Quantcast
Channel: Swann Galleries News
Viewing all 1212 articles
Browse latest View live

Identifying Types of Photographic Prints

$
0
0

Keavy Handley-Byrne of our Photographs & Photobooks department has put together a cheat sheet for identifying some of the more common types of photographs we handle.

 

A cyanotype print is made by brushing iron salts, which are light-sensitive, onto a sheet of plain paper. These iron salts oxidize in the light and turn a brilliant Prussian blue color. We see many industrial and amateur photographs from the Victorian era to the 1920s using this simple technique. The beautiful blue prints appeal to vernacular photography collectors, and have been rediscovered by contemporary artists.

 

20 photographs documenting the construction of a trestle bridge in France, cyanotypes, 1899-1902. Sold April 19, 2016 for $15,000.

 

The vivid color prints of a dye transfer print were originally used for advertising. Considered one of the most stable color printing techniques, they can often be distinguished from chromogenic prints by the paper base or stock. Dye transfer prints are made on fiber-base paper. These photographs have a rich color palette and occasionally there are faint registration lines at the edge of the image area where the three color negatives used in this process do not align. Popularized by William Eggleston, the technique has been discontinued.

 

 

Ernst Haas, The Creation, complete portfolio with 10 dye-transfer prints, 1962-81, printed 1981. Sold October 15, 2015 for $6,000.

 

Another stable color photography technique, cibachrome prints can be distinguished from dye transfer prints by their bold color palette, plastic-like paper base and very subtle metallic appearance. These are favored by Nan Goldin, whose prints have a luminous quality and vivid color range.

 

Nan Goldin, Brian in the cabana, Puetro Juarez, Mexico, oversized cibachrome print, 1982. Sold February 14, 2017 for $8,450.

 

Black-and-white gelatin silver prints are best associated with classical photography from the twentieth century. Using a loupe, these prints are often distinguished by the film grain, which appears as tiny irregular shapes in the image area. Gelatin silver prints graphically render pictures in bold lines, shapes, textures and forms, making it a preferred technique of Ansel Adams, Edward Weston, Harry Callahan, Dorothea Lange and a host of others.

 

Danny Lyon, Danny Lyon, complete portfolio with 30 silver prints, New York, 1962-79, printed 1979. Sold April 20, 2017 for $30,000.

 

Photogravures are made by a “photomechanical” process, and is a form of intaglio printmaking. Photogravures can be distinguished by a plate mark surrounding the image area, which reveals depressions from the copper plate. Alfred Stieglitz’s Camera Work magazine employed the finest photogravures, and this was also the preferred technique of Edward Curtis in creating The North American Indian.

 

Alfred Stieglitz, Camera Work, Number 36, with 16 photogravures, New York, 1911. Sold April 20, 2017 for $20,000.

 

Auctions of Photographs & Photobooks at Swann frequently boast works made by these popular techniques, as well as many less common methods.

The post Identifying Types of Photographic Prints appeared first on Swann Galleries News.


Black and White All Over: The Riddle of Classical Photography

$
0
0

The following was written by Vice President and Director of Photographs & Photobooks, Daile Kaplan:

 

I love looking at photographs in both black-and-white and color iterations. Long before streaming existed, TV programs and noir films were produced in black-and-white, and print media was devoid of color. All of this was readily accepted by the public. Black-and-white, or classical fine art photography, was the visual language of the twentieth century. Although silver prints were often quite small, approximately eight by ten inches, they still presented myriad opportunities for creative pictorial expression.

 

Jimmy De Sana, book maquette for Submission, with 31 silver prints, 1979.
Sold April 17, 2014 for $22,500.

 

Today it’s hard to find pictures that don’t appear digitally, in color, or that aren’t selfies. Of course, images that utilize a full chromatic palette can be pretty astounding. But the whites, grays and blacks of a photograph made by hand, in a darkroom, often conveys a distinctly transformed reality. The bold graphic qualities of a black-and-white photograph render form, line, shape and texture in essentially new ways.

 

Ansel Adams, Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, mural-size silver print, 1941, reprocessed 1948, printed early- to mid-1950s. Sold February 25, 2016 for $221,000.

 

Take the work of Ansel Adams, for example. He pre-visualized the image Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico; he saw the picture in his mind’s eye before it existed on film or paper. Moonrise is a profound visual poem—tombstones in a cemetery subtly lit by moonlight—that speaks to our common humanity.

 

Lewis W. Hine, Safety-man coming up on mooring mast, Empire State Building, silver print, 1930. Sold December 12, 2013 for $21,250.

 

Photography has always relied on advances in technology and optics. Adams himself was famous for developing a set of principles, known as “the zone system,” that articulated his masterful technique. However the attention he devoted to creating a photographic print wasn’t just a geeky exercise, it was a personal practice that drew from his longstanding belief in the inherent beauty and power of the photographic object: the print.

 

The next auction of Photographs & Photobooks at Swann Galleries will be held on October 19, 2017. To consign quality materials, please contact Daile Kaplan at dkaplan@swanngalleries.com.

The post Black and White All Over: The Riddle of Classical Photography appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

Specialists in the Field: Sarah Shelburne at Dia: Beacon

$
0
0

One of the best parts of working at Swann is the ability to be surrounded by incredible varieties of art collecting and witness their intersection within our gallery. Our specialists (who are each, at heart, huge nerds) share interests across fields and enjoy educating ourselves, and this has primed us to recognize conceptual connections between seemingly dissimilar items when out in the wider art world.

 

Above: Sol LeWitt, Drawing #411B, #411D, #411E. At Dia: Beacon.
Below: P.C., Cinzano. Sold May 25, 2017 for $1,063.

