![]() The couple installed a Crestron system to manage music, TV and shades. A number of rooms have coffered ceilings and fabric wall coverings. ![]() There’s also an abundance of storage space. Throughout the residence are oak floors, oversize mirror-lined casement windows and ceilings measuring 9 feet 4 inches. May’s favorite room in the apartment - is an enormous soundproof media room, which features a drop-down screen for watching movies. (They run a nonprofit family foundation, and are involved in numerous organizations, including the New York Philharmonic and the Central Park Conservancy.) The couple used it mainly for parties and charitable functions. ![]() Charles metal cabinets original to the unit. The space, which also has a separate entrance from another elevator bank, holds a study with built-ins a sauna a bedroom with an en-suite bath and the second kitchen, which features St. Pocket doors in the dining room connect the east wing to what had been the second apartment on the west side. A full bath and staff bedroom are nearby. There’s also a washer/dryer hidden behind cabinets and a separate breakfast room. The main kitchen is equipped with a marble center island and countertops mahogany cabinets a built-in bar with ice-maker wine storage and stainless-steel appliances, including a Wolf stove with six burners and a griddle. The unit, purchased from the developer William Zeckendorf, has three bedrooms, five and a half baths and four terraces. Over the summer, they paid $29.5 million for a 17th-floor apartment at 740 Park Avenue near 71st Street, designed by the equally renowned architect Rosario Candela. So, the Mays are trading one exclusive co-op address for another across town. May, a founder and president of the asset management firm Trian Partners, “and the views of the park attracted me in the first place.” But one thing this residence lacked, he said, was private outdoor space. Their sprawling apartment, in the north tower of the landmark building, at 145-146 Central Park West between 74th and 75th Streets, is a combination of two units on the 15th floor with prime vistas of Central Park and the Lake. ![]() May and his wife, Leni May, are ready to part with their longtime home at the San Remo, one of the prewar masterpieces of the architect Emery Roth. 1916) Vija Celmins: Untitled (1980) Charles Demuth: In Vaudeville: Soldier and Girl Friend(pencil and watercolor, 1915) Lucian Freud: Naked Girl (1966) April Gornick: Light After Heat(1998) John Graham: Eyes Astray (Pystis Sophia) (1955) Neil Jenney: Acid Story (1983-84) John Koch: Lovers (1970) David Park: Two Women (1957) and James Gale Tyler: Ship at Sea(we are told that this first purchase, when Martin was 21, is a well executed little oil painting, still worth, as Martin explains, with inflation, the $750 he paid for it.The money manager Peter W. Other works in his collection include Stanton MacDonald-Wright’s Synchromy, Cubist Head (c. 8 (no date) and actor-painter Martin Mull’s Birthday Boy XI (2000). 1952), Edward Hopper Captain Upton’s House (1927), and Hotel Window(1955), Roy Lichtenstein Ohhh … Alright … (1964), Cindy Sherman Untitled Film Still (1979), Robert Crumb Weirdo No. He selected three works by Eric Fischl, Barbeque (1982), Truman Capote in Hollywood(1988) and Steve (1998) with works by Willem de Kooning Two Women (c. Most of the artists in Martin’s collection are American. Steve Martin – Art Collector–Artintelligent The San Remo has been home to many celebrities including Dustin Hoffman, Mary Tyler Moore, Raquel Welch, Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, Donald Sutherland, Paul Simon, Barry Manilow, Elain May, Tony Randall, Robert Stigwood, Howold Arlen, Diane Keaton, U2 Frontman, Bono and Rita Hayworth , Steven Spielberg, Donna Karan, Steve Jobs, Glenn Close, Eddie Cantor, Robert Stigwood, Marshall Brickman, Jackie Leo, and Don Hewitt. Steve Martin’s home is the San Remo at 146 Central Park West, which he shares with his massive modern art collection.
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