Auctions | April 15, 2020
Courtesy of PBA Galleries

Berkeley, CA – PBA Galleries invites bidders to their inaugural online-only timed auction, available for bidding until lots begin to close on Thursday, April 16th at 11:00am Pacific Time. The sale features a collection of publications of the Book Club of California and other fine press books from the Robert Ebiner Collection. PBA’s next timed auction sale, Americana from the George E. Steinmetz Collection is also live and available for bidding until lots begin to close the following week on Thursday, April 23rd at 11:00am Pacific Time.

In accordance with Berkeley’s shelter-in-place restrictions, the auction will take place without an auctioneer calling the sale. This has commonly been referred to as an “eBay-style” auction. Each lot will be open for a defined time period and will close one minute after the preceding lot, allowing bidders to watch each lot as it closes (unless extended bidding has been triggered). Earlier bids are given priority in case of a tie.

“After a brief furlough, our small but mighty PBA staff is back at work via telework, in accordance with our public health order to shelter at home,” says PBA Galleries president Sharon Gee. “We are cataloging future auctions and will continue to offer timed auctions in the upcoming weeks.” PBA looks forward to continuing to serve clients who have been inquiring about future auctions, many of whom are enthusiastic about the new format. “The staff is also glad to be cataloging and interfacing with our consignors,” adds Gee.

Additional details regarding the logistics of bidding with a timed auction format are available on the PBA Galleries website. To protect the health and safety of PBA staff and customers, no in-person preview for the auction will be available.

“We appreciate your support during these trying and uncertain times,” says Gee.

PBA Galleries was founded under the name California Book Auction Galleries in 1955. After 35 years of successful book auctions, founder Maurice Powers passed away and his heirs placed the company into voluntary bankruptcy. Butterfield’s acquired the name and mailing list, but not the people or the spirit of the company. The current iteration of the company, Pacific Book Auction Galleries, was founded in 1992 by the core members of the original auction house, including current Senior Vice President Bruce MacMakin. The company changed its name to PBA Galleries in October of 2001 to reflect its increasingly global presence in the marketplace as well as its diversified offerings. We are proud to have buyers and sellers from all over the world participating in our auctions.

Auctions | April 15, 2020

Dallas, TX – A letter signed by Florence Nightingale, whose name has become synonymous with the altruistic spirit many associate with the members of the medical profession, is among the featured lots in Heritage Auctions’ Historical Manuscripts Auction April 22 in Dallas, Texas.

In the letter (estimate: $2,000+) addressed to Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, Nightingale expresses her gratitude for his advice in a recent letter to her, and promising to help distribute a large donation Sultan Abdulmecid of the Ottoman Empire made to the nurses and hospitals in response to efforts by Nightingale and other British nurses to improve conditions in hospitals during the Crimean War.

“When she heard about the substandard conditions of the hospitals, Florence Nightingale traveled in 1854 to Scutari, a district in Istanbul, with more than 30 nurses to care for those who were sick and dying,” Heritage Auctions Historical Manuscripts Director Sandra Palomino said. “She helped to coordinate a Sanitary Commission that was brought in to address the sanitation and ventilation concerns, changes that had a significant impact on the death rate at the hospital.”

Nightingale was hailed for her unending efforts to care for the patients, so much so that she earned the name “The Lady with the Lamp.” After learning of her selfless dedication, Abdulmecid made a sizeable donation to the nurses and hospitals, and presented Nightingale with a diamond and carnelian bracelet.

In the letter, Nightingale seeks Lord Stratford’s approval for her distribution of the donated funds, writing, in part, “I beg to thank your Excellency for your kind letter of July 8, & for the advice which it contains, which I have hastened to follow by referring the matter touching the Sultan's donation to the Nurses and its distribution to authority at home.”

Auctions | April 13, 2020

Dallas, TX – The stunning original art for Bernie Wrightson’s Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's Frankenstein Front Endpapers Illustration Original Art (late 1970s) and a Frank Frazetta painting that appeared on the cover of The Serpent each could bring $250,000 or more in Heritage Auctions’ Comics & Comic Art Auction April 30-May 3 in Dallas, Texas.