 

It was in this frame of mind that I visited Dia: Beacon last month. Dia: Beacon, a cookie box printing factory turned world-renowned contemporary art center in Beacon, New York, houses nearly 300,000 square feet of exhibition space devoted to the works of artistic minds such as Dan Flavin, Sol Lewitt, Robert Irwin, Donald Judd and John Chamberlain. It is, in short, an art oasis in the Hudson Valley.

 

Left: Richard Serra, Union of the Torus and the Sphere, 2001. At Dia: Beacon.
Right: Adolphe Mouron Cassandre, Normandie, 1935. Sold May 25, 2017 for $22,500.

 

With the intention of quietly consuming a healthy dose of contemporary art on a weekend, the result was my mind racing between the monumental works art in front of me, and the poster design mediums with which I am most familiar.

 

Left: Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #235 The location of three points, 1974.
Right: Charles Kuhn, Telephone International, 1930. Sold May 25, 2017 for $2,500.

 

The conceptual nature of the art in Beacon lends itself to this train of thought. The mediums themselves are recognizable in advertising, such as the fluorescent tube lights which make up Dan Flavin’s iconic light sculptures, which were advertised with similar dynamism by Orsi in the 1940s. Similarly, the geometric elements and color schemes of many of the works are graphic design fundamentals, echoed in advertising and propaganda from the last century.

 

Left: Dan Flavin, Untitled, 1969. At Dia: Beacon.
Right: Orsi, Lamp Flourescente / Philips, circa 1940. Sold May 25, 2017 for $4,000.

 

 

The post Specialists in the Field: Sarah Shelburne at Dia: Beacon appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

Gail Chisholm: A Life in Posters

$
0
0

Nearly a quarter of our March 1 auction of Vintage Posters is devoted to highlights from the collection of renowned poster dealer and aficionado Gail Chisholm. The sale will open with more than 130 premier examples ranging from fin de siècle literary advertisements to World War II propaganda, which have been organized into their own catalogue. Proceeds from the sale of these posters will benefit one of Gail’s favorite non-profit organizations.

 

Lot 29: Georges Dorival, Vers le Mont – Blanc, group of three posters, 1928. Estimate $8,000 to $12,000.

 

Gail Chisholm was beloved in the poster community for her impeccable taste and sense of humor. The colorful cross section of twentieth-century posters is led by a suite of three works—unique to the travel poster genre—by Georges Dorival, titled Vers le Mont – Blanc, 1928. The set displays the majestic peak throughout the day to lure all potential tourists, from early risers to night owls. Breathtaking travel advertisements for Scotland include two depicting holes on the famed Gleneagles golf course—The “Howe o’ Hope” and The “Heich o’ Fash. Powerful graphic works by Adolphe Mouron Cassandre include Chemin de Fer du Nord, 1929, and Paris, 1935.

 

Gail Chisholm in her gallery.

 

Gail Chisholm moved from a small town in Virginia to New York City at the age of 20. She devoted the next 42 years of her life to a marvelous mixture of art, culture, history and commerce. Her gallery operated from 1975 to 1994 in the West Village and from 1995 to 2017 in Chelsea.

 

Lot 75: Charles Loupot, Cointreau, 1930. Estimate $5,000 to $7,500.

 

An unmistakable theme in Chisholm’s collection is a concentration of tantalizing advertisements for food and drink. Two posters from Charles Loupot’s iconic 1930 series for Cointreau demonstrate the artist’s mastery by using the color of the beverage as a thematic element while also reminding the viewer of the fruit from which it derives. Additional culinary highlights include J. Stall’s Champagne Joseph Perrier, circa 1929 and two featuring lobsters.

 

Lot 69: Dorfi (Albert Dorfinant), Quinquina Duhomard, circa 1935. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.

 

The void created by Gail’s absence will never be filled. At the end of her life, Gail was comforted by the knowledge that the posters in her collection would find good homes. In accordance with her wishes, proceeds from the sale of these posters will benefit Planned Parenthood of New York City.

Browse the full catalogue.

The post Gail Chisholm: A Life in Posters appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings

$
0
0

 

Diego Rivera’s scarce lithograph El sueño (La noche de los pobres), 1932, leads a vibrant section of Latin-American art in this dynamic sale. Opening the auction is a run of works by important Impressionist artists, with notable collaborative lithographs by Claude Monet and George W. Thornley. Also available are selections by modern European visionaries including Pablo Picasso’s elegant lithograph La Colombe, 1949, and unique watercolors by artists like Georges Braque. Headlining the American section are masterful etchings by Edward Hopper, following our record-setting sale of The Lonely House, 1923.

 

Lot 265: Diego Rivera, El sueño (La noche de los pobres), lithograph, 1932. Estimate $20,000 to $30,000.

 

Lot 549: Henry Moore, Half Figure, bronze with patina, 1952. Estimate $30,000 to $50,000.

 

Lot 302: Amedeo Modigliani, Femme nue, pencil, circa 1915. Estimate $40,000 to $60,000.

 

Lot 301: Amedeo Modigliani, Femme nue, trois quarts, debout, pencil, circa 1915. Estimate $50,000 to $80,000.

 

Lot 544: Fortunato Depero, New York, gouache on board, 1930.

 

Lot 145: Edward Hopper, House by a River, etching, 1919. Estimate $100,000 to $150,000.

 

Lot 316: Pablo Picasso, La Colombe, lithograph, 1949. Estimate $50,000 to $80,000.

 

For more information on the sale, contact a Specialist in the Prints & Drawings department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: Autographs

$
0
0

Gracing this sale is a poem completed by Walt Whitman on his deathbed, transcribed by a secretary and signed, with holograph edits. It was his last poem, entitled A Thought of Columbus, 1892. We feature a 1778 letter signed by George Washington, planning the Sullivan Expedition against Loyalists and enemy Iroquois at the frontier; an autograph note signed in 1772 by Benedict Arnold; and a 1470 document signed by Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. Also in the sale are letters and manuscripts by writers, musicians and artists.

