Thursday, May 15, 2014

Eerie Photos Reveal The Lonely Life Of A Reclusive Heiress And Her Empty Mansions

When Huguette Clark passed away in 2011 at the age of 104, she left behind a fortune worth $300 million. But just-released photos reveal that many of the trappings of the heiress's fortune were abandoned long before her death.

The daughter of U.S. Sen. William A. Clark, the mining and railroad tycoon who founded Las Vegas, Huguette removed herself from public life in the 1930s, secluding herself in the family's Fifth Avenue New York apartment. In doing so, she left mansions in Santa Barbara, Calif., and New Canaan, Conn., largely untouched.

Photos of Clark's many preserved yet uninhabited estates, published in a new biography, "Emphy Mansions: The Mysterious Life Of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Tortune,"provide a view into Clark's eerie hollowness. Here's a peek into the life and mansions of Huguette Clark.
                                     Huguette as a teenager
                  Huguette holds her violin on a balcony in Paris
                        An uninhabited bedroom at Fifth Avenue
    Huguette in an Indian costume with her father, W.A. Clark
              The Clark family’s country retreat, Le Beau Château
                   A two-story addition at Le Beau Château
Bedroom at the Clark summer home, Bellosguardo, in California
Huguette's mother Anna's bedroom in about 1940 at Bellosguardo in Santa Barbara. A painting by Sargent hangs next to the window, showing a woman dancing the tarantella for a man on a rooftop in Capri. A photo of elder daughter Andrée is next to the lamp.
                                 Huguette playing violin
The dining room at Bellosguardo
This is one of the rooms said to have originally been in the old Clark Mansion on Fifth Avenue in New York. The 167 vertical panels are each unique, carved from a single piece of black oak. The ceiling has a whimsical border with gargoyles and classical figures. This photo is from about 1940.
                                       Huguette in 1943

2 comments:

  1. Fascinating book PIC,
    I must read it. It sounds like a very hollow life. But she sure lived a long time. I hope her fortune will do some good in this world.

    Luv PIC

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's a must read for me also , I'm on Barnes & Noble list , I know it's sad and lonely .
    Dad is getting it for me , a lady at the bookstore is stuck on him , he said she asked where his grandkids was and he said in school that's why he don't come as often .
    PIC , that man is a riot.

    When the people that's handling her estate get through there will be little left .

    Luv PIC

    ReplyDelete