Wrightson’s original art for Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s Frankenstein is an absolute rarity. Starting in 1975, he spent six years creating images, only three of which are landscape format pieces (the wraparound cover and the back endpapers are the others). Wrightson is so revered for his work on the project that even the images he created that did not end up getting used in the book are in high demand among serious collectors.

“Part of the popularity of Bernie Wrightson’s work stems from the unbelievable amount of detail he works into his images,” Heritage Auctions Vice President Todd Hignite said. “Look at it closely and you’ll see the incredible number of lines he has in everything, whether it is the Frankenstein character, the trees around him or even the background. The amount of work he invested in this powerful image, which offers a glimpse into the monster’s soul, is part of why it is considered such a masterpiece.”

Frank Frazetta The Serpent (aka “Aros”) Paperback Novel Cover Painting Original Art (Paperback Library, 1967) is a spectacular image by an artist whose works have been enormously popular at auction in recent years. The image creates a bit of a conflict for the viewer. Normally, a standing, semi-nude human figure would be the dominant figure in any image, but in this case, the woman’s skin almost blends into the color around her, while the black and green serpent, despite having its head under water, creates the strongest visual contrast. With two of the biggest fantasy art tropes in the semi-naked woman and the snake, the image was used on the 1967 paperback edition for Jane Gaskell’s The Serpent, which was the first in the Atlan Saga series.

Carl Barks Surprise Party at Memory Pond Painting Original Art (1994) (estimate: $130,000+) is a celebration of Donald Duck’s 60th anniversary. The oil-on-Masonite painting, which includes elements from Donald’s first screen appearance, the Silly Symphony, includes Horace Horsecollar, Clarabelle Cow, Uncle Scrooge, Daisy, Huey, Dewey, Louie, Grandma, Gyro Gearloose, Gladstone Gander and Gus Goose and is signed in the lower left corner by Banks.

Robert Crumb CoEvolution Quarterly #14 Complete 4-Page Story "R. Crumb's Modern Dance Workshop" Original Art (Point, 1977) (estimate: $120,000+) is a four-page story that many of the artist’s fans will recognize from when it was reprinted in Best Buy Comics #nn from Apex Novelties in 1979, during a peak period during the artist’s long career. In the story, Crumb directs a women’s modern dance troupe, until he gives so many orders that one of the women in group spins him back into his place. The ink-on-Bristol board pages are done in ink with incredible detail; the first page is signed and dated lower left.

From the collection of Doonesbury creator Garry Trudeau comes Winsor McCay Little Nemo In Slumberland Sunday Comic Strip Original Art dated 12-13-1908 (New York Herald, 1908) (estimate: $120,000+) is an unquestioned masterpiece, the impact of which can not be overstated. McCay is one of the pioneers of the genre whose work is universally accepted, studied, admired and replicated by countless artists who came after him. In the offered lot, the anticipation of youth awaiting Santa Claus is revealed by Nemo climbing on to the roof and then hanging on as he is sheathed in ice before eventually falling during an icicle landslide.

Amazing Fantasy #15 (Marvel, 1962) CGC VF 8.0 Off-white pages (estimate: $100,000+) is, quite simply, the most prized – and without question the most valuable – of all Silver Age books and one of the hardest to find in a high grade, and the offered copy is in exceptional condition. The March 2020 CGC census reports just 23 copies carrying a grade of 8.0 and just 34 with a higher grade; only three certified copies with a higher grade have been offered through Heritage Auctions. The reason for the issue’s popularity and soaring demand is simple: it includes the origin and first appearance of Spider-Man, as well as the debut appearances of Peter Parker’s Uncle Ben and Aunt May. The classic cover was a joint effort by Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, and the issue marks the start of Ditko’s run as the primary artist for the Spider-Man title.

Showcase #22 Green Lantern (DC, 1959) CGC NM- 9.2 Cream to off-white pages (estimate: $75,000+) is an extremely rare copy of one of the Silver Age’s most important books; according to the March 2020 CGC census, this is the only known copy carrying a grade of 9.2, with just one copy with a higher grade. Featuring the origin and first appearance of the Silver Age Green Lantern, it ranks No. 10 on Overstreet’s Top 50 Silver Age Comics list. Gil Kane did the cover and interior art for the issue that features the first appearances of Abin Sur and Carol Ferris.