 

George Washington, Letter Signed, as Commander in Chief, planning the Sullivan Expedition, “Head Quarters,” Fredericksburg, Virginia, 1778. Estimate $25,000 to $35,000.

Thomas Jefferson, Letter Signed as Governor to Major-General Nathanael Greene, Richmond, 1781. Estimate $15,000 to $25,000.

 

Walt Whitman, signature & corrections on a secretary’s manuscript draft of his last poem, A Thought of Columbus, Camden, NJ, 1892. Estimate $20,000 to $30,000.

 

Louis Armstrong, two Autograph Letters Signed to Erich Kauffmann, his lip salve purveyor, 1965-70. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500.

 

Thomas A. Edison, Autograph Letter Signed to Western Union President William Orton, Menlo Park, 1878. Estimate $10,000 to $20,000.

 

Mohandas K. Gandhi, Autograph Letter Signed to Savak R. Bomanji, Segaon, Wardha, 1939. Estimate $4,000 to $6,000.

 

 

For more information on the sale, contact Specialist Marco Tomaschett in the Autographs department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Autographs appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: Printed & Manuscript African Americana

$
0
0

 

This powerful auction on March 29 encompasses a wide range of the African-American experience, from letters by Frederick Douglass to his friend and fellow diplomat Ebenezer Bassett, to posters from the Civil Rights Movement and the Black Panthers. Highlights include a pair of slippers said to be made by legendary seamstress Elizabeth Keckley in 1865 for cabinet member Gideon Welles to wear at Lincoln’s second inauguration.

Several remarkable lots not previously seen at auction include an 1838 letter by the early African-American abolitionist David Ruggles, attempting to launch a Committee of Vigilance to support the Underground Railroad in Syracuse, NY, and a previously unknown poster for an appearance by Martin Luther King in Paris while on a fundraising tour for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The sale also includes a poignant 1854 letter from Moses Walker, an enslaved Georgia man, to his mother in North Carolina, asking after his brother and discussing the recent birth and death of his son. Important photographs bring the sale to life.

Frederick Douglass, signed albumen cabinet card, by George Kendall Warren, circa 1879. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

Letters concerning Gabriel Johnson, an enslaved man at Mount Vernon, 1842-45. Estimate $12,000 to $18,000.

 

Moses Walker, letter to his enslaved mother, Hootenville, Georgia, January 1854. Estimate $12,000 to $18,000.

Papers of an early Pennsylvania abolitionist, including the kidnapping case of John Davis, 1791-1800. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

David Ruggles, Letter Signed, to Ezra Stiles, urging the establishment of a Committee of Vigilance in Syracuse, New York, 1838. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000.

Malcolm X, autograph letter from prison to a member of the Nation of Islam, one of the first to use his new name, 1950. Estimate $20,000 to $30,000.

 

Poster for a French appearance by Dr. King & Harry Belafonte, Paris, 1966. Estimate $2,500 to $3,500.

 

Buddy Esquire, group of 18 printed handbills, 1980-83. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.

 

 

For more information on the sale, contact a specialist in the Printed & Manuscript African Americana Department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Printed & Manuscript African Americana appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

Vintage Posters 101

$
0
0

So you’ve fallen in love with a vintage poster. What next? Here are some of the most important things to consider when talking about, looking for, and decorating with vintage posters. We used some exemplary works from our archives, as well as installation shots from a few of our recent exhibitions.

 

Sarah Shelburne of the Vintage Posters department inspects a work in the Collection of Harry C. Meyerhoff.

 

Anatomy of a Poster

Around the edge of most posters is the margin. The width of this border varies from poster to poster, but should not be trimmed off; not only is this most often where the printer’s information is found, it is also considered an integral part of the poster itself. A missing margin is considered a flaw.

 

James Montgomery Flagg, Wake Up, America!, 1917.
Sold August 3, 2016 for $4,500.

 

Some posters include a blank space where text could be inserted at a later date. This was most common in advertisements for performers who might appear at different venues, or products sold at different stores. Thus it is possible to see two posters for a performance which appear identical in image, but bear the name of a different theater and date. These are referred to as variants.

 

Alphonse Mucha, Parfumerie Gellé Frères / Sylvanis Essence, 1899.
Sold January 26, 2017 for $27,500.

 

The earliest full-color posters were all created via the process of stone lithography, in which different stones were created for each color of the poster and the image was printed in layers. Subsequent printing styles include zinc (or metal) plate lithography, photo-offset, silkscreen and letterpress.

 

Andy Warhol, Flowers, silkscreen, 1964. Sold February 5, 2013 for $3,600.

 

Is my poster real?

Determining the authenticity of a vintage poster is not always easy to do, but there are a handful of techniques you can use to make an initial assessment. If the poster purportedly originated around the turn of the century, the paper should have a texture reminiscent of newsprint. If it feels or looks like the paper from a glossy magazine, it is a more recent print.

It is not unusual for a reproduction of a poster to actually have that information printed in the bottom margin. Regrettably, this isn’t always the case, but it is worth a quick look.

Posters that are supposed to be stone lithographs will not look pixilated under a loupe, or magnifying glass. The process of stone lithography applies a solid layer of color to the paper, whereas posters that are digitally reproduced all have the tell-tale pixels when seen under magnification. The tricky part is that some posters were originally printed photographically, so seeing pixels is not always a way of proving authenticity.

 

Vivid, luscious destinations in the exhibition of our Rare & Important Travel Posters auction on October 26, 2017.

