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Egon Schiele: A Look at the Artist's Evolving Self-Image

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The piece below was written by Swann Prints & Drawings Specialist Diana Flatto.

Egon Schiele is celebrated among the Austrian Modern Masters Gustav Klimt and Oskar Kokoschka, who are best remembered for their insightful portrayal of the human condition. Schiele’s style was informed by the tumultuous nature of his tragically short life; in 1912 he was arrested and imprisoned on charges of kidnapping and seducing a minor, as well as displaying pornographic art. While the kidnapping and seduction charges were eventually dropped, he was convicted of the remaining pornography charge. His imprisonment, along with a period of social isolation, enforced Schiele’s self-image as a martyr for his craft. These experiences and opinions had a profound effect on Schiele’s work, which can be clearly perceived when looking at pieces crafted before and after his imprisonment. 

Lot 423: Egon Schiele, Schlafender Mann, watercolor, pencil and crayon, 1910. Estimate $200,000 to $300,000. 


While the Cubists were breaking down form in Paris, Schiele and his cohorts were embracing the figure in Vienna in order to expose deeper emotions and ideas. Turn-of-the-century Vienna was an incubator of intellectuals, fostering an environment of both academic and visual creativity. Visual artists, musicians, writers, philosophers and scientists were not segregated and greatly influenced one another through their interconnected circles. As such, Klimt, Kokoschka and Schiele confronted the most daunting corners of the human psyche in their work, playing off of the ideas they were immersed in and contributed to, including those of Sigmund Freud, Ludwig Wittgenstein and others. The rawness and sensuality of these artists’ work is what makes them stand out as some of the most meaningful and important objects of the early 20th century.

 

Left: Lot 424: Gustav Klimt, Urmarmen Akte, pencil, 1908. Estimate $40,000 to $60,000. 
Right: Lot 426: Oscar Kokoschka, Stehender Akt einer alten Frau, pencil, 1907. Estimate $4,000 tp $6,000. 

Schiele was heavily influenced by painter Gustav Klimt, whom he met in 1907 and took as his mentor. Klimt facilitated Schiele’s entry into the 1909 Internationale Kunstschau and afforded him connections to various wealthy patrons. The same year, Schiele and other young Viennese artists formally rejected academic tradition and started the Neukunstgruppe, prompting his family to discontinue financial support.

Much of the apparent anguish in Schiele’s artwork stems from the critical and social isolation he experienced in the early 1910s and culminating in his 1912 imprisonment.  The recent exhibition at the Neue Galerie, “Egon Schiele: Portraits,” curated by Dr. Alessandra Comini, brought renewed attention to Schiele’s drawings and focused on the imprisonment as a turning point in his work.  We can see clearly the divergence in styles by comparing the artist’s pre-prison, 1910 watercolor Schlafender Mann (Sleeping Man) [pictured above], with the 1917 bronze, Selbstbildnis [below]
Lot 425: Egon Schiele, Selbstbildnis, bronze, 1917. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 

Fully realized watercolor studies by Schiele such as Schlafender Mann are extremely scarce as his career spanned only about a decade, and such compositions are important to the understanding of his overall development. Schlafender Mannis a stunning example of Schiele’s experimentation with color and line in 1910, a year during which he gave particular focus to studies of the male form. What is most striking is the electric blue hair and collar, exemplifying the artist’s deliberately avant-garde choices. The burnt red color in the sitter’s flesh is characteristic of Schiele’s work at the time, and though it is a clothed portrait the angularity in the figure’s limbs parallels the emaciated figure-type common in Schiele’s male nudes. The awkwardly crossed arms indicate a fitful sleep and allude to Schiele’s self-imposed mythology as a tortured artist, and the low perspective directs focus to the figure’s suggestively open legs, imparting ideas of eroticism, frequently seen in Schiele’s work.

Jane Kallir, Co-Director of Galerie St. Etienne and the author of Egon Schiele: The Complete Works, notes in the catalogue raisonné that the subject of Schlafender Mannhas been identified both as a self-portrait and as a portrait of the artist Anton Peschka (1885-1940), who was a classmate of Schiele’s at Vienna’s Academy of Fine Art, a fellow member of the Neukunstgruppeand later Schiele’s brother-in-law. Schiele explored self-portraiture repeatedly over the course of his short career through drawings, paintings and sculptures, providing repeated imagery through which to examine his artistic processes. Whichever individual it depicts, Schlafender Mann is a brooding, self-conscious likeness that reflects the early state of Schiele’s career, as well as his general attitude toward artists at the time.

Autograph postcard signed by Egon Schiele to Anton Peschka, 30 October 1916. Sold November 29, 2012 for $11,400. 


In comparing a drawing such as Schlafender Mann with a more familiar portrait that is seen regularly at auction and in museums, Selbstbildnis, we can see Schiele’s development pre- and post-imprisonment. In the sculpture, Schiele portrays himself harshly with a shock of hair and hollow eyes, as opposed to the more relaxed and calm Schlafender Mann. Selbstbildnis faces the viewer directly in a combative stance with a raised chin, asserting the artist’s confidence that had matured since his arrest, as well as his removal from society . As one of the few sculptures the artist created, a bronze cast from Schiele’s clay model, Selbstbildnisis a marked departure from his previous work. Unlike Schlafender Mann, the sculpture has a more permanent and (literally) weighted feel. Depicting his likeness in this way, Schiele further claims his dominance in the artistic sphere. Because the clay model was completed shortly prior to Schiele’s death, posthumous bronze castings such as this support the legacy he spent much of his career cultivating.


Egon Schiele's life and promising career were tragically cut short in 1918, when he succumbed to the Spanish flu epidemic at the age of 28. Spurred on by his experiences as oulaw and pariah, throughout his career Schiele rejected the norm and chose to apply a raw and emotional physicality to his work through his use of color, line, and gesture. Schiele is remembered today for creating some of the earliest Expressionist works in Austria, and for developing his own style independently of his Expressionist contemporaries across Austria and Germany. While Schiele is classified as an Expressionist, he forged a distinctive aesthetic that continues to set him apart from other artists.