Variety Store Collection

The auction also includes 50 copies from the fresh-to-market “Variety Store Collection.” This incredibly high-grade single-owner collection of Marvel titles from the 1960s and 1970s, many of which carry grades of 9.6 and 9.8, has been stored by a Midwest convenience store owner for years, and boast gleaming white pages, stress-free spines and brilliant colors on the covers. The store owner pulled the nicest copies from his stock issues, often with multiple copies of the same issue, and stored them away to preserve them in pristine condition. After a hiatus in the 1970s, the store owner resumed collecting, along with his grandson, in the 1980s.

“This is one of the most pristine original-owner collections Heritage has ever had the pleasure of offering at auction,” Heritage Auctions Comics Consignment Director Matt Griffin said. “We are in awe of how well these were preserved over the years and we are certain bidders will be astounded by their condition and eye-appeal as well.”  

Some of the top lots from the Variety Store Collection include, but are not limited to:
    •    The Amazing Spider-Man #40 (Marvel, 1966) CGC NM/MT 9.8 White pages (estimate: $20,000+)
    •    Fantastic Four #52 (Marvel, 1966) CGC NM+ 9.6 White pages (estimate: $18,000+)
    •    The Amazing Spider-Man #39 (Marvel, 1966) CGC NM/MT 9.8 White pages (estimate: $15,000+)
    •    Tales to Astonish #93 (Marvel, 1967) CGC NM/MT 9.8 White pages (estimate: $13,500+)
    •    Fantastic Four #48 (Marvel, 1966) CGC NM+ 9.6 White pages (estimate: $12,500+)

Auctions | April 13, 2020
Courtesy of RR Auction

A rare flown lunar Bible from the Apollo 13 mission.

Boston — RR Auction's annual spring Space sale features an extraordinary assortment of nearly 700 lots, with online bidding from April 9 - April 16.

Headlining the sale is a rare and highly desirable Northwest Africa 5000 Lunar Meteorite Slice.

This is the very first, only, and last time a complete slice from this ultra-desirable lunar meteorite NWA 5000 will be put up for auction from the original source.

At 702.89 grams, "The Perigee," is also the largest and heaviest belonging to the exclusive group of seven complete slices originating from the record-setting 11,528-gram main mass discovered in 2007. 

This stunning specimen contains a generous amount of 4.5 billion-year-old gleaming metal, and the 3D-like matrix contrast is striking—presenting breccias within breccias—it actually takes on the appearance of the Moon.

Von Hupé Planetary Collection curator, Adam Hupe, saved the very finest complete slice for last, holding this fusion crusted example back because, in his opinion, it represents the best of the best. Six of the seven slices were sold privately to some of the world's wealthiest, most discerning meteorite collectors.

Also featured is Buzz Aldrin's Apollo 11 Personal Preference Kit— used to carry several religious artifacts from the first lunar communion service.

The flown Beta cloth is accompanied by an extensive provenance package of visual evidence, signed testimonials, and a history of the Apollo 11 lunar communion service, which is highlighted by a signed letter of provenance from Aldrin, dated November 14, 1998.

"This flown bag carried with it the means to perform the first religious ceremony performed on another celestial body, as the very act of the communion service itself appears almost tantamount to the achievement of Man's first lunar step," said Bobby Livingston, Executive VP at RR Auction.

Also up is a signed replica chalice that was personally autographed by Buzz Aldrin, in 2011. Aldrin returned the original communion chalice he used on the Moon to Webster Presbyterian Church in Webster, Texas, where he served as an elder. The lot is accompanied by a photo of Aldrin taken at the time of signing.

Among other highlights, dozens of significant Apollo and Space Shuttle hardware pieces, a multitude of flown items, and astronaut autographs. A section honoring the 50th anniversary of Apollo 13 includes flown checklist pages, a rare flown lunar Bible, and hardware associated with the near-disastrous mission.

