KLAS-TV Channel 8 News Las VegasLeibovitz can keep portfolio under new debt deal

Leibovitz can keep portfolio under new debt deal

Posted: Updated:

AP Entertainment News Video More>>

Police kill gunman who held 3 at Discovery Channel

Gunman mad over Discovery Channel programs takes hostages at its offices, is killed by police More>>

Police: Man holds hostages in Discovery building

Police: Gunman holding 'small number of hostages' in Discovery Channel headquarters More>>

Police: Discovery gunman shot; 3 hostages safe

Police: Gunman in Discovery headquarters shot; 3 hostages able to escape safely More>>

Police: Gunman holds hostage in Discovery building

Police: At least 1 person being held hostage by gunman in Discovery TV building in Md. More>>

Cho finds comedy in serious topics on new album

Margaret Cho finds humor in serious topics on new album that combines comedy and music More>>

Roger Clemens pleads not guilty to charge of lying

Roger Clemens enters not guilty plea on charges he lied to Congress about drug use More>>

Stars do sunset shades on Emmys red carpet

'Mad Men' and 'Glee' stars among the trendsetters on Emmys red carpet in sunset shades More>>

Split personality for Emmy Awards

In with the new for Emmy comedies, in with the old for drama More>>

Police: Paris Hilton arrested on cocaine charge

Police: Paris Hilton arrested on cocaine charge in Las Vegas More>>

By ULA ILNYTZKY
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - Annie Leibovitz, the photographer who mismanaged her fortune so badly that she faced losing legal rights to some of pop culture's most enduring images, has reached a long-term agreement with a private investment firm to help manage her debt and market her vast portfolio, both sides said Tuesday.

Leibovitz, 60, will retain total control of her multimillion-dollar portfolio under the deal she signed with Colony Capital LLC of Santa Monica, Calif., on Monday, said Richard Nanula, a principal with the firm.

Under the agreement, Colony will become the photographer's sole creditor and help market her archive of such provocative images as a nude John Lennon cuddling with a clothed Yoko Ono hours before his death, as well as a nude and very pregnant Demi Moore.

Leibovitz obtained an extension last year to repay a $24 million loan to a Manhattan firm, Art Capital Group, in a financial dispute that had threatened her rights to those images and others.

The specific terms of the new deal were not disclosed, but Nanula said "it pays off all the Art Capital loan. ... It cleans up the rest of her balance sheet."

The Colony loan also contains more than $20 million of real estate collateral, Nanulaadded - Leibovitz's three Manhattan town houses. The Art Capital loan was repaid Monday, he said.

Art Capital confirmed the repayment and said in a statement that it "is pleased to announce that its loan to Annie Leibovitz has been satisfied. We are encouraged by the results of this complex transaction and wish Ms. Leibovitz the best in all of her future endeavors."

"It's long-term in nature," Nanula said of the partnership with Leibovitz. "Our interest is in helping her be successful and to be her financial partner."

"Colony is a dedicated and creative team," Leibovitz said in a statement. "We will be working on new projects, and I will have the support and freedom necessary for nurturing my work and preserving my archive."

"Colony Capital, LLC has formed a new partnership with Annie Leibovitz, one of world's greatest portrait photographers," the firm said in a statement. "We are delighted to be able to do that here by partnering with Ms. Leibovitz in a business relationship that allows her to continue to flourish as an artist while together we seek opportunities to enhance the value of the magnificent body of work she has created over the past 40 years."

Those opportunities, Nanula said, could involve traveling exhibitions of Leibovitz's works, books and fine-art copies of her photographs.

He stressed that any commercialization of her work would be decided by Leibovitz and that Colony would be her financial partner in any such venture.

Leibovitz's portfolio is estimated to contain more than 100,000 images and 1 million negatives.

"It's one of the most valuable and unexploited" photo archives, Nanula said.

The deal between Colony and Leibovitz was first reported in the Financial Times on Tuesday.

Colony Capital is a global firm that focuses primarily on real estate-related assets, securities and operating companies. Last year, it purchased a loan with a face value of $23.5 million on Michael Jackson's Neverland in California, giving it the rights to the late singer's nearly 3,000-acre property.

In the course of her 40-year career, Leibovitz's lens has captured such famous faces as Queen Elizabeth II and Bruce Springsteen, many for the covers of Vanity Fair, Vogue and Rolling Stone.

In 2008, Leibovitz put up as collateral the three town houses, an upstate New York property and the copyright to her images to secure the Art Capital loan to repay debt that the firm said stemmed from mortgage obligations, tax liens and unpaid bills.

Art Capital, an independent provider of financing for the art world, agreed at the time it extended the repayment on the loan to sell back the rights to her works.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Powered by WorldNow
All content © Copyright 2000 - 2010 WorldNow and KLAS. All Rights Reserved.
For more information on this site, please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.