 

Taking care of your poster

Posters are delicate. By their nature, they are ephemeral and not intended for longevity. Collectors have different opinions on proper treatment and preservation but the American standard is to have a poster mounted onto linen. This will help not only to stabilize the paper, but also allows conservators to make any necessary restoration on the piece. The process, when done professionally, is museum-quality and fully reversible. European collectors (specifically the Swiss) prefer not to have their posters linen-backed. When it comes time to sell a vintage poster, there is not often a difference in value between those that are mounted and those that are not (although there are some exceptions to this rule).

One universally accepted “no-no” is to permanently adhere a poster to its backing. It was quite popular in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s to have posters dry-mounted to a board so that they would lie flat in their frames. This process is irreversible and posters that have been dry-mounted tend to lose as much as 50% of their value when it comes time to sell.

 

Many, many posters mounted on linen on display for our August 3, 2016 auction of Vintage Posters.

 

Framing a poster behind glass is heavy and risks tearing the poster if the frame drops and the glass cracks. Using plexiglass is a less expensive, safer way to go. If you plan to hang your poster on a wall where it will be exposed to natural light you should also consider using UV (ultra-violet) plexi, which will prevent fading.

 

Posters under safe glass from our January 26, 2017 auction of Alphonse Mucha & Art Nouveau: The Harry C. Meyerhoff Collection.

 

Consign, or use our archive for further research. You can also contact the department about upcoming auctions.

 

The post Vintage Posters 101 appeared first on Swann Galleries News.


A Look Inside the Catalogue: Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books

$
0
0

This sale on March 8 will feature an extensive selection of early Spanish books on a variety of subjects including agriculture, heraldry and genealogy, history, horses, law, literature, medicine, theology and travel. Printed circa 1496-97,Arte de Ajedres by Luis de Lucena is the earliest surviving manual of chess, leading a sizable section of incunabula.

Scientific highlights include the first illustrated editions of two early astronomical texts: the 1478 Sphaera mundiby Johannes Sacrobosco, and the 1482 Poeticon Astronomicon by Caius Julius Hyginus. The travel section contains scarce works on missionary journeys to the East, particularly accounts of ill-fated ventures in Japan such as José Sicardo’s 1698 Christiandad del Japón.

 

Lot 113: Luis de Lucena, Arte de Ajedres, first edition of the earliest extant manual on modern chess, Salamanca, circa 1496-97. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

Lot 156: Pedro de Gracia Dei, Blasón General y Nobleza del Universo, illuminated manuscript, Spain, circa 1500. Estimate $3,000 to $4,000.

 

Lot 109: Caius Julius Hyginus, Poeticon Astronomicon, first illustrated edition, with 47 half-page woodcuts, Venice, 1482. Estimate $15,000 to $20,000.

Lot 74: Nicolas Chorier, Aloisiæ Sigeæ Toletanæ Satyra Sotadica de Arcanis Amoris et Veneris, 1660s. Estimate $5,000 to $7,000.

 

Lot 176: Pedro de Medina, Libro de grandezas y cosas memorables de España, Alcalá de Henares, 1566. Estimate $3,000 to $5,000.

 

 

Full Catalogue

 

For more information on the sale, contact Specialist Tobias Abeloff in the Books department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: Graphic Design

$
0
0

This popular annual event celebrates innovation in poster design. On May 3 we will offer examples of British Modernism from the 1940s by Frederick Henri Kay Henrion, Patrick Cokayne Keely and Zéró (Hans Schleger). Visionary Georges Lepape is represented by an original maquette promoting a 1924 gala, as well as the poster for the Bal de la Couture Parisienne, 1925. More recent masterpieces include Günther Kieser’s iconic concert poster for The Doors and The Canned Heat, 1968.

 

Georges Lepape, Pour l’Enfance Soirée de Gala Organisée par La Croix Rouge, gouache maquette, 1924. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

Amaldi, I Cavatteri in Nero, O Bleu, gouache maquette. Estimate $800 to $1,200.

 

Andy Warhol, The Chelsea Girls, 1966. Estimate $3,000 to $4,000.

 

Tadanori Yokoo, Having Reached a Climax at the Age of 29, I Was Dead, 1965. Estimate $15,000 to $20,000.

 

Unicum / Zwack Budapest, designer unknown, 1907. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.

 

Gino Boccasile, 50 Gran Rifa de Automoviles Ford, gouache maquette, 1932. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.

 

For more information on the sale contact a specialist in the Vintage Posters department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Graphic Design appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: Printed & Manuscript Americana

$
0
0

Latin Americana includes significant early Mexican printing, with several books published before 1600. Alonso de la Vera Cruz’s Dialectica resolutio cum textu Aristotelis, 1554, is the first printing of Aristotle—or any classical author—in the New World.

Additional early highlights include a rare Pony Express Bible and an 1871 Colorado diary documenting a sheep drive. Sixteen binders of photographs of John F. Kennedy from the estate of his official photographer Cecil Stoughton bring the sale closer to the present day.

Alonso de la Veracruz, Recognitio summularum & Dialectica resolutio cum textu Aristotelis, first editions, bound together, Mexico, 1554. Estimate $40,000 to $60,000.

First printed account of the assassination of Joseph & Hyrum Smith in the Nauvoo Neighbor Extra, Illinois, 1844. Estimate $50,000 to $70,000.

 

Pony Express Bible, issued to employees of Russell, Majors & Waddell, inscribed, New York, 1858. Estimate $7,000 to $10,000.

 

Alexander Hamilton, Observations of Certain Documents…, unauthorized second edition detailing his affair with Maria Reynolds, Philadelphia, 1800. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

Cecil W. Stoughton, 16 albums of photographs taken as JFK’s
official photographer, 1962-63. Estimate $5,000 to $7,500.