Records & Results: Printed & Manuscript Americana

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Swann Galleries' autumn auction of Printed & Manuscript Americana on September 17 saw particularly strong results. Heavy bidding in several sections caused the sale to end an hour after closing time, making it one of the best general Americana sales in Swann's history.


Manuscript book of furniture designs by Philadelphia joiner John Widdifield, circa 1700-1720. 
Sold September 17, 2015 for $75,000.

The top lot in the sale was a record book kept by Philadelphia furniture-maker John Widdifield in 1704, estimated at $15,000 to $25,000. Although the subject was far afield for most Americana buyers, the volume was of enormous interest to scholars of American furniture, and the lot tripled its high estimate. 


Peace, Liberty, and Independence, letterpress broadside from the American Revolution, 
Philadelphia, 1783. Sold September 17, 2015 for $35,000.

One of only two known copies of a 1783 broadside announcement of peace with Great Britain, which had passed through the collections of Thomas W. Streeter, Philip Sang and Milton R. Slater, nearly quadrupled its high estimate with $35,000. 

Joseph Smith, The Doctrine andCovenants…, fourth edition, Nauvoo, IL, 1846. 
Sold September 17, 2015 for $27,500.   

The estate of Milton Slater also consigned a large collection of Mormon manuscripts, books and rare pamphlets, which brought $27,500 for a fourth edition of The Doctrine and Covenants, and $12,500 for the rare 1839 pamphlet, Facts Relative to the Expulsion of the Mormons.

John P. Greene, Facts Relative to the Expulsion of the Mormons…from the State of Missouri under the “Exterminating Order", first edition, first issue, Cincinnati, 1839. 
Sold September 17, 2015 for $12,500.


Alexander Hunter, Johnny Reb and Billy Yank, first edition, New York, 1905. 
Sold September 17, 2015 for $2,080.

A first edition of Alexander Hunter's Civil War classic Johnny Reb and Billy Yank, not often seen in its dust jacket, set an auction record at $2,080. Another first edition of Noah Webster's A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language doubled its high estimate and sold for $3,000.
Noah Webster, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language, first edition, New Haven, 1806. Sold September 17, 2015 for $3,000.



Specialist Rick Stattler said of the sale, "the mood on the auction floor was electric, with a wide variety of buyers hungry for unique and rare material."

Full results can be found here.


Jack Welpott: Photographer, Educator & Collector

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A charismatic figure in the California photographic community, Jack Welpott was a photographer known for his stately female nudes and for the decades he spent as an educator.  His collection, part of which is being offered at Swann on October 15, tells the story of both the classical and experimental trajectories of photography in the 20th century. Many of the photographers are now known for their unconventional, radical views on the possibilities of the medium.

Lot 201: Jack Welpott, Sabine, silver print, 1973, printed 1980s. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 

Lot 254: Ralph Eugene Meatyard, Wall Abstraction, silver print, 1958. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 


Henry Holmes Smith, Jerry Uelsmann, Ralph Eugene Meatyard, and Robert Heinecken, among others, challenged the status quo, redefined what the medium could or should do, and continue to influence and find meaning with a rising group of young photographers. These artists pushed the limits of the darkroom, and found new and challenging ways to articulate themselves.

Lot 347: Henry Holmes Smith, Mother and Son, dye-transfer print, 1950-70. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 


Lot 348: Henry Holmes Smith, Death of Punch, dye-transfer print, 1960-75. Estimate $3,000 to $4,000. 

Henry Holmes Smith, once Welpott’s instructor at Indiana University, used photography (often camera-less) to explore light and color. In Death of Punch, he used broken Christmas tree ornaments to create a riotous, very nearly dangerous, circus of form and layered color. Mother and Son  explores mythic, primordial subjects. In this study, Smith spread a viscous liquid and water on a pane of glass, and made an exposure with a 100-watt light bulb. The light passed through the liquid, revealing his expressive, amorphous figures.

Lot 298: Jerry Uelsmann, Small Woods Where I Met Myself (Final Version), silver print, 1967. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 

Lot 299: Jerry Uelsmann, Untitled (female nude melting into bed), silver print, 1977. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. 

An MFA classmate of Welpott, Jerry Uelsmann's mysteriously surreal tableaux, created completely in the dark room, are rich in detail and complexity and invite the viewer to create a narrative. Using layered negatives, Uelsmann's work paved the way for 20th-century American montage.

Lot 335: Robert Heinecken, Documentary Photogram/ Coffee Break Drinks and Dinner, offset lithograph from a photogram, 1971. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 

Lot 350: Robert Heinecken, [detail] She/He, Polaroid, 1980. Estimate $5,000 to $7,500. 

Another dynamic figure in the California photography community with Welpott, the subversive and provocative Robert Heinecken called himself a "para-photgrapher," often appropriating photographs that appeared in popular media, and reimagining, recontextualizing, and rephotographing them as an exploration of media, traditional definitions of "high" versus popular culture, sex, and advertising. His Polaroids, one of which is offered here as part of the He/She series, represent one of his forays into his own image-making. Using photography incorporated into sculptures, moving images, magazine imagery, and traditional printmaking methods, Heinecken demonstrated that photography has no limits.


For more photos from the collection of Jack Welpott, be sure to check out our catalogue. Thanks to Associate Director of Photographs & Photobooks Deborah Rogal for contributing this post.

Records & Results: 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings

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This fall's semiannual sale of 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings was the highest-grossing sale of its kind at Swann Auction Galleries, demonstrating clearly that the market for quality works on paper is strong. 


Lot 423: Egon Schiele, Schlafender Mann, watercolor, pencil and black crayon, 1910. 
Sold September 24, 2015 for $905,000.

