A former Latest York City dog walker thought he was going to get a $10 million payday when a painting he’d come to own by a famous artist — whose works sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars — went to auction this week.
The retiree, who resides off Social Security, was devastated when the painting sold for a meager $40,000.
Mark Herman, 68, of Manhattan, said he had a vision while on psychedelic mushrooms that the painting by the late abstract artist Chuck Close can be price $10 million.
But that drug-induced dream crumbled as he watched the work sell for a fraction of that in Dallas on Tuesday, the Latest York Times reported.
“I’m really disillusioned,” he admitted. “But then, I believe, if I had a variety of money it could put a variety of pressure on me.
“And that’s the final thing I would like,” he added.
Herman was given the untitled 6-foot abstract nude by former lawyer Isidore Silver, whom he became close friends with after he began walking his toy poodle about six years ago, in accordance with the paper.
Silver, who had repped Close in a First Amendment lawsuit against the University of Massachusetts within the Sixties, had mentioned to Herman in passing that he kept one among the artist’s works rolled up in a closet.
![Herman was given the untitled 6-foot abstract nude by former lawyer Isidore Silver, whom he became close friends with after he started walking his toy poodle about six years ago.](https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/11/Screenshot-2023-11-19-at-3.09.56-AM.png?w=1024)
In March, because the 87-year-old Silver’s health declined, he offered the painting to the dog walker.
“He mainly said, ‘Take the painting,’” Herman told the Times.
Days later, Silver died.
Herman researched Close and located that one among the artist’s paintings had sold for a whopping $4.8 million. He contacted Sotheby’s auction house, which agreed to sell the painting.
“I used to be on cloud nine,” he said of the day he dropped it off, together with his eight-figure hopes taking hold.
Nevertheless, Close died in 2021, and the artist’s estate had no record of the painting Herman wished to sell.
The day before it was to go to auction, Sotheby’s pulled it and footed Herman with a $1,742 bill for preparing the canvas.
A discovery made by an archivist at the University of Massachusetts, though, kept Herman’s hopes for a latest home for him and his girlfriend alive. Caroline White uncovered a photograph of the painting in a 1967 issue of the coed paper, confirming the work was Close’s, in accordance with the Times.
Along with his enthusiasm restored, Herman strapped in to observe live from his apartment because the painting hit Heritage Auctions in Dallas on Tuesday.
The auction house had estimated it to fetch between $20,000 to $30,000 — but before the auction began it had already received an early for $40,000.
![When Close died in 2021, the artist’s estate had no record of the painting Herman wished to sell.](https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/11/GettyImages-1058567414.jpg?w=1024)
Which is where Lot 77070 would ultimately stand with no other bids.
The purchaser, Long Island lawyer James Pincow, told the outlet that he bought the painting together with his father because they thought it was undervalued and were intrigued by its backstory.