Parke-Bernet Galleries, ca. 1975.
Designed by Walker & Poor in 1949, this simple limestone facade modern building was originally the home of the Parke-Bernet Galleries. For many years Parke-Bernet was the largest auctioneer of fine art in the United States. They were purchased by Sotheby's in 1964.
The aluminum sculpture of two figures above the entrance is called "Venus Bringing the Arts to Manhattan," an appropriate depiction for a fine arts auction house. Designed by Wheeler Williams, the chest of the female figure extends into what is considered public space by 18 inches. Because of this intrusion, the building owner was originally forced to pay a $25 a year "rental" fee. (According to a 2006 New York Time article the cost of the rental that year had grown to $3,251.)
Considered largely unremarkable architecturally by commenters on the city's built environment, the building had an additional (set back) story added in 1957, and Sotheby's moved out by the mid-1980s. In 2006, the owner considered a full renovation of the building and the addition of two oval-shaped glass towers for apartments. Being within the Upper East Side Historic District, this plan was weighed by the LPC and found wanting. The towers were never built.