Javits's head, but none came readily to his mouth.
"What do you think is fair?" was all he found himself capable of
saying, while he chastised himself internally. Surely he'd opened himself up to
the lowball offer he feared, and provided no recourse for a productive
counteroffer. What the man said next, however, surprised him.
"Tell you
what. Let me think about it, do a little research, and I'll make you an offer
tomorrow. I promise you it'll be fair." The would-be customer took the
artist's blank expression as agreement. "Just don't sell that piece to
anyone else without giving me a chance to match." The marketing executive
shook his hand, with the firm grip of someone used to taking meetings, and
exited the gallery. Davis spent the evening in the grip of disappointment,
wondering how he'd allowed a potential career-making sale to slip through his
paint-caked fingers and drive off in a town car worth more than everything
Davis Javits owned.
* * *
True to his word,
though, the heavyset man came back the next day. Just in case The Suit showed
up, Davis spent the morning tidying the room up a bit, sweeping years' worth of
sawdust, cobwebs and loose nails and screws into a corner behind a series of
hyperbolic Soviet-style propaganda posters he'd painted on drywall in a
younger, more active time. He dressed up as best he could with his limited
wardrobe, buttoning up a dress shirt he usually wore open over a t-shirt, and
slicking his hair back with a part on one side. To give the impression of a
business setting, he set up a desk and a pair of office-style chairs — all
procured on dumpster runs and not yet repurposed — in the middle of the
gallery.
Davis was too
nervous to do real work that day, perusing his workshop like a visitor until he
heard the expected vehicle pull up next to the old barn. After propping the
door open, he sat at the desk in the hope of looking official. The Suit entered
the room, carrying the briefcase and plopping down on the empty chair. After
brief small talk, the fat man leaned back and said, "So let's talk
business. I've brought what I consider a more than fair offer for you, and I'm
ready to make the buy today." Davis steeled himself with his best neutral
expression, prepared to reject the presumably lowball first offer. Then he
heard, "One-point-two-five million."
Now it was his
turn to ask, "How much?"
"One million,
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars," the man said, betraying a smile
at the artist's obvious shock. That was the point when he'd removed the bonds
from his briefcase and handed them to Davis. "That's the offer. Take it or
leave it."
"Yes, um,
definitely. That sounds... Well, that sounds amazing," Davis said after
his long silence, looking at the pile of bonds in his hand. Even in
denominations of ten-thousand dollars, the bonds made a heavy block, with a
palpable sense of how much money they were worth. Not only had Davis never seen
that kind of money — after all, most people never had — but he'd never expected
to even know someone who'd seen so much. All he had to do now was cash the
bonds in, and he'd be the richest person he'd ever known.
Well, more like
the second richest, after the man handing the money to him.
"Thank you so
much," Davis said, instantly forgetting any pretense of trying to bid up
the offer. "I hope you enjoy the piece. You've made an excellent
choice."
"Just so
we're clear, that offer is for everything you have here, including the
building," the marketing executive said, casting his hand in a loop to
indicate the entire gallery. "You didn't really think I was going to give
you that much money just for the one piece? That's more money than you'll ever
need."
This gave Davis
pause. The Suit was right that the bonds he now held were more than ample for
the rest of his life. It was an incredible amount of money to a man used to
subsisting on fast food and cold-cut sandwiches, but it would also mean giving
up more than five hundred works of art. Admittedly, many of them were subpar
efforts he just completed for the sake of completion, and the field house had
gotten uncomfortably cramped from the sheer quantity of work. It was still a
lot to walk away from. But it was also a lot of money.
"Are you sure
you don't want to just pick all the pieces you want?" Davis asked.
"Otherwise, what am I going to sell? What if one of the pieces I sell you
generates demand?" A phrase he'd heard a more business-oriented
contemporary use once, and which he thought sounded apt.
"Oh, you
can't sell any more art. This is it. The pieces only become valuable if you're
dead."
A chill struck
Davis, who stared at the marketing executive's right hand, and noticed it was
in his suit pocket. Realizing where the artist's eyes were focused, the
heavyset man laughed and withdrew his hand. "No, no, nothing like that. I
just meant the work has to be the product of an artist everyone thinks is dead
if it's going to justify the money I'm spending on it. Think of it as an
elaborate marketing strategy."
"What I am
supposed to do? People will see me around. Plus I have to get a new place to
live if you want this one; whatever I rent or buy will be in my name."
Davis had never before told a relative stranger that he lived in his workspace,
but figured there was no reason to be coy about it now.