Space & Aviation Auction from RR Auction will begin on April 9 and conclude on April 16. For more information, go to www.rrauction.com

Events | April 8, 2020
Courtesy of ILAB

Access to reliable and relevant information is vital in a time of crisis. Many of our colleagues are concerned about the following weeks and months, have spend weeks re-organizing the business, were forced to lock up shops, send staff on leave or furlough or are simply in lockdown at home.

Events and fairs in the rare book world were cancelled or postponed all over the world. Now is the time to stand together as a worldwide trade.
 
ILAB would like to thank the following speakers who are prepared to answer questions from colleagues, share some of their experience and their view on the current situation and also share ideas with colleagues when this type of exchange is most needed:

Brad Johnson, US
Mario Giupponi, Italy
Pom Harrington, UK
Ryu Sato, Japan
Hervé Valentin, France
Sibylle Wieduwilt, Germany

The webinar will be moderated by ILAB President, Australian bookseller Sally Burdon. Pre-registration is not required but allow yourself a bit of time if you have not used Zoom before as the software might take a little while to install on your computer / device.

Please click this link to join the webinar:
https://zoom.us/j/215452376
 
No pre-registration is required. Only click on the link on the day.

DATE: Thursday, 9 April 2020
TIME: 2pm LONDON TIME
Los Angeles 6am, New York 9am

ILAB invites participants by being a part of our worldwide audience and to send questions to be put to the panelists. Questions may be sent immediately to ILAB Secretary Angelika Elstner at secretariat@ILAB.org or to ILAB President Sally Burdon: Sally@AsiaBookroom.com

Viewers are encouraged to ask live questions during the webinar via the Q&A button.

Sally Burdon, ILAB President in a message to all ILAB booksellers worldwide on 6 April 2020:

"As a result of the rapid spread of the Corona Virus we are all now experiencing unprecedented and ever-changing living and business environments. Our sympathies go out to all those whose health has been directly or indirectly affected by it. Some colleagues have already gone through severe health problems, others are still not well. We wish them all a fast return to full health.

ILAB will do everything in its power to keep affiliates up to date on relevant events and information as it comes to light.

ILAB is here and listening – we want to help! Like you the ILAB Committee are uncertain as to what is going to emerge in the new world as a result of the impact of COVID-19, how long the current situation will continue or what the results will be, but we want to assure you that we are all working to support you through these testing times.

You can contact me, any member of the ILAB committee or Angelika Elstner at any time!

We will get through this together. On the bright side there will undoubtedly be some new ideas and opportunities that become clear, no doubt we will learn new skills and coping strategies during this time and in the meantime Amor Librorum Nos Unit...  Let’s support each other and we will emerge all the stronger for it."

News | April 8, 2020
Courtesy of Peter Harrington

Ulugh Beg’s Tabulae long ac. lat. stellarum fixarum, the crowning achievement of Islamic astronomy.

London — A selection of 85 books and manuscripts that offer an enticing selection of some of the most sought after and desirable works by leading lights of the Islamic and Arabic-speaking world.

According to Pom Harrington, owner of Peter Harrington, “Our Abu Dhabi 2020 catalogue reflects the incredible breadth of interest of collectors from the Arabian Gulf. It has been curated over several months to showcase selections of some of the best-loved literature and poetry, as well as seminal works of luminaries of Islamic astronomy and medicine. The collection also includes highly unusual and collectable manuscripts and guides. These document the advent of pivotal industries and the development of city infrastructure that marked the emergence of the Arabian Peninsula as a modern and dynamic economical region in the 20th century.

The selection was curated for the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair which was due to take place in the United Arab Emirates in mid-April. The fair has since been postponed to May 2021.

“There is quite a significant tradition of book collecting in the Middle East,” explains Pom Harrington. “It’s certainly not a recent phenomenon but we have seen increasing growth in recent years. Most of the interest we see is in books written about the Arabian Peninsula – particularly first-hand travel accounts from the 16th to early 20th century. Additionally, manuscripts and maps that document the development of the peninsula in the early and mid-20th century are also highly sought after – this includes maps on trade and shipping routes, political developments, oil exploration and so on.

“There is also a strong interest in early photography of the region. Works that document Mecca and Medina or early city infrastructure continue to be very popular. Additionally, the region has a highly and broadly educated population and a significant amount of institutional patronage, so landmark economical, philosophical or literary works from the Western canon are also sought after by Middle Eastern collectors,” added Pom.