The most exciting lot to watch at auction was Egon Schiele's Schlafender MannSchiele's short life and career makes finished watercolors such as this one scarce. Attesting to this rarity, the lot soared over its high estimate to $905,000, setting a house record for the highest-priced item to sell in a 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings sale. 


Lot 424: Gustav Klimt, Urmarmen Akte, pencil drawing, 1908. 
Sold September 24, 2015 for $125,000. 

Schiele's mentor and leader of the Vienna Secession movement, Gustav Klimt, followed up strongly as the second highest lot in the sale with his sensuous drawing Urmarmen AkteKlimt and Schiele met in 1907, and Klimt facilitated Schiele's entry into the 1909 Internationale Kunstchau and afforded him connections to various wealthy patrons. Tense bidding put the drawing at $125,000, more than twice its high estimate. 

Lot 389: Pablo Picasso, Femme assise au Chignon, color linoleum cut, 1962. 
Sold September 24, 2015 for $55,000.

Pablo Picasso's color linoleum cut Femme assise au Chignon and Salvador Dalí's wonderfully weird portfolio Les Caprices de Goya, both set auction records at $55,000. 


Lot 600: Salvador Dalí, Les Caprices de Goya, portfolio of 80 heliogravures from Goya’s etchings reworked by Dalí with drypoint and stencil coloring. Sold September 24, 2015 for $55,000.

Swann Vice President and Director of Prints & Drawings Todd Weyman said, "Collectors are prepared to bid just as aggressively on quality drawings as they are on important oil paintings, showing that desirable examples of an artist's draughtsmanship are strongly sought after, particularly when they exhibit an artist's celebrated attributes."


Full results can be found here

Specialist Selections: Daile Kaplan's Top Five Picks from Icons & Images: Fine & Vernacular Photographs

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Our specialists lovingly assemble hundreds of images into multiple sales every year, but there are always a few items in each auction that catch their attention in a different way. Here's a look at Swann Vice President and Director of Photographs & Photobooks Daile Kaplan's top five picks from our upcoming auction Icons & Images: Fine & Vernacular Photographs below, along with a few words from her about each piece. 


Lot 63: Lewis W. Hine, Sadie Pfeifer, a Cotton Mill Spinner, Lancaster, South Carolina, silver print, 1908, printed 1940s. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000. 

Lewis Hine's remarkable study of Sadie Pfeifer captures her dreary day job working in a mill. National legislation prohibiting child labor wouldn't be enacted until 1938, though this photo remains haunting as child labor continues to be a growing problem in the developing world. 


Lot 171: A pair of mugshots of Russian-American anarcho-feminist Emma Goldman, silver prints, circa 1901. Estimate $1,800 to $2,200. 

A rare Bertillon-style mugshot of the fresh-faced activist. Emma Goldman continually challenged the status quo, espousing prison reform, free love, free speech and anti-capitalist principles. 


Lot 205: Paul Outerbridge, Jr., Woman with red lipstick in a swimming pool, Ektacolor print, 1940s. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000. 

One of the most important advertising photographers of the 20th century, Paul Outerbridge, Jr.'s upbeat image displays a brilliant use of color, successfully presenting the photograph as a fine art form. 


Lot 320: Ralph Eugene Meatyard, Center for Photographic Studies, Portfolio Three, "Ralph Eugene Meatyard," including ten silver prints, 1959-71, printed 1974. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000. 


An optician by trade, Ralph Eugene Meatyard's images relied on friends and family members to explore identity, and often reference surrealist influences. 


Lot 360: Lalla Essaydi, Converging Territories #10, oversized chromogenic print, 2003. Estimate $9,000 to $12,000. 

Lalla Essaydi's photograph is a tour-de-force of image and text. While her artwork draws from her background and personal experiences as a Moroccan woman, this image encourages cross-cultural understanding. 


More information and highlights from this sale can be found here, or check out our catalogue for a complete look. 

36th Annual W. Eugene Smith Grant Awards

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Swann is proud to sponsor the 36th annual W. Eugene Smith Grant Awards. The grant awards presentation, which takes place October 14th at 7:00pm at the School of Visual Arts Theater, honors the very best in photojournalism. 

The event is free and open to the public, and will feature a keynote address from New Yorker Editor David Remnick, as well as a short presentation on the work of W. Eugene Smith by Swann Vice President and Director of our Photographs & Photobooks department, Daile Kaplan More details about the event can be found here.

Here's a look at some of W. Eugene Smith's photos that have been featured in Swann auctions that Daile with speak about Tuesday evening. 


Lot 271: W. Eugene Smith, Gus Gus, silver print, 1960. 


Lot 153: W. Eugene Smith, Man in radiation helmet, from the series Life without Germs, silver print 1949, printed 1970. 

Lot 152: W. Eugene Smith, Saipan, silver print, 1945, printed circa 1970. 

Lot 270: W. Eugene Smith, Tomoko Uemura in her bath, silver print, 1971-73. 

Lot 154: W. Eugene Smith, Nurse Midwife (Maude Callen), silver print 1951, printed circa 1970. 

Lot 155: W. Eugene Smith, from The Country Doctor series published in LIFE magazine, silver print, 1948, printed circa 1953. 


More information on these photographs can be found in our catalogue for Icons & Images: Fine & Vernacular Photographs. 


Orthography and Autography: The Little "F" in Freud's Signature

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The piece below was written by Autographs Specialist Marco Tomaschett.

Autograph collectors all encounter it at one time or another: the perfectly illegible autograph. The impossible convulsive scrawl of Giacomo Puccini, or the idiosyncratic tremor of the Duke of Wellington—interpreting autographs like these is almost always frustrating, but they are especially so in more informal letters. One wonders how the recipients of such letters could understand them at all! Surprisingly, the recipients could often read even the hastiest lines with little trouble, because they were familiar with the orthographic style of the writer and the conventions among writers in those places and times.

Lot 65: Sigmund Freud, Autograph Note Signed, a bill for one of his last patients, Vienna, 31 January 1934. Estimate $3,000 to $4,000. 