"You just
leave the country, change your name, start a whole new life. This is no way to
go on, after all. You just start over, build a better life for yourself. Then
once we wait enough time, I present your art to the public as the work of a
great lost genius. If it works, I can make you one of the most famous
found-object artists of the century. But it only works if I come up with the
right backstory. Ideally something with a tragic death, something noble. Maybe
saving someone from drowning or a fire, the kind of heroic story people will
remember. I promise I'll think of something with the right impact. I'm usually
pretty good at this sort of thing."
Davis protested
briefly, explaining that he didn't have a passport, had never traveled abroad,
and didn't know how to speak any foreign languages except a bit of
conversational Spanish he'd picked up in high school. The Suit countered, not
unreasonably, that more than a million dollars in cash would solve all those
problems rather easily.
The more Davis
Javits thought about it, the better the proposed arrangement seemed. Really,
nothing was keeping him there. His parents were long dead back in Arkansas. He
had a grandmother alive somewhere in Oregon or Washington, but they'd lost
touch years earlier. He never had a real romantic relationship, just a series
of inebriated hookups with women he would probably never see again. His few
friends were really just acquaintances, other struggling artists who met at
bars from time to time to punish their livers and vent their spleens about the
success of presumed hacks younger than all of them — and he knew most of them
would regard him as just such a hack now that he'd made an unexpected and
lucrative sale.
Besides, he'd
always heard Argentina was nice this, or any, time of year. He shook the man's
hand, promised to move to Buenos Aires in the next two or three weeks, and
agreed to send a blank, telltale postcard to the marketing executive as soon as
he was set up abroad. Davis wisely insisted that he cash in the bonds before
turning over the keys to the field house, but the money proved genuine. Once
enough time had passed, The Suit assured him, his work would be presented to
the world, and his genius would finally be known. Now a financial success, he
would soon also become a critical one.
* * *
Jeremiah David, as
the artist chose to rechristen himself once safely moved into a beautiful
Argentine villa with a panoramic view of the South Atlantic, did in fact have
enough money to last the rest of his life. Between the favorable exchange rate
in his new homeland and a comfort with inexpensive living honed by years of
experience as a struggling artist, he never had to work another day. Sure, art
was still part of his life, something he dabbled in from time to time. But
without the same driving hunger, it became just a hobby to his mind, as it had
always been to his pocketbook. After working nearly every day of his adulthood,
he took a few months off immediately after his move to handle necessary tasks
like finding a home, getting his accounts set up, buying an all-terrain
vehicle, and teaching himself the language. In the process, he discovered he
didn't miss his old schedule all that much, and spent another few weeks seeing
the country, traveling around the pampas and checking out the attractions of several
cities. When he decided to try his hand at art again, it was more out of
boredom and a fear of his skill atrophying than any real need to work.
Strangely, the
lack of ambition actually made his art... better. Nothing that would ever hang
in a modern gallery or fetch an inflated price at auction, certainly nothing
that would have impressed his found-art colleagues back in the States. But with
the exception of one marketing executive and himself, nothing he created
impressed anyone that much in the first place. His work in Argentina was less
pretentious, more practical and accessible, applying his limited talent to
pieces that had everyday uses.
He soon wound up
making mobiles for the newborns in his new neighborhood on the outskirts of
Buenos Aires, applying his old technique but with recognizable shapes of
animals and toys instead of repurposed rusty cans. New friends often received
gifts of unusually shaped, but sturdy, furniture from the American who lived in
the villa, and who spent many a Sunday afternoon leading outdoor workshops on
carpentry or painting for as many local teenagers as cared to attend. Because
of his comfortable but modest lifestyle, and his continued lax approach to his
dress and presentation, few of the people Jeremiah David met understood just
how wealthy he'd become.
His only obvious
vice was the Internet alerts. Just hours before he left America, Davis Javits
had sat in an airport lounge with the thin laptop purchased with his newfound
wealth, making sure every search engine would let him know anytime the name
Davis Javits made news. With his disappearance preventing meaningful contact
with anyone stateside, he figured it would be the best way to find out when he
became the posthumous star of the found-object universe.
In the first few
years of his new life, he checked those alerts obsessively, searching for his
old moniker almost any time he went online, then less so as time went along.
Within three years, the alerts had been forgotten, though they stayed in place
as an afterthought. There was simply never any news to report, and Jeremiah
David — or, as he eventually learned to pronounce it, "Heremiah
Daveed" — had stopped actively seeking such information.
* * *
Because The Suit
had pegged Davis Javits as a street person that first time he'd seen him
rummaging around the dumpster, he thought it would be easy to locate him again.
While he never interacted with them, he recognized that most of the homeless
people he passed on his way to and from work were consistent faces, and had
kept an eye out for the thin, bearded young man. Failing to find his target and
getting desperate, he started inconspicuously checking other alleys and
dumpsters for signs of him.