Peter Harrington’s Abu Dhabi 2020 Catalogue includes books of fascinating provenance and scarcity, almost all of which are rare first editions, presentation copies inscribed by the authors to personal friends and acquaintances, or sumptuously illuminated and illustrated works.

Highlights include:

•    An inscribed first edition of Khalil Gibran’s Twenty Drawings – the first and only collection of the Lebanese poet’s drawings. No other inscribed copies have been found listed in auction records. (£12,500)

•    A first edition and very scarce presentation copy of Khalil Gibran’s well-loved masterpiece The Prophet. Signed or inscribed copies of the first printing of The Prophet are very scarce – only two other copies can be traced. (£12,500)

•    Highly detailed planning documents of Jeddah Water Supply with the inscription “To A.A. / From D.R.B.”. Very rare – no other copies have been located or references found. D.R. B was David Ross Balfour, who led the project as a partner in his father’s civil engineering firm, D. Balfour and Son. The recipient is most likely Ahmad Ashmawi, Assistant Director of Gellatly Hankey’s Jeddah office. Ashmawi attended the inauguration in 1947, where he presented the scheme to Emir Saud on behalf of Gellatly Hankey and Balfour. (£17,500)

•    An outstanding presentation copy of Seven Pillars of Wisdom from T. E. Lawrence to his solicitor Edward Eliot, inscribed on the first blank, “E. G. Eliot from T. E. ‘Lawrence’. The book is a personal and emotive narrative of Lawrence’s own role in the Arab Revolt and possibly the only presentation copy signed in Lawrence's "true" name. (£85,000)

•    Part V of The Canon of Medicine by Ibn Sina, known in the West as Avicenna – often regarded as the most influential writer in the history of medicine. (£75,000)

•    The crowning achievement of Islamic astronomy, Ulugh Beg’s Tabulae long ac. lat. stellarum fixarum (£38,500)

•    First edition of Charles M. Doughty’s Travels in Arabia Deserta. His famous account, which comprises almost 1,000 pages of painstaking detail, was much favoured by T. E. Lawrence, who used it as his main guidebook to the region nearly 30 years later. (£1,950)

•    A rare travel guide to the region in Arabic for oil company employees of the Iraqi Petroleum Company. The company was formed in 1925 and began to grab concessions across the region throughout the 1930s and 1940s. (£2,250)

•    A first edition, presentation copy inscribed by Gertrude Bell of Hafiz, Shams al-Din Muhammad. Poems from the Divan. Bell’s translation received a favourable critical reception on its publication and was long regarded as the best free-verse translation into English of the revered Persian poet. This is the only true presentation copy inscribed at the time of publication that has been able to be traced. (£8,750)

•    A striking and handsome Library Edition set of Richard F. Burton’s translation of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night. Illustrated by a series of 71 original illustrations reproduced from the original pictures in oils specially painted by Albert Letchford, the 12-volume set retains the imposing box which has kept it in lovely condition. (£12,500)

•    Large and sumptuously illuminated Qur’an from the 17th-century Mughal period in India (£62,000)

•    Classic Chinese Qur’an in Thirty Sections from the 18th century (£50,000)

The Abu Dhabi 2020 catalogue is presented in two sections – the first with material relating to the Islamic and Arabic speaking world as noted above, and the second with highlights of Western literature.

•    Highlights from the Western section include Napoleon I’s manuscript notes on reading Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations (£250,000)
•    A particularly handsome set of Blaeu’s Grooten Atlas (Atlas Major) - hailed as “the greatest and finest atlas ever published” (£750,000)
•    A first edition of the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (£225,000).

All items in this catalogue will be available for sale online at www.peterharrington.co.uk

While our stores in Mayfair and Chelsea are temporarily closed on account of the evolving Covid-19 pandemic, our online store is open and our specialists are available to give consultations by Zoom video chat or FaceTime – buyers can email mail@peterharrington.co.uk to set up an appointment, or if they have any other questions.

Peter Harrington’s mail order delivery service is also fully operational and all national and international online orders are being fulfilled as normal.