 

 

For more information on the sale contact a specialist in the Printed & Manuscript Americana department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Printed & Manuscript Americana appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: African-American Fine Art

$
0
0

Two highlights of this sale on April 5 are significant, vibrant paintings by modernist New York artists. Beauford Delaney’s large Untitled (Village Street Scene), 1948, depicts a Greenwich Village corner in bold impasto; Norman Lewis’sUntitled, 1956, is a mid-career abstraction of a city crowd surrounded by thin veils of pulsating color. An important find is a recently rediscovered tempera painting by Jacob Lawrence of a scene from the War of 1812 from his 1954-56 series, Struggle . . . From the History of the American People.

The auction also features a strong selection of abstract canvases by sought-after contemporary artists, with works by Ed Clark, Sam Gilliam, James Little, Stanley Whitney and Jack Whitten, as well as a scarce photograph from Carrie Mae Weems’s iconic 1989-90 Colored People series, High Yella Girl, from an edition of only three.

 

Norman Lewis, Untitled, oil on canvas, 1956. Estimate $150,000 to $250,000.

 

Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Village Street Scene), oil on canvas, 1948. Estimate $150,000 to $250,000.

 

Sam Gilliam, Untitled, acrylic on canvas, 1972. Estimate $40,000 to $60,000.

 

Charles White, O Freedom, charcoal with crayon & wash on board, 1956. Estimate $200,000 to $300,000.

 

Jacob Lawrence, Tension on the High Seas, egg tempera on board, 1956. Estimate $75,000 to $100,000.

 

Elizabeth Catlett, Head of a Woman, oil on canvas, 1942-44. Estimate $80,000 to $120,000.

 

William H. Johnson, Jitterbugs II, color screenprint & pochoir on board, circa 1941. Estimate $30,000 to $40,000.

 

William H. Johnson, Jitterbugs III, color screenprint & pochoir on board, circa 1941. Estimate $30,000 to $40,000.

 

Hughie Lee-Smith, The Bouquet, oil on board, 1949. Estimate $30,000 to $40,000.

 

Carrie Mae Weems, High Yella Girl, toned silver print with Prestype & frame, 1988-90. Estimate $50,000 to $75,000.

 

 

 

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: African-American Fine Art appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: Printed & Manuscript Americana

$
0
0

Upcoming Highlights on April 12:

Latin Americana includes significant early Mexican printing, with several books published before 1600. Alonso de la Vera Cruz’s Dialectica resolutio cum textu Aristotelis, 1554, is the first printing of Aristotle—or any classical author—in the New World.

Additional early highlights include a rare Pony Express Bible and an 1871 Colorado diary documenting a sheep drive. Sixteen binders of photographs of John F. Kennedy from the estate of his official photographer Cecil Stoughton bring the sale closer to the present day.

Alonso de la Veracruz, Recognitio summularum & Dialectica resolutio cum textu Aristotelis, first editions, bound together, Mexico, 1554. Estimate $40,000 to $60,000.

First printed account of the assassination of Joseph & Hyrum Smith in the Nauvoo Neighbor Extra, Illinois, 1844. Estimate $50,000 to $70,000.

 

Pony Express Bible, issued to employees of Russell, Majors & Waddell, inscribed, New York, 1858. Estimate $7,000 to $10,000.

 

Alexander Hamilton, Observations of Certain Documents…, unauthorized second edition detailing his affair with Maria Reynolds, Philadelphia, 1800. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

Cecil W. Stoughton, 16 albums of photographs taken as JFK’s
official photographer, 1962-63. Estimate $5,000 to $7,500.

 

 

For more information on the sale contact a specialist in the Printed & Manuscript Americana department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Printed & Manuscript Americana appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: Fine Illustrated Books & Graphics

$
0
0

This multifaceted auction on April 26 spans media and disciplines, and features a private collection of important works on East Asian painting and decorative arts. Highlights include John Ayers and Regina Krahl’s three-volume Chinese Ceramics in the Topkapi Museum, 1986, the scarce and desirable Chinese Architecture, 1925, by Osvald Sirén, and six volumes about antique Japanese fabrics with swatches by Kyoto Shoin.

Early twentieth-century graphic design and the fine arts include a never-before-offered trade catalogue of brightly colored wallpaper samples by the legendary designer Jacques-Émile Ruhlmann, circa 1915, and Gustav Klimt’s limited edition tours-de-force Das Werk, 1918, and Eine Nachlese, 1931

 

Jacques-Émile Ruhlmann, wallpaper sample book, with 47 plates of 19 pochoir patterns, circa 1912-18. Estimate $15,000 to $25,000.

 

Gustav Klimt & Max Eisler, Eine Nachlese, with 30 plates by Klimt, Vienna, 1931. Estimate $15,000 to $25,000.

 

C.P. Cavafy, Fourteen Poems, illustrated & signed by David Hockney, London, 1966. Estimate $5,000 to $7,500.

 

For more information on the sale, contact Specialist Christine von der Linn in the Books department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: Fine Illustrated Books & Graphics appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: The Knowing Eye: Photographs & Photobooks

$
0
0

Our April 19 sale features a rare vintage print of Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic Premier at La Scala, Milan, circa 1933, and Frank’s quirky Portrait of art dealer Richard Bellamy, circa 1959. Contemporary artworks include The Most Beautiful Part of a Man’s Body, 1986, by Duane Michals, as well as a deluxe edition of Robert Adams’s From the Missouri West, 1980.

 

Manuel Álvarez Bravo, La Buena Fama Durmiendo, silver print, 1939, printed 1970s. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

Aleksandr Rodchenko, The Poet Vladimir Mayakovsky, silver print, 1924, printed 1994. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000.

 

Peter Hujar, Robert Wilson, Vestry Street, silver print, 1975. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000.

 

Duane Michals, The Most Beautiful Part of a Man’s Body, silver print, 1986. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.

 

 

For more information on the sale, contact a specialist in the Photographs & Photobooks department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter 

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: The Knowing Eye: Photographs & Photobooks appeared first on Swann Galleries News.