In Vienna during the 19th century, the script that was taught in schools was quite different from that in the non-German speaking parts of the world, and different as well from the German script of the present-day. This style of script is known as Kurrentschrift, and it was used in the same way that (some of us) use cursive today. Sigmund Freud, for instance, wrote letters, scribbled analyst’s notes and signed his name, in Kurrentschrift. An example of his characteristic signature can be seen in lots 65 and 66 of Swann’s 22 October autographs auction. Although Freud is known to have signed his name in other ways, he often signed “freud.” The capital and lowercase “F” of Kurrentschrift are very similar in form, but not identical. Freud wrote these two letterforms identically, not only in his name, but universally. Despite this slight stylistic liberty, recipients of Freud’s letters would undoubtedly have recognized that “first National Bank” and “freud” were intended to be understood as capitalized.

 

Lot 66: Sigmund Freud, Typed Letter Signed "freud," Vienna, 24 March 1926. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.


The painter Egon Schiele, living at roughly the same time and place as Freud, also wrote in Kurrentschrift. No amount of familiarity with Schiele’s peculiarities would have rendered understandable the printer’s error in the catalogue for his 1916 Kunstschau exhibition. In that catalogue, illustrations of two of his works were either ascribed to a different painter, or titled inaccurately. In some copies of this catalogue, including the one on offer in lot 384 of Swann’s October auction, Schiele marked through the erroneous print and wrote the correct information below.

Lot 384: Katalog der Wiener Kunstschau signed and inscribed by Egon Schiele, 1916. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000. 


While Freud intended his name to be capitalized and was somewhat indifferent as to how it was written, e.e. cummings was famously insistent that his name be printed entirely in lowercase letters. As he explained in the letter contained in lot 318 of Swann’s October auction, cummings conceived of the capitalization of words referring to himself the same way that European languages used capitalization of first-person pronouns: written in lowercase, unless capitals were needed to convey emphasis. Paradoxically, cummings signed the letter in lot 318 with capital letters—perhaps for emphasis!

Lot 318:e.e. cummings, Typed Note Signed "E.E. Cg's," on the choice to utilize lowercase letters for his name,  New York, 21 February 1957. Estimate $800 to $1,200.


It is hardly surprising that e.e. cummings was sensitive about the spelling of his name. One’s name often suggests certain associations, and desiring control over them is natural. Edvard Grieg, a composer who was proud to be Norwegian, was not pleased by the English association conveyed when his name was sloppily spelled “Edward.” In an 1893 letter, offered in lot 254 of Swann’s October auction, this impatience is made explicit: “With great pleasure, use my name, but—on one condition: without the ‘W’! My name is ‘Edvard.’ Excuse me but this is my sore spot.”

Lot 254: Edvard Grieg, Autograph Letter Signed, correcting a common misspelling of his name, Bergen, 22 September. Estimate $1,000 to $1,500. 

cummings sought to subvert some orthographic conventions concerning his name to show his personal preference for other conventions. President Harry S. Truman, by contrast, did not mind leaving it up to others when it came to his own name. As Truman points out in the letter being offered in lot 217 of Swann’s October auction, Truman is satisfied to have the “S” in his middle name followed by a period—or without one. Editors encountering his name must make a choice about this, because his given middle name is the letter “S.” As he explains in the letter, he was given this name to honor his grandfathers, Andrew Shippe Truman and Solomon Young: “In order to be strictly impartial in naming me for one or the other, I was given the letter ‘S’ as a middle name.”

Lot 217: Harry S. Truman, Typed Letter Signed, explaining his middle name, Independence, 26 July, 1967. Estimate $500 to $750.

Perhaps the most remarkable orthographic autograph in Swann’s October auction is Noah Webster’s letter (lot 362) to a group of conservative editors, in which he touches upon his justification for the spelling reforms introduced in his American Dictionary, 1828. He states that his reforms are not innovations, rather corrections: “The ignorance or negligence which introduced wrong spelling, &, in some cases, made words which are nonsense, & then permitted these words to occupy a place in our best books, even in the Bible, for centuries; appeared to me an abuse of the language not to be tolerated.” Webster signed his letter “N Webster,” and though he just as often signed his full name, he did not tolerate alternative spellings of his name.

Lot 362: Noah Webster, Autograph Letter Signed "N Webster," directing unnamed editors to sources justifying his spelling reforms. 
Estimate $3,000 to $4,000. 



William Shakespeare, who was writing long after the Bible was written and long before Webster was born, signed his last name “Shakspere,” or “Shaksper,” or in other ways; but his tolerance for spelling variation was not uncommon, and it extended to not only personal names, but to the written language generally. Despite the lack of standardized spelling, probably all who knew him would understand just who was meant when encountering any of the various instances of Shakespeare’s name, and it would seem surprising if the number of any sort of misunderstanding among writers was greater in his day than today. Nevertheless, it is likely that writers will never cease to labour to give each thing its true name. Or rather I should say labor.





More information on these items and additional autographs can be found in our catalogue

Autographs and Personal Correspondence: Influential People Showing Respect for Those Who Influenced Them

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Oftentimes the things we sign are incredibly personal items, letters, cards, even brief notes to a friend or loved one. Tie that sliver of correspondence to an influential figure and that item might just end up in one of our Autographs sales. 

Take a look below at a few instances of personal correspondence in our upcoming Autographs auction; it's easy to see just how much respect these famous figures had for the important people in their lives. 


Lot 123: Autograph poem by John Quincy Adams from an autograph album containing over 40 items kept by Abby S. Smith, with an inscription signed by her grandfather, John Adams, 1822-28. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000.  

Abby S. Smith, while not famous herself, came from quite an illustrious family, with both a grandfather and an uncle who served as presidents. This album contains over 40 items kept by Smith, including items signed or signed and inscribed by the two former presidents, as well as friends and relatives. 

