“I met Jennifer many moons ago and we just struck up an immediate friendship,” says Lady Kinvara Balfour, a producer of the 2018 documentary McQueen, which featured Zuiker’s collection. Balfoun, who helped facilitate the sale, says, “Jennifer was very private and didn’t want any fame or glory for herself, but was really happy to have her clothes featured. Her collection is on another level.” Real fashion obsessives will notice a parallel between Zuiker’s collection – mostly unworn, museum-grade pieces – and that of Sandy Scheier’s archive, which was the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute’s last exhibit before Covid-19 closures. Schreier, a Detroit native, maintained a collection of several hundred pieces of couture and ready-to-wear, never wearing it. Zuiker’s collection of legendary McQueen pieces is similar: The work of a singular master preserved in time.
“I think collections like Jennifer’s are so precious because he’s gone,” says Balfour. “I will definitely be buying a couple pieces.” Buyers of the individual and institutional sort should take that into consideration as they plan their budgets for this sure-to-be epic sale.
“I think collections like Jennifer’s are so precious because he’s gone,” says Balfour. “I will definitely be buying a couple pieces.” Buyers of the individual and institutional sort should take that into consideration as they plan their budgets for this sure-to-be epic sale.
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