When he came
across him at another dump site a few days later, he followed Davis home. Upon
discovering that the forager was an artist looking for material, The Suit began
to form some ideas about how to shield his real objective, and his sharp
marketing instincts generated a perfect solution. He had correctly assumed that
the untrained eye of Davis Javits wouldn't recognize the eighty million dollars’
worth of uncut jewels The Suit had hidden in a paper bag inside an
inconspicuous old table in the building's storage room. When he realized the
maintenance crew had unexpectedly removed the table that morning, he wrongly
assumed it would be left alone in the dumpster for a few hours on a non-pickup
day — though he checked the window constantly to be sure, planning to retrieve
it the instant nobody was watching. Once in the field house, the relieved
marketing executive spotted the gems instantly on the huge wooden cross, and
began to devise an offer that would guarantee both the return of his
merchandise and the artist's silence. He knew he had to pick an overwhelming
amount of money, a total he could spare that would be enough to buy off the
artist, instantly and for good, and knew the old canard about fame only after
death would be an equally effective motivator.
He had used the
posthumous success line before in his dealings with creative types, and always
wondered why they fell for it so often. He knew that Van Gogh had died
penniless and unknown, and had earned his recognition only after that point,
and figured that was where the trope came from. But while no expert, he also knew
enough about art to know the Van Gogh story was a big exception, no matter how
often it was noted. He knew Goya had been the court painter of Spanish royals,
that Michelangelo's patrons showered him in riches, that Degas was the son of a
rich banker who never wanted for money. All he could figure was that it made a
handy crutch for the unsuccessful, a built-in excuse for their failures that
doubled as a reason to keep going. It didn't matter that it was untrue. After
all, he reasoned, lemmings didn't really commit suicide, and ostriches didn't
hide their heads in the sand.
Not only did his
deal with Davis Javits allow The Suit to reclaim the reward of one
less-than-legitimate side project, it also laundered the dubious income he
acquired through another. Even before he confirmed Davis had cashed in the
bonds and left the country, the fat man had meticulously removed each jewel
from the cross with one of the artist's leftover screwdrivers, careful not to
scrape them in the process. He made sure to stay in his job and keep his wealth
well hidden for a few years to avoid any suspicion, before making his own move
to a penthouse suite in New York. He took one of the paint-can mobiles with
him, both because he'd legitimately admired it on the first visit to the field
house and because it served as a constant reminder of his greatest marketing
triumph.
* * *
Most of Davis
Javits's old art stayed in the field house where he'd worked for so long, with
the obvious exception of the diamond-encrusted cross. The Suit had left the
sign advertising the gallery out front, though the chasing lights from the old
calliope eventually ceased working. Even with the gallery essentially abandoned
and the door left wide open, somehow fewer visitors than before bothered to see
what the sign was advertising — though the occasional squatter would use the
locker room to avoid the worst of the winter snow, and local teenagers
sometimes stole leftover supplies or tagged the side of the old barn with spray
paint. After it had sat vacant for a couple of years, the local government used
eminent domain to claim the barn and the land it sat on as part of an
incorporation plan, giving the former marketing executive a generous tax break
in the process.
After a few more
years of inactivity, the newly formed city razed the old field house to build a
state-of-the-art, booster-funded football field for the nearby high school. In
the days before the demolition, crews of workmen went through what had been
Davis Javits's old gallery, perusing his life's work and checking to see if
there was anything of value worth saving. Some of the artwork wound up
repurposed, broken down into pieces to serve as building materials, scrap
metal, or firewood. A lot more of it wound up right back in dumpsters.
*****
THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY
I often collect possible titles for
future stories, and sometimes I’ll just select a title from that list and start
writing whatever it evokes. This story started out that way. For “The Business
of Art,” I first came up with the main character, this outsider artist with no
sense of how to place a value on the work he does, and the story’s central
dilemma came from that.
*****
ABOUT JEFF FLEISCHER
Jeff Fleischer is a Chicago-based
author, journalist and editor. His fiction has appeared in publications including
the Chicago Tribune's Printers Row
literary journal, Shenandoah, Steam
Ticket Third Coast Review, Pioneertown, Crossborder Journal, Zoetic Press
Non-Binary Review, Chicago Literati, and Indiana Voice Journal. He is also the author of non-fiction books
including ROCKIN' THE BOAT: 50 ICONIC REVOLUTIONARIES (Zest Books, 2015), VOTES
OF CONFIDENCE: A YOUNG PERSON'S GUIDE TO AMERICAN ELECTIONS (Zest Books, 2016),
and THE LATEST CRAZE: A SHORT HISTORY OF MASS HYSTERIAS (Fall River Press,
2011). He is a veteran journalist published in Mother Jones, the New Republic, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Chicago
Tribune, Chicago Magazine, Mental_Floss, National Geographic Traveler and
dozens of other local, national and international publications.
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