April 7, 2020
Courtesy of LiveAuctioneers and Susanin’s Auctions

Yaacov Agam (Israeli, b. 1928-), Nine X Three X Five, color serigraph, 1987. Signed LR and numbered H.C. 3/6, coming up in Susanin’s April 21, 2020 auction. Estimate: $150-250

New York – LiveAuctioneers, whose online bidding platform is used by more than 6,000 auction houses and reaches millions of bidders worldwide, is offering special assistance both to clients and charitable organizations as COVID-19 continues to wield its devastating impact on businesses and communities.
 
“The team at LiveAuctioneers is committed to helping auction houses navigate the unprecedented circumstances that are restricting their ability to conduct in-person gallery previews and sales,” said LiveAuctioneers CEO Phil Michaelson. “Auction house owners are extremely concerned about the welfare of their customers, employees and communities, so many are replacing in-person sales with online-only events on LiveAuctioneers.com. They’re taking these steps to sustain their local businesses and keep team members employed, while also doing their part to flatten the curve. At LiveAuctioneers, we’ve immediately implemented supportive measures that bring in more buyers, relieve some of the financial pressures auction houses may be feeling, and generate proceeds for COVID-19 relief efforts.”
 
The LiveAuctioneers stimulus package includes waiving listing fees through April 30 for any auction company’s first automated, online-only auction facilitated by LiveAuctioneers, and creating a custom website for the client at no charge.
 
For those auction houses that may be short-staffed or working remotely, LiveAuctioneers’ cloud technology is making it possible for them to run their auctions with minimal overhead while reaching millions of online auction bidders. Streamlined capabilities include:

●      Automated bidder approvals: Global approval settings enable auction houses to automatically approve bidders based on custom criteria they set.
●      Online payment collection: LiveAuctioneers Payments allows bidders to pay for purchases with credit card.
●      Automated payments: Funds from winning bidders with credit cards on file can be automatically collected through LiveAuctioneers’ Autopay function.
●      Postsale channels: Unsold auction merchandise can get another chance via LiveAuctioneers’ Buy-it-Now and Live-to-eBay solutions.
●      Instant communication with bidders: LiveAuctioneers’ new Announcement feature allows auction houses to share critical updates with bidders through on-page messages and email alerts, such as updates on shipping and pick-up.
 
To give bidders an additional incentive to bid online, all new-bidder first purchases made through April 30 will generate a substantial charitable donation from LiveAuctioneers. Eighty percent of LiveAuctioneers’ proceeds from first-time online purchases (*conditions apply) will be donated to organizations supporting COVID-19 response efforts, including the World Health Organization COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund. Learn more at https://www.liveauctioneers.com/flattenthecurve/.   

Auctioneers who would like to learn more about automated online-only auctions are encouraged to contact LiveAuctioneers by calling 888-600-BIDS (2437), ext. 2; or emailing support@liveauctioneers.com. Anyone who would like to stay inside and support local businesses, with a portion of proceeds going to COVID-19 relief, can see upcoming auctions of art, jewelry, collectibles and more at https://www.liveauctioneers.com/.

* First-time customers only, limit of one per household. Applicable to first item purchased now through April 30, 2020 12AM EDT. Eighty percent of LiveAuctioneers’ net revenue from the first item won will be donated to charity. Maximum donation of $1,000.00 per household.

Auctions | April 6, 2020

Virgil Finlay's The Thief of Forthe, Weird Tales magazine cover, July 1937 (estimate: $20,000-30,000).

Dallas, TX – An extraordinary selection of artwork used on pulp magazine covers, from artists like Virgil Finlay, Margaret Brundage, Hugh Joseph Ward and Norman Saunders, are among the top attractions in Heritage Auctions’ Illustration Art Auction April 24 in Dallas, Texas.

The 414-lot sale also will include artwork by legendary pin-up artists, including Patrick Nagel, Gil Elvgren and Alberto Vargas, as well as an impressive array from the Golden Age of Illustration Art.

“Pulp art is enormously popular right now,” Heritage Auctions Vice President Todd Hignite said. “This sale offers a very strong selection from some of the most popular and important Pulp artists, some classic images from the genre. The range of images offers elite collections for Pulp collectors of all levels.”