Erik Nitsche’s Modernist Vision

$
0
0

One of many highlights in our March 1 sale of Vintage Posters is a run of posters designed by Erik Nitsche in a series of campaigns for General Dynamics. Nitche’s design paved the way towards Modernism and away from overtly literal advertising campaigns. The 19 posters — the largest selection to be offered in a single auction — form part of the Gail Chisholm Collection.

 

Lot 122: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Atoms for Peace, 1955.
Estimate $1,500 to $2,000.

 

Erik Nitsche was a Swiss native who worked in Germany and Paris before moving to the United States in 1934. He was one of many young European immigrants who changed the face of American graphic design, and is best remembered for his series of 29 posters for General Dynamics, where he served as Art Director between 1955 and 1960. His first series, Atoms for Peace, consisted of six posters designed for the General Dynamics exhibition at the International Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy in Geneva in 1955. These images rank among the most impressive corporate identity campaigns of the twentieth century. The campaign issued posters in English, French, German, Hindi, Japanese and Russian — according to Steven Heller at Typotheque, “those nations where atomic energy was being used for peaceful purposes.” Nitsche was charged with elevating “the stature of General Dynamics among other huge American technology firms in attendance, including General Electric, Union Carbide, and Westinghouse.”

 

Lot 119: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Electrodynamics, Sanskrit, from Atoms for Peace, 1955. Estimate $700 to $1,000.

 

As the conference was focusing on peaceful uses of atomic energy, so too did General Dynamics’s posters. Due to pressing national security issues, General Dynamics could not allow any of their products to projects to be depicted on a poster. Thus, Nitsche had to express the corporate mission through allegorical means, using design to convey speed, growth and forward impulsion. He found inspiration in scientific imagery, focusing largely on color gradients and geometric forms to convey these abstract concepts. According to the Cooper HewittAtoms for Peace “melds influences from modernist art with scientific imagery to evoke a dynamic, innovative, and peaceful future.”

 

 

Lot 117: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Hydrodynamics, French, from Atoms for Peace, 1955. Estimate $2,500 to $3,500.

 

Perhaps the most famous image in the series depicts the USS Nautilus, one of the U.S.’s first nuclear-powered submarines. From Typotheque: “It was an indelible logo in its day. Set against a gradated gray background, the shell was a virtual cornucopia of progress. The submarine was not seen as a killing machine, but rather the offspring of progress poised to help the world.” It should be noted that the ongoing project to construct the Nautilus was so top-secret that Nitsche was only provided a basic idea of what the submarine would ultimately look like.

 

Lot 118: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Astrodynamics, Russian, from Atoms for Peace, 1955. Estimate $1,500 to $2,000.

 

Here’s Steven Heller again from Typotheque: “The first series of six posters established a tone for all future General Dynamics graphics, as well as a paradigm, of sorts, for how the marriage of science and engineering would be visualized by kindred companies. Indeed Nitsche’s brand of artful futurism was copied by many others at the time and might be seen today as representative of the so-called ‘Atomic Style’ that emerged in the mid- to late-1950s.” The selection in the March 1 auction features all six of the original Atoms for Peace series from 1955, and 13 from various other campaigns, including the second Atoms for Peace series in 1956 and the Exploring the Universe series of 1958.

 

Lot 124: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Basic Forces, 1956.
Estimate $1,200 to $1,800.

 

Heller continues, “General Dynamics was incorporated in 1953 as the parent for ten different manufacturing firms (among them, Electric Boat, Canadair Limited, Electro Dynamic, General Atomic, Convair, and Stromberg-Carlson) which at that time were administering to the defense needs of the United States. Its products ranged from atomic powered submarines to electric motors for destroyers, to the B-58 supersonic jet bomber and the commercial 880 jet transport. The company was also working in the areas of electronics, astronautics, aero- and hydrodynamics, and nuclear physics.”

 

Lot 126: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Nuclear Fusion, from Exploring the Universe, 1958. Estimate $1,500 to $2,000.

 

Nitsche’s work is recognizable for its uncluttered minimalism and tasteful use of text as a design element. The forms, according to Jesus Diaz of Co.Design, “transcend their symbolism to become almost purely abstract.”

 

Lot 129: Erik Nitsche, General Dynamics / Undersea Frontiers / Electric Boat, circa 1960. Estimate $1,500 to $2,000.

 

In accordance with Gail’s wishes, proceeds from the sale of these posters will benefit one of her favorite non-profit organizations, Planned Parenthood of New York City. Browse the full catalogue.

The post Erik Nitsche’s Modernist Vision appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

The Earliest French Erotica

$
0
0

A titillating section in our March 8 auction of Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books contains two scarce early examples of French erotica.

Lot 75: Michel Millot and Jean L’Ange (attributed to), L’Escole des Filles, third edition of the first work of pornographic fiction in French, Fribourg, 1676. Estimate $8,000 to $12,000.

 

L’Escole des Filles, ou La Philosophie des Dames, which translates to The School for Girls, or Ladies’ Philosophy, is the first work of pornographic fiction in French. It was an early example of the literary genre unfortunately called “Whore Dialogues” that consist of two women, generally one more experienced than the other, discussing sexual exploits.  In her essay, The Politics of Pornography: L’Ecole de Filles,  Joan DeJean wryly points out that “the dialogue form is the preferred vehicle for a blend of philosophical and sexual subversiveness. The dialogues [in L’Escole des Filles] hardly live up to the promise of the work’s subtitle, La Philosophie des Dames, for in them sexual explicitness is completely without philosophical implications.” The present copy is believed to be the third edition–the 1655 first edition was suppressed on publication; all but a few copies were burned, and none now survive. Its alleged authors, Millet Millot and Jean L’Ange, were put to death.