Lot 172: Ronald Reagan, Autograph letter Signed "RR" as Governor, discussing his discoveries of his family's Irish origins, circa 7 June 1967. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. 

Former President Ronald Reagan delved into his paternal family history, discovering that his paternal grandfather was born in Ballyporeen, County Tipperary, as well as uncovering relatives he had never heard of before. 

Lot 220: Woodrow Wilson, Letter Signed, describing his family's genealogy, 12 November 1896. Estimate $700 to $1,000. 

Former President Woodrow Wilson describes his family's genealogy, as well as their relatively short history in America. The Woodrow side of his family hailed from Scotland, while the Wilson side came from Carlisle, England, where his mother was born. 

Lot 334: Jack Kerouac, Signature "Ti Jean / XXX," on a birthday card to his mother. 

The famous Beat writer was born Jean-Louis Lebris de Kérouac, and was often referred to as "Ti Jean" or "Little Jean" by his family growing up. 


Lot 385: Carl Van Vechten, group of 4 items Signed, "Carl V.V." or "Carl van Vechten" to artist Charles B. Keeler, New York 1935-36. 


The warm correspondence between Carl Van Vechten and Charles B. Keeler reveals that Van Vechten felt as though Keeler had inspired him on several fronts, sparking his interest in Spain, and subsequently his interest in photography. 




For more Autographs, letters and small peeks into the lives of significant figures, take a look at the catalogue for our upcoming Autograph auction here





Beauty in Print: A Look At Exotic Types

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When it comes to books, the most fascinating aspect is generally the content, but sometimes it's nice just to appreciate the beauty and precision of printed language. Here are some examples of books printed in types from a range of different languages in our upcoming auction of Early Printed & Medical Books

From Lot 102: Giovanni Cristoforo Amaduzzi, Alphabetum Brammhanicum, first editions, Rome, 1771-76. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

Tibetan



From Lot 102: Giovanni Cristoforo Amaduzzi, Alphabetum Brammhanicum, first editions, Rome, 1771-76. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

Burmese



From Lot 102: Giovanni Cristoforo Amaduzzi, Alphabetum Brammhanicum, first editions, Rome, 1771-76. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

Malayalam



From Lot 102: Giovanni Cristoforo Amaduzzi, Alphabetum Brammhanicum, first editions, Rome, 1771-76. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

Sanskrit



Lot 102: Joannes Agop, Puritas Haygica: sive, Grammatica Armenica, first edition, Rome, 1674-75. Estimate $1,000 to $2,000.  

Armenian  



Lot 115: Hiob Ludolf, Lexicon Aethiopico-Latinum...Accessit Authoris Grammatica, first edition, London, 1661. Estimate $500 to $750. 

 Ethiopic



Lot 113: Athanasius Kircher S.J., Prodromus Coptus sive Aegyptiacus, first edition, Rome, 1636. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

 Coptic



Lot 112: Issac Sciadrensis, Rudimentum Syriacum, first edition, Rome, 1618. Estimate $800-$1,200. 

Syriac 


Lot 192: Missale Romanum Slavonico idiomate, Rome, 1741. Estimate $400 to $600. 

Glagolitic


For a look at more examples of lovely type have a look at our catalogue

Records & Results: Icons & Images: Fine & Vernacular Photographs

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The results of our autumn auction, Icons & Images: Fine & Vernacular Photographs, emphasize the magnetism and enduring popularity of iconic imagery with collectors and dealers alike. Over time, icons (such as Dorothea Lange's photograph Migrant Mother, pictured below), become archetypes of the culture they came from. 

Lot 125: Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother, oversized silver print, 1936, printed after. 
Sold October 15, 2015 for $20,000.

An enduring classic from Dorothea Lange's time working for the Farm Security Administration, Migrant Mother, continues on in time as an often-remembered face of the Great Depression. Of course the subject has since become mythic in American photographic history, and the oversized silver print sold well over its estimate at $20,000.

Lot 103: Sally Mann, Candy Cigarette, silver print, 1989. Sold October 15, 2015 for $215,000.

Sally Mann's Candy Cigarette, a gift to former gallerist Marcuse Pfeifer, sold for $215,000. Strengthening the female presence in the list of top lots, contemporary photographer Lalla Essaydi's enigmatic print from her first series, Converging Territories #10, also sold for a near double of its high estimate at $22,500.

Lot 360: Lalla Essaydi, Converging Territories #10, oversized chromogenic print, 2003. 
Sold October 15, 2015 for $22,500.

Lot 99: Lewis W. Hine, Men at Work, first edition, signed by Hine, 1932. 
Sold October 15, 2015 for $12,500.

A signed first edition of Hine's famous photobook Men at Work, and W. Eugene Smith's print from The Country Doctor series, both went for auction records of $12,500 each, highlighting a lasting interest in quality documentary work. 

Lot 155: W. Eugene Smith, from The Country Doctor series in LIFE magazine, silver print, 1948, printed circa 1953. Sold October 15, 2015 for $12,500. 


Lot 103: Group of photographs related to Artkraft Strauss, in color and monochrome, 1948-80s. 
Sold October 15, 2015 for $2,375.


An archive of material pertaining to Artkraft Strauss [a company best known for its neon signage in New York City's Times Square] nearly doubled its high estimate with $2,375. Included in the archive are contact prints of various signage, an album entitled "Commercial Signs" and photographs documenting the design, construction and installation of various sign and billboard advertisements. Fine examples of vernacular photography like this illustrate the pervasive nature of photography–these images are the texture of our quotidian existence and a vital part of contemporary visual language. 



Full results can be found here

Celebrating 129 Years of the Statue of Liberty with a Scientific Eye

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On this day 129 years ago, the Statue of Liberty was unveiled to an eager crowd of New Yorkers in a ceremony that included fanfare and presidential pomp and circumstance. 

These images come from an issue of Scientific America, Architects and Builders Edition, published in November 1886, just after the big reveal. 