The auction includes three Weird Tales Magazine covers: Virgil Finlay The Thief of Forthe, Weird Tales magazine cover, July 1937 (estimate: $20,000-30,000), Lee Brown Coye, The Vampire, Weird Tales magazine cover, July 1947 (estimate: $8,000-12,000) and Margaret Brundage The Slithering Shadow, Weird Tales pulp magazine cover, September 1933 (estimate: $20,000-25,000). Finlay was central to the development of science fiction illustration – in The Thief of Forthe his inventive compositions and dramatic renderings perfectly display the artist’s mastery. Coye’s The Vampire is an extremely rare cover by an artist whose work is rarely encountered and who focused on Gothic Pulp illustrations. This auction includes five Coye lots which never have been offered previously at auction from the same private collection. Brundage always manages to capture her audience with her dramatic rendering of women as seen in The Slithering Shadow.

Other Pulp highlights in the sale include:

    •    Hugh Joseph Ward Desert Madness, Spicy Adventure Stories magazine cover, May 1935 (estimate: $30,000-50,000)
    •    Norman Saunders Murder's Little Helper, Black Mask cover, September 1950 (estimate: $8,000-12,000)

The sale features a strong selection from the Golden Age of Illustration Art. Fresh to the auction market, Haddon Hubbard Sundblom Sprite Boy, Coca-Cola advertisement, 1949 (estimate: $10,000-15,000) is a wonderful example of famed Coca-Cola illustrator Haddon Hubbard Sundblom, and comes directly from its exhibition at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Also offered are several examples of Johnny Gruelle’s Raggedy Ann illustrations straight from the family of the publisher, including this delightful cover: Johnny Gruelle Raggedy Ann's Fairy Stories book cover, 1934 (estimate: $5,000-7,000), and the first offering from the Dixon Ticonderoga Collection, Kenneth Pauling Riley’s They Raised a Great Shout (estimate: $10,000-15,000), which features Ethan Allen during the Battle of Ticonderoga, a pivotal moment in the American Revolutionary War.

From one of the most popular pin-up artists comes Patrick Nagel Untitled, 1982 (estimate: $60,000-80,000). Nagel’s signature style of images of beautiful women, often with dark or bright red lips and dark hair and eyebrows, captures the roots of early 20th-century graphic design, and has been utilized extensively in fashion and music, including on the cover of Duran Duran’s Rio album. This acrylic on canvas, measuring 40 by 30 inches, is signed and dated lower right and appears on page 76 of The Art of Patrick Nagel (Mark Editions, 1985).

Three of the top lots in the sale are by noted American pin-up artist Gil Elvgren, whose work was popular in advertising and illustration. The top Elvgren lots in the sale include:

    •    Gil Elvgren A Put-Up Job, Brown & Bigelow calendar illustration, 1955 (estimate: $40,000-60,000), oil on canvas reproduced as figure No. 279 in Gil Elvgren All His Glamorous American Pin-Ups by Charles G Martignette and Louis K. Meisel (Taschen, 1999).
    •    Gil Elvgren The Ace of Hearts (estimate: $30,000-50,000) is one of the artist’s most popular images, oil on canvas from the IRI Collection.
    •    Gil Elvgren Neat Trick, 1953 (estimate: $30,000-50,000) also comes from the IRI Collection, and was reproduced as figure 320 in Gil Elvgren All His Glamorous American Pin-Ups by Charles G. Martignette and Louis K. Meisel (Taschen, 1999). An original 1969 calendar accompanies this lot.

Other top pin-up lots in the sale include, but are not limited to:

    •    Enoch Bolles Dancer, Breezy Stories magazine cover, August 1935 (estimate: $25,000-35,000)
    •    Patrick Nagel Standing Nude, Playboy illustration (estimate: $20,000-30,000)
    •    Alberto Vargas Legacy Nude (estimate: $20,000-30,000)
    •    Alberto Vargas Merry Widow, 1951 (estimate: $20,000-30,000)

Events | April 6, 2020
Courtesy of Spencer W Stuart

What is a Collection Lifecycle? Spencer W Stuart, Collections Advisor, to give one-hour webinar on Lifecycles: Collecting & Collections program.