 

 

In the first dialogue, a libidinous young man named Robinet lusts after naïve Fanchon, and has persuaded her older cousin Susanne to convince the girl to lay with him. Susanne prepares Fanchon, giving such helpful tidbits as the names and mechanics of various parts of the body, how to kiss, descriptions of positions and so on. Susanne enthusiastically describes a phallus: “It’s thicker and half as long again, hard and stiff as a truncheon, quite sturdy enough to stand erect in the way I’ve described.” Intrigued, Fanchon agrees to see Robinet in private, and a few days later Susanne resumes the dialogue to ask her young cousin about the experience, which Fanchon relates in detail.

Sarah Toulalan notes in Imagining Sex: Pornography and Bodies in Seventeenth-Century England, that although the protagonists of most seventeenth-century erotic dialogues are women, the focus of the conversation is on the “beauty” and pleasure of the male participant. “Even in passages where our first impression is that the female body is being described, what the text leads us to focus on is the action of the man in revealing and touching that female body, and of the reaction of the male body to the female body.” Toulalan accounts for this in two possible ways. First, that the texts were intended as guidebooks for women who were often entirely unaware of the specifics activities necessary for reproduction. Second, and more probable, “Whore Dialogues” catered to a male readership, and the focus was intended to align with the interest of the consumer.

 

Lot 74: Nicolas Chorier, Aloisiæ Sigeæ Toletanæ Satyra Sotadica de Arcanis Amoris et Veneris, early edition, 1660s. Estimate $5,000 to $7,000.

 

The second example of nascent French erotica in our March 8 auction is an early edition of Aloisiæ Sigeæ Toletanæ Satyra Sotadica de Arcanis Amoris et Veneris, by French lawyer and historian Nicolas Chorier. The work consists of six dialogues concerning a young woman’s sexual initiation. In  A History of Erotic Literature, Patrick Kearney calls it “the most outspoken erotic work of the seventeenth century.” Though the text purports to be the Latin translation by the Dutch classical scholar Johannes Meursius of a Spanish work by the sixteenth-century poet and courtesan Luisa Sigea de Velasco, this is now generally agreed to be incorrect.

 

 

The title translates to Luisa Sigea of Toledo’s Sotadic Satire on the Secrets of Love and Venus. “Sotadic” refers to Sotades, an ancient Greek poet known for lewd poems. The first edition was published in secret around 1660, containing the present six dialogues; the complete edition with a seventh and final dialogue appeared in 1678.

As in L’Escole des Fillesthe dialogues take place between two women, 26-year-old Tullia and her 15-year-old cousin Octavia. Tullia has been asked by her own husband to “reveal to you [Octavia] the most mysterious secrets of bridal bed and to teach you what you must be with your husband, which your husband will also be, touching these small things which so strongly inflame men’s passion.” She suggests that “This night, so that I can indoctrinate you in all of this liberated language, [we] will sleep together in my bed, which I would like to be able to say will have been the softest of Venus’s lace.” Poor Octavia serves as a comedic foil, asking amusingly naïve questions that Tullia answers in graphic detail.

The book devotes much time to the history and practice of lesbians, “complete with scholarly etymologies and learned references to Ovid, Lucretius, Horace, and Petronius,” according to Terry Castle in The Literature of Lesbianism: A Historical Anthology from Ariosto to StonewallIt’s also characterized as a practical pursuit because “it won’t make you pregnant.”

 

Lot 74: Aloisiæ Sigeæ…, signature of Gershon Legman, 1954.

 

The present copy comes from the library of the erotica scholar and collector Gershon Legman.  His bibliographical notes and stylized signature, dated 1954, are mounted on the front endpaper. According to The New York Times, “He accumulated what has been described as one of the world’s largest collections of published and unpublished erotic and scatological literature.” His secondary interest was origami.

These works were circulated among the libertine community brewing in Paris. Indeed, it seems they were as rousing politically as they were physically. In closing The Politics of Pornography, Joan DeJean asks, “What link can be established between clandestine literature of all types and the political explosion that was the culmination of Enlightenment? In other words, is it possible to use the category of philosophical books to help explain how the French were collectively able to rise up?”

Browse the full catalogue.

 

The post The Earliest French Erotica appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

Records & Results: Icons & Images: Photographs & Photobooks

$
0
0

We opened the 2018 season with a $1.6M auction of Icons & Images: Photographs & Photobooks on February 15. Important rare and unique work, both fine art and vernacular, brought a variety of buyers to the fore, with especially active bidding by institutions.

 

Lot 20: Robert B. Talfor, Photographic Views of Red River Raft, album with 113 hand-colored photographs, 1873.
Sold February 15, 2018 for $93,750.

 

Leading the auction and closing to applause was Photographic Views of the Red River Raft, 1873, one of three extant copies of Robert B. Talfor’s documentation of the second attempt to clear debris from Louisiana’s Red River. Several institutions competed for the 113 hand-colored albumen prints, and the album quadrupled its high estimate to sell for $93,750.

 

Lot 60: Lewis W. Hine, Powerhouse Mechanic, silver print, circa 1921.
Sold February 15, 2018 for $81,250.

 

A collection of 24 prints of Lewis W. Hine‘s most iconic photographs, spanning the entirety of his career, made their victorious auction debut, selling 92%. The works-each boasting the handstamp of Hine’s Hastings-on-Hudson studio, as well as notations in his own hand-were previously owned by Isador Sy Seidman, a friend of Hine, photographer and lifelong collector of photographs of New York City. An extremely rare early printing of the monumental Powerhouse Mechanic, or Mechanic at Steam Pump in Electric Power House, circa 1921, led the selection at $81,250. A contact print of One of many youngsters working in Carolina cotton mills, also known as Sadie Pfeifer, a Cotton Mill Spinner, Lancaster, South Carolina, 1908, printed 1931, doubled its high estimate to sell to a collector for $30,000. The lasting relevance of these images is exemplified by the buyer of Russian family at Ellis Island, 1905, who happily relayed that the children in the photograph are his great-grandmother and her sister.