From Lot 10: Scientific American, Architects & Builders Edition, Volumes 1-6, New York, 1885-88. Estimate $2,500 to $3,500. 

The article itself was written just before the statue was unveiled, and details the planning, execution and assembly of the statue, including detailed engravings outlining the process for the in-the-know audience this issue was targeting. 

According to the article, "We give a series of engravings from which a fair idea of the appearance and nature of the structures can be gathered." The writer goes on to detail the exact proportions of the base on Bedloe Island, the price of the statue, even the length of the girders that support the statue internally. 

We very much agree with the author's closing sentiments, "The whole structure in its final appearance is eminently satisfactory. 

Long may it stand as an emblem of Freedom and a monument of the good will and friendship existing between France and the United States of America!"

From Lot 10: Scientific American, Architects & Builders Edition, Volumes 1-6, New York, 1885-88. Estimate $2,500 to $3,500. 

From Lot 10: Scientific American, Architects & Builders Edition, Volumes 1-6, New York, 1885-88. Estimate $2,500 to $3,500. 


Mysterious as a Cat: Famous Felines in Literature

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There seems to be a special relationship between writers and cats, whether it be Ernest Hemingway and the multitudes of 6-toed fuzzballs haunting his Key West estate, or Raymond Chandler, whose cat, according to his agent, may have been his closest confidant. Even the great Edgar Allen Poe once wrote, "I wish I could write as mysterious as a cat."

So in celebration of National Cat Day here's a selection of literary felines and cat-related literature from our upcoming auction of 19th & 20th Century Literature featuring The Lawrence M. Solomon Collection.

Lot 266: Edgar Allen Poe, Works, 10 volumes, limited edition, number 130 of 250, Chicago, 1894-95. Estimate $500 to $750.
Among Poe's many mysterious and macabre works is a short story entitled "The Black Cat," which depicts the tumultuous relationship between the narrator and his cat, Pluto. 

Lot 388: Truman Capote, Breakfast at Tiffany's, first edition, first printing, New York, 1958. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

Capote's Holly Golightly may flit from companion to companion in this classic novella, but her one constant company is a tabby aptly named, Cat. 


Lot 375: Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, London, 1897. Estimate $1,000 to $1,500. 

Alice's world is inhabited by two fantastic felines. At home, she enjoys the company of her amiable cat Dinah, while in Wonderland she is teased and tormented by the riddle-filled Cheshire Cat, whose likeness can by seen in the upper right corner of the fancifully bound copy above. 

Lot 395: Frank L. Baum, The Emerald City of Oz and The Scarecrow of Oz, first editions, Chicago, 1910 & 1915. Estimate $600 to $900. 

While most of us think of Dorothy's trusty terrier Toto when asked to conjure animals from these tales, the land of Oz is well-populated by cats too: Eureka, a kitten who starts out as white but is either pink or purple in Oz; Bungle, an animate glass cat; and of course, the Cowardly Lion. 

Lot 413: Wanda Ga'g, Millions of Cats, first edition, signed by the author, New York, 1928. Estimate $400 to $600. 

This 1929 Newbery Honor award winner tells the tale of an elderly couple trying to choose a cat, we won't spoil the story, but when cats are involved, things are bound to get a little complicated. 


For more books by cat-loving authors, peruse our complete catalogue








From the Whimsical to the Monstrous: Fantastic Beasts and Figures of Myth in Old Master Through Modern Prints

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While works by the old masters are often known to depict religious scenes, their work occasionally strayed into fantastic or mythic territory as well, showing a range of creatures and legends. Here we've taken a tour through some of the various monsters and myths represented in our upcoming auction of Old Master Through Modern Prints

Lot 233: Albrecht Dürer, Beast With Horns Like a Lamb, woodcut, 1498. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000. 

While still technically a religious image, master German Renaissance printmaker Albrecht Dürer's apocalyptic print certainly includes some intimidating beasts. 



Lot 312: Pieter Bruegel (after), Greed, engraving, 1558. Estimate $5,000 to $8,000. 

This engraving is full of all manner of of greedy anthropomorphic monsters, from the giant windmill head in the back to the frog-mouthed mer-creature downing a few of his fishy brethren in the bottom right corner. 



Lot 476: Francisco José de Goya, Allá vá eso, etching and aquatint, circa 1799. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.

From Goya's Los Caprichos, this etching shows a witch and a devil or demon, along with a cat and a serpent, often thought to be familiars of witches. 



Lot 303: Hans Baldung Grien, Sleeping Groom and a Sorceress, woodcut, 1544. Estimate $4,000 to $6,000. 

The most gifted student of Dürer, Hans Baldung Grien's work explored themes of witchcraft and sorcery, a topic of fascination and fear in Strasbourg during his time there. 


Lot 341: Giovanni B. Castiglioni, Circe Changing Ulysses' Men into Beasts, etching, circa 1651. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. 

A figure of myth alternatively represented as a sorceress or goddess associated with magic, in Homer's The Odyssey the titular character must rescue his men from Circe, who has turned them into animals. 



Lot 305: Hans Sebald Beham, The Lady and Death, engraving, 1541. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. 

Depictions of Death by various printmakers range from ominous to amusing. Beham's Death may be somewhere in between, with his skeletal features under a jester-like hood. 



Lot 435: Jacques Chiquet, Cat under Arrest, engraving, circa 1700. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 

Slightly more whimsical, but still fantastic, Chiquet's piece shows a band of anthropomorphic beasts arresting a cat for his crime, which is described just below. 



For more fantastic beasts, mythic creatures and mysterious beings, take a look at our complete Old Master Through Modern Prints catalogue





Records & Results: Autographs

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Our October 22 auction of Autographs had a strong sell-through rate of 81%, and many of the top lots sold well surpassed their high estimates. Swann Galleries' Autographs Specialist Marco Tomaschett said, "Many of the top lots came from a host of international musicians, artists, scientists and others, which reflects a shift of interest in the autographs market from Americana toward international items."