Friday, April 24, 1:00PM EDT Tickets available through EventBrite: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/lifecycles-collecting-collections-tickets-101250839988

Spencer W Stuart, Collections Advisor, is pleased to announce a one-hour webinar on Lifecycles: Collecting & Collections. The one-hour webinar will be drawing from my three-part Lifecycles program that focuses on collecting fine art and private libraries.

Lifecycles covers the complete timeline of a collector and the lifecycle of their collections. It discusses the initial attractions that move one to collect through to the steps one must take to ensure a collection’s legacy beyond one’s very personal time and place.

About Spencer W Stuart, Collections Advisor

Spencer provides advisory services to collections both private and institutional, helping to facilitate collection development, cataloguing and deaccession strategies. His specialities include rare books, prints and photography. For more information go to spencerwstuart.ca.
Spencer holds a master’s degree in the History of Art from the Courtauld Institute in London, England (recipient of the Director’s Award). Upon graduation he took a position with Bonhams Auctioneers where he worked closely with the North American Rare Books and Manuscripts department in Toronto and New York.

He is also an alumnus of the Colorado Antiquarian Book Seminars and the Rare Book School (University of Virginia).

In concert with his advising, Spencer presents a monthly segment on Sheryl MacKay's CBC Radio program North by Northwest as a Book Historian.

 

Auctions | April 1, 2020

Dallas, TX – A lithograph screenprint from Roy Lichtenstein’s popular Reflection series will vie for top-lot honors in Heritage Auctions Prints and Multiples Auction, April 21. The sale will feature artwork by many coveted artists, including Andy Warhol, KAWS, Wayne Thiebaud and Pablo Picasso.
 
Leading the sale is Roy Lichtenstein’s Reflection on Crash (estimate: $100,000-150,000), part of the artist’s Reflection Series. The lot exemplifies Lichtenstein’s objective to obscure subject matter, appropriated from previous works and comic book references, with reflective streaks exploring themes of light and reflection. The print is a rarity, editioned No. 57 out of 68, along with 16 artist’s proofs.
 
“Roy Lichtenstein’s Reflection series is important enough to have a permanent place in the Tate Museum, and this is truly a museum-worthy piece,” Heritage Auctions Modern & Contemporary Art Director Holly Sherratt said. “His works have enjoyed tremendous success at previous auctions at Heritage, and Reflection on a Crash is a beautiful print, a throwback to his 1960s pop art around which a strong collection can be built.”
 
Another highlight is KAWS’ Seeing (estimate $40,000-60,000). A varying take on the artist’s well-known BFF figure, in which the eyes have been replaced with LED lights allowing the alloy and ceramic sculpture to operate as a glow in the dark lamp. Seeing, which is editioned No. 69 of 50, accompanies KAWS’ Tension Portfolio, 2019 (estimate: $60,000-80,000), a series of 10 screen prints in the artist’s distinct style, each of which is signed, numbered and dated in pencil along the lower edge.
 
Another top lot is Coeurs Volants by Marcel Duchamp (estimate $40,000-60,000). Translating to “Fluttering Hearts,” the overlying red and blue hearts play on theories of psychological optics. A handsome work by David Hockney rounds out the highlights. Sun, from the artist’s Weather Series, utilizes Japanese influences to depict various stylizations of atmospheric events.
 
Other top lots include; two Andy Warhol Portraits, one of Mick Jagger (estimate $40,000-60,000) and one of Joseph Kennedy II (estimate: $30,000-50,000), a Wayne Theibaud Dark Cake (estimate $20,000-30,000) print and a Pablo Picasso ceramic (estimate $10,000-15,000). Other top artists include Jeff Koons, Robert Motherwell, Alex Katz, Richard Diebenkorn, Keith Haring, Robert Indiana and more.
 
Bidding is open for Heritage Auctions’ April 21 Prints and Multiples Auction. For more information and images, or to view or download a printable catalog of the sale, visit HA.com/8023.
 
Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world’s largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, San Francisco, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Geneva, Amsterdam and Hong Kong.

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