Auctions | June 9, 2021

Fine Books & Autographs at Swann June 17

Courtesy of Swann Galleries

Detail from Joan Miró, Autograph Letter Signed, to Ballets Russes director Serge Grigoriev, with two small ink drawings, 1933. Estimate: $3,000-4,000

New York — Swann Galleries will hold their spring offering of Fine Books & Autographs on Thursday, June 17. The auction will feature a strong showing of autographs by prominent American political figures, as well as bright minds from both the performing and visual arts. Literature from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is present alongside a selection of art, press and illustrated books.

The autographs portion of the sale includes uncommonly inspiring items in nearly every major category of collecting. Among Americana is an 1849 autograph letter signed by Abraham Lincoln to Whig activist George W. Rives ($10,000-15,000); and an 1823 ALS from Declaration signer Charles Carroll of Carrollton writing more than 20 years after the death of his friend, George Washington, that the General’s “great and disinterested services will be revered by every good citizen of these States to the gates of time” ($2,000-3,000). Another renowned General who helped create a nation was Giuseppe Garibaldi, who wrote in 1867 encouraging President Andrew Johnson, the members of Congress, and all Americans, to “trample underfoot every kind of individual prejudice in order to maintain intact the unity of the great Republic, the most powerful symbol of liberty in the world” ($3,500-5,000).

Courtesy of Swann Galleries

Additional autograph highlights include: Thomas Edison, explaining in a 1922 typed letter signed that he and his assistants worked five days and nights without sleep so that the first phonograph would be ready to be unveiled at the Exposition Universelle in Paris ($3,500-5,000). The master of musical theater Stephen Sondheim celebrates the successful opening weeks of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum in a 1962 TLS, in which he also jokes that the title “ex-queen of television” might apply equally to Leonard Bernstein or his wife ($800-1,200). Among the writers in the sale is an extraordinary three-page ALS from the expatriate Thomas Mann, writing to his two eldest children in 1938 about their recent book on the culture of exiles, acknowledging that “German freedom and the Weimar republic have been destroyed; we, you and I, are not altogether guiltless in that matter” ($10,000-20,000). Joan Miró is on offer, with the ALS he wrote to Ballets Russes director Serge Grigoriev in 1933, in which Miró describes some changes to be made to the costumes he designed for the ballet Jeux d’enfants, illustrated with two small sketches ($3,000-4,000). In addition to these, excellent examples of letters, documents, photographs and other items, signed by U.S. presidents, astronauts, suffragists, labor leaders, and more.

Moving into the nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature portion of the sale, James Joyce leads the offering with a signed deluxe limited issue of Ulysses, London, 1936 ($15,000-20,000), also by Joyce is a signed first edition, limited issue, of Finnegans Wake, London, 1939 ($6,000-9,000). Additional publications include a first edition of William Faulkner’s The Sound and Fury, New York, 1929, available with the first state dust jacket ($5,000-7,500); a scarce first edition of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet, New York, 1923 ($4,000-5,000); a first edition of John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, New York, 1939, with a signed card and a letter from Steinbeck’s agents ($4,000-6,000); and a signed first edition of Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind, New York, 1936, in the first issue dust jacket ($3,500-4,500). Poetry includes an author’s presentation copy of Robert Frost’s Collected Poems, New York, 1930, signed twice by Frost, with the entirety of Stopping by Woods on A Snowy Evening accomplished by him in holograph ($8,000-12,000); and a first edition of Pablo Neruda’s Canto General, Mexico City, 1950, with pictorial endpapers designed by Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros, signed by Neruda, Ribera and Siqueiros with an additional inscription by the poet ($2,500-3,500).

Closing out the sale is a selection of art, press and illustrated books. On offer is a limited edition, presentation copy of Alighiero Boetti and Anne-Marie Sauzeau-Boetti’s Classifying the Thousand Longest Rivers in the World, Italy, 1977, signed by Boetti and Sauzeau-Boetti ($15,000-20,000); and Eugène Grasset’s La Plante et Ses Applications Ornementales, Series 1 and 2, Paris, 1896 ($7,000-10,000). Notable fine artists include Joan Miró and Jacques Prévert with Adonides, Paris, 1975, portfolio with complete text and 44 entexte and one hors-texte, signed by Miró ($7,000-10,000); Man Ray with a very scarce first issue of the first edition without the “second edition” label on the copyright page of Man Ray Photographs 1920-1934 Paris, Hartford, CT and New York, 1934 ($6,000-9,000); and Agnes Martin with Paintings and Drawings 1974-1990, Amsterdam, 1990, the complete set of 10 lithographs ($4,000-6,000).

Limited previewing (by appointment only) will be available through June 16, to be scheduled directly with a specialist in advance and conforming to strict safety guidelines. Swann Galleries staff will prepare condition reports and provide additional photographs of material on request. Advance order bids can be placed with a specialist for the sale or on Swann’s website, and phone bidding will be available. Live online bidding platforms will be the Swann Galleries App, Invaluable, and Live Auctioneers. The complete catalogue and bidding information is available at www.swanngalleries.com and on the Swann Galleries App.
 
Additional highlights can be found here.