Lot 27: The Tagore Birthday Book with more than 80 Signatures or Signatures and Inscriptions, including Rabindranath Tagore, Churchill and Gandhi, each signed on their birthdate page. Sold October 22, 2015 for $30,000.


A fascinating copy of The Tagore Birthday Book eclipsed its high estimate of $5,000 and sold for $30,000 after competitive bidding. The book compiles more over 80 autographs of South Asian and British notables including Winston Churchill and Mohandas K. Gandhi.
Lot 70: Mohandas K. Gandhi, Letter Signed to Dr. John Haynes Holmes, expressing shock at the accusation that he stated an Independent India should form an army, April 1940. Sold October 22, 2015 for $10,625. 


There was a great deal of interest in this letter from Mohandas K. Gandhi dated from April 1940. In it, the Lawyer and Indian Independence movement leader firmly denies a claim made by Dr. Sherwood Eddy in Eddy's 1940 book I Have Seen God Do It, that Gandhi made statements which contradicted his pacifism. 


Lot 251: George Gershwin, Typed Letter Signed to Benjamin Kasser concerning the clarinet parts in Rhapsody in Blue. Sold October 22, 2015 for $27,500. 

Items relating to prominent musicians performed well in the sale, including this letter from American composer George Gershwin, and the Signed and Inscribed photograph of Tchaikovsky pictured below. 

Lot 302: Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, photograph Signed and Inscribed to librettist Paul Collin, March 1888. Sold October 22, 2015 for $11,700. 

Lot 123: Autograph album kept by John Adam's granddaughter Abby S. Smith including over 40 items Signed or Signed and Inscribed by John Adams, John Quincy Adams, relatives and friends, 1820s. 


The top presidential item was this autograph album kept by Abby S. Smith, granddaughter of President John Adams and niece of John Quincy Adams. The album includes the original Autograph Poem Signed by John Quincy Adams pictured above. 




A complete list of results for this sale can be found here

Traveling Through Time: Tracing the History of Science Fiction

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While looking at a list of movies currently playing in any given cinema might easily lead you to the conclusion that audiences love Science Fiction, our fascination with the genre goes back farther than you might think. 

Dr. Lawrence M. Solomon, a devoted book collector whose impressive assemblage of books is being auctioned at Swann on November 10, caught the Sci-fi bug at a young age. His collection displays a deep love for several genres, including Mystery and Detective Fiction, and does an excellent job of walking both the avid fan and the casual consumer through the history of genres. Below you'll find a brief tour through the history of Science Fiction demonstrated by The Lawrence M. Solomon Collection

Lot 297: Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Frankenstein; or The Modern Prometheus, third American edition, Boston and Cambridge, 1869. Estimate $600 to $900. 

Like any genre, the exact roots of Science Fiction are difficult to trace, and hints of science have intertwined with fantasy in tales all the way back before the days of print. Several different Science Fiction scholars and researchers identify Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, as a progenitor of the genre, helping to create the now recognizable character of the mad scientist, and heavily focusing on technology. 


Lot 344: Jules Verne, From the Earth to the Moon; Passage Direct in 97 Hours and 20 Minutes, first edition, Newark, 1869. Estimate $25,000 to $35,000. 

The genre saw a boom in Europe in the late 18th century with serialized work from writers like Jules Verne riveting magazine readers. English writer H.G. Wells would further popularize and transform the genre a little more than 20 years later with books like The Time Machine, The Island of Doctor Moreau, The Invisible Man and his classic The War of the Worlds, all of which are included in Dr. Solomon's collection. 

                        
Left, Lot 358: H.G. Wells, The War of the Worlds, first edition, first issue, London, 1898. Estimate $1,200 to $1,800. 
Right, Lot 355: H.G. Wells, The Time Machine, first English Edition, London, 1895. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000. 


Science fiction continued to sky-rocket in the years after WWI. In 1926, just a year after the first novelized publication of his previously serialized Ralph 124C 41+, Hugo Gernsback, a writer, publisher and inventor, founded the first magazine dedicated to the genre, Amazing Stories. The magazine would go one to publish works from Sci-fi greats like Isaac Asimov and Ursula K. Le Guin. The Hugo Awards, which celebrate works in the genre, are named in his honor. 

Lot 147: Hugo Gernsback, Ralph 124C 41+, first edition, Boston, 1925. Estimate $300 to $400. 

Science Fiction would enter its Golden Age in the 1940s and 50s, when other media like television and film began their love affair with the genre. During this time, writers like Issac Asimov, first published by Hugo, flourished. 

Lot 371: Issac Asimov, The Foundation Trilogy, three volumes, first editions in first issue dust jackets, New York, 1951-53. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000. 


The genre continued to expand and adapt, often borrowing from or expanding into other genres to create new styles and subcategories. One author known for this genre collaging was Phillip K. Dick, whose works like The Man in the High Castle bring together the alternate history and science fiction genres. Dick experimented with simulated reality in his 1959 novel Time Out of Joint. 

Lot 84: Phillip K. Dick, Time out of Joint, first edition, New York and Philadelphia, 1959. Estimate $800 to $1,200. 


Like the universe or a fictional viral epidemic, the genre of Science Fiction continues to expand and change. For more examples of the roots of the genre, have a look at the complete catalogue for our auction of 19th & 20th Century Literature featuring The Lawrence M. Solomon Collection. 

Records & Results: Early Printed & Medical Books

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Our late October auction of Early Printed & Medical Books exceeded expectations with a 96% sell-through rate and strong bidding across all categories. Rare linguistic and travel books generated particularly heavy interest, and seldom seen material relating to Eastern Christianity drew a substantial response. 

Lot 257: William Shakespeare, Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies, the Fourth Folio, 
London, 1685. Sold October 27 for $31,200.

Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies rose to its place as top lot by selling for more than twice its pre-sale estimate at $31,200. Although Andreas Vesalius's Anatomia Deudsch was superseded by Shakespeare, it remained a strong selection and sold well over its high estimate, bringing $27,500.

