How Gardy St. Fleur Became the NBA’s Go-To Art Adviser

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Art advisor Gardy St. Fleur has helped Misty Copeland, Kyrie Irving, and others expand their collections by working closely with the artists themselves.

for years. She recalled in a phone interview that she met St. Fleur in 2017 at the Studio Museum in Harlem. “I was so new to the game,” Roberts said. “You need people you trust.” Copeland, via St. Fleur, ended up reciprocating Roberts’s appreciation: her collection now includes work by the artist. “We don’t know the bridges he’s built until we walk over them,” Roberts said of St. Fleur.St. Fleur met Hammons through his framer, who is a friend of the artist’s.

At this stage, “there was still an argument as to if anything would actually flourish in my career,” Quinn said. “Gardy was there as that argument resolved itself.” St. Fleur began working with Quinn, and the two men have travelled together between Paris, Los Angeles, London, and the Hamptons as Quinn’s career has developed and museums have acquired his paintings. In 2015, St. Fleur brokered Quinn’s first comprehensive critical review, in the art magazine.

“I live with art,” St. Fleur said at his home, “and I experience the making of it.” He lit up when describing the studio visits he’s coordinated for his NBA clients. When Deron Williams first met Quinn, they realized that some of Williams’s old University of Illinois teammates grew up in the same Chicago housing project as the artist, where Williams had also played some games during the offseason. Courtney Lee, a veteran guard who played with the Knicks for several seasons, told St.

In his early 20s, St. Fleur ran a footwear retail company. He wanted to break into the art world, but said that “no one would give me a chance.” His current career began through his relationship with Villalongo, who introduced him to the late, eminent collector Peggy Cooper Cafritz. “I came from a different stage,” St. Fleur said. “The only way I could build a business is by building close relationships with the artists and keeping them at the forefront.

Ronnie Price, who retired after 12 seasons in the NBA in 2017, was in the middle of his playing career when a friend connected him with St. Fleur. Price had been watching the art world from afar and reading up, he said in a phone interview, but wanted to learn more about how to begin a collection. St. Fleur started sending him books and magazines, and every time Price came to New York, the two men would visit galleries together.

 

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