 

Lot 178: Cindy Sherman, Self-Portrait as Lucille Ball, chromogenic print, 1975, printed 2001. Sold February 15, 2018 for $25,000, a record for the work.

 

Notable auction records were set for works by marquee artists, including Cindy Sherman’s Self-Portrait as Lucille Ball, 1975, for $25,000. Roy DeCarava’s double portrait of Dizzy Gillespie & Roy Eldridge, 1956, also achieved a record at $27,500. The fifth book of Edward S. Curtis’s The North American Indian, 1907, set a record for that volume, selling to a collector for $43,600.

 

Lot 119: Ansel Adams, Georgia O’Keeffe and Orville Cox, silver print, 1937, printed late 1960s. Sold February 15, 2018 for $48,000.

 

Seven of the eight offered lots by Ansel Adams found buyers, led by a candid portrait of Georgia O’Keeffe and Orville Cox, 1937, which doubled its high estimate to sell for $48,600. Additional highlights included Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, 1941, and Winter Sunrise, Sierra Nevada, from Lone Pine, California, 1944 ($43,200 and $21,600, respectively).

 

The next auction of Photographs & Photobooks at Swann Galleries will be The Knowing Eye on April 19, 2018. The house is currently accepting quality consignments for autumn auctions.

The post Records & Results: Icons & Images: Photographs & Photobooks appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

Specialists in the Field: Keavy Handley-Byrne & Diana Flatto at Magnum Manifesto

$
0
0

Specialists in the Field is our segment devoted to specialists incorporating their work into their lives and vice versa. Keavy Handley-Byrne of our Photographs & Photobooks department contributed.

 

Over the last two years, my colleague Diana Flatto from the Prints & Drawings department has been working towards an MA with a curatorial certificate at Hunter College, the culmination of which will be an exhibition entitled Framing Community: Magnum Photographs 1947-Present. Through Swann, Diana and I were lucky enough to connect and become friends around photography and art, frequently visiting museums together and sharing discourse surrounding both classical and contemporary photographs. Most recently, we visited the closing weekend of Magnum Manifesto at the International Center of Photography.

 

Diana Flatto at Magnum Manifesto at the International Center of Photography.

 

Magnum is one of the most far-reaching and well-known networks of photographers in the world. The work included in this show ran the gamut of their oeuvre, giving a sampling of important works by Magnum photographers from multiple generations working all over the globe. In terms of contemporary photography, a few old friends were prominently featured; Inge Morath’s Mask Series, a kind of artistic collaboration with Saul Steinberg, could be found in the third room of the exhibition on their own wall. An image from the project will be offered in our October 19 auction of Art & Storytelling: Photographs & Photobooks.

 

Inge Morath, from Saul Steinberg: Mask Series, 1962.

 

Additionally, works by Danny Lyon from his series Conversations with the Dead and the magazine spreads in which they appeared were presented in a striking and timely way. Magazine spreads were present throughout the earlier generation’s portions of the exhibition, keying into a more recent fascination with press prints, ephemera and vernacular photography.

 

Danny Lyon, magazine spread with material from
Conversations with the Dead, 1971.

 

One of the most important aspects of the show highlighted that Magnum is a living, growing organization that continues to encourage photographers to document their worlds, however large or small they may be. Contemporary photographs and photobooks were abundant, and seeing them contextualized under the auspices of Magnum brought home the versatility of the medium, and indeed, how various the distinctions of “documentary photography” can be.

 

Mikhael Subotzky, from the Ponte City series, circa 2011, with zine-like book maquettes.

 

Martin Parr, 7 Communist Still Lifes, 2003.

 

Thankfully, attending exhibitions of this sort always reminds me that I am never finished learning about photography, and never finished drawing important and edifying connections between contemporary photography and its forebears.

 

Diana Flatto admiring works by Olivia Arthur.

 

Keavy Handley-Byrne lost in Mediterranean Sea, 2015, by Paolo Pellegrin.

 

The post Specialists in the Field: Keavy Handley-Byrne & Diana Flatto at Magnum Manifesto appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

A Look Inside the Catalogue: 19th & 20th Century Literature

$
0
0

The May 15 auction of 19th & 20th Century Literature is replete with science-fiction cornerstones; of special note in this sale is a run of first editions by Philip K. Dick, including a signed copy of The Man in the High Castle, 1962.

philip k. dick, literature

Philip K. Dick, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, first edition, New York, 1968. Estimate $4,000 to $6,000.

 

Also available is an inscribed copy of the specially bound author’s edition of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, 1953, one of just 50 copies, as well as scarce early titles by Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke and Robert Heinlein. Signed limited editions include works by William Faulkner, Aldous Huxley, Virginia Woolf and W.B. Yeats, as well as a rare deluxe copy of Dylan Thomas’s Selected Poems 1934-1952, one of 65 signed copies, published in 1952.

 

ray bradbury, books, literature

Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451, limited author’s edition, presentation copy, signed & inscribed, New York, 1953. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000.

 

Nineteenth-century highlights include the seldom-seen first separate American edition of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven, circa 1870, and the first edition in fragile wrappers of Christabel: Kubla Khan, A Vision; The Pains of Sleep, 1816, by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Fore-edge paintings, children’s literature, library sets and bindings are also well represented.

 

For more information on the sale, contact Specialist John D. Larson in the Books department.

Consign with Swann

Get the Semimonthly Newsletter

The post A Look Inside the Catalogue: 19th & 20th Century Literature appeared first on Swann Galleries News.

Viewing all 1212 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images