Lot 378: Andreas Vesalius, Anatomia Deudsch, first edition of an unauthorized German translation, Nuremberg, 1551. Sold October 27 for $27,500. 


Lot 141: [Biblia Latina], second Koberger Vulgate, Nuremberg, 1477. 
Sold October 27, 2015 for $19,500.




Lot 30: The New Testament of Jesus Christ translated faithfully into English, first edition, Rheims, 1582. 
Sold October 27, 2015 for $13,750.

Early printed Bibles sold well, signifying a lasting collector interest in material related to Christianity and its early roots. A second Koberger Vulgate of [Biblia Latina] sold for $4,500 over its high estimate at $19,500, and an early printed copy of the New Testament in English sold for $4,750 over its high estimate with $13,750.



Lot 258: Shakespeare, [Sir William Davenant], Macbeth, first edition of Davenant’s adaptation, London, 1674. Sold October 27, 2015 for $20,000.


Equally surprising was the sale of a first edition Sir William Davenant's adaptation of of Shakespeare's Macbeth for almost seven times its pre-sale estimate of $2,000 to $3,000. It set an auction record, and went to a dealer for $20,000. 

Lot 303: Gioseffo Zarlino, Le Institutioni Harmoniche, first edition, Venice, 1558. 
Sold October 27, 2015 for $20,000


A landmark in the history of music theory, Gioseffo Zarlino's important work Le Institutioni Hamoniche, whose pre-sale estimate was also $2,000 to $3,000 likewise set an auction record of $20,000. 

View the full results here.


The Irascibles and Abstract Expressionism

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While the practice of artists naming or voicing the movements in which they were participants began in the late 19th and early 20th century, there was often hesitation, or even resistance to being assigned a label. One such "group" that came together and yet struggled against the idea of unity was the so-called Irascibles, also know as the Irascible 18. The moniker was given to a group of 18 American artists who signed their names to an open letter protesting the Metropolitan Museum of Art's juried exhibition American Painting Today-1950, claiming that the selected jury was "notoriously hostile to advanced art" and had demonstrated a clear bias against "modern painting." The letter was published on the front page of the New York Times on May 22, 1950 and sparked a subsequent barrage of media attention. 

The Irascibles were photographed and appeared in the January 15, 1951 issue of LIFE magazine. While many of the artists, including Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, demonstrated concern with being grouped together (in fact even getting them together for the photograph proved trying), the members gained attention and the media coverage coined and popularized the term Abstract Expressionism. Work by several of the Irascible 18 artists featured in our November 12 auction of Contemporary Art can be seen below. 


Lot 77: Theodoros Stamos, Feeding Station, oil on canvas, 1953. Estimate $50,000 to $80,000. 



Lot 6: Jackson Pollock, Untitled, etching and drypoint, printed 1944-45. Estimate $30,000 to $50,000. 



Lot 7: Willem de Kooning, High School Desk,  lithograph, 1970. Estimate $7,000 to $10,000. 


Lot 27: Robert Motherwell, Gesture III, color brushed aquatint and lift-ground aquatint printed in blue and black, 1976-77. Estimate $10,000 to $15,000. 



Lot 5: Adolph Gottlieb, Untitled, color lithograph, 1969. Estimate $3,000 to $5,000. 


Lot 1: Hans Hofmann, Composition, color screenprint with hand coloring in oil, 1961. Estimate $4,000 to $6,000. 


More highlights from our Contemporary Art auction can be seen in the catalogue

Disaster, Demise and Scarcity: Rare Posters of Titanic at Auction

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A subject of fascination since its dramatic demise during its maiden voyage, the legacy of White Star Line's Titanic has continued to ripple throughout the auction world for years. While ephemera related to the Titanic appears with some frequency at auction, posters depicting the doomed ocean liner are relatively rare for several reasons: first, many images of White Star Line's Olympic-class ocean liners depict Titanic's sister ship, Olympic, which was launched seven months prior to Titanic; additionally, many posters and images of the Titanic were taken down and destroyed by White Star Line in the wake of her sinking. Even given the disaster, considering the fame of the ship it's surprising that so few posters of it survive. We've identified less than ten distinct posters.

In addition to holding records for several Titanic posters at auction, Swann has two Titanic posters in our upcoming sale of Rare & Important Travel Posters


Lot 82: Montague Birrell Black, [White Star Line / Olympic & Titanic], circa 1910. 

This image of White Star Line's Olympic-class liners, based on a painting by Montague Birrell Black, shows the sister ships Olympic and Titanic passing at sea, with Olympic in the foreground and her sister Titanic visible in the distance. Black's painting became the basis for posters and postcards for White Star Line, with the posters originally bearing the caption "White Star Line / Olympic 45,000 tons - Titanic 45,000 tons the Largest Steamers in the world," on a green border surrounding the image. The posters were printed in a relatively small number, intended to hang in White Star Offices, and just a handful have survives. The text-bearing green borders were most likely removed after the catastrophic maiden voyage of the Titanic. This example, however, is framed in an original White Star Line company frame. 



Lot 81: James Scrimgeour Mann, [White Star Line / R.M.S. Olympic & Titanic], circa 1911. 

Ocean liner companies would often promote sister ships, such as the nearly identical Olympic and Titanic, by issuing posters in anticipation of their launch. In this instance, the poster advertises both gigantic ships, but depicts the Olympic, recognizable here by her open upper promenade. By the time the sister Titanic was launched she weighed 46,329 tons, not the advertised 45,000, due to the decision to enclose one of her upper decks. This poster has appeared twice before at auction in Europe, with the exterior mat in Swedish promoting White Star Line's Swedish ticket agent, suggesting the company used the image in multiple countries by changing the mat to reflect the information in different languages. This exact copy has appeared once before at auction and is the only example with an English mat to ever come to auction.


Sale 2261-Lot 93: White Star Line / Titanic, by an unknown designer, 1912. Sold November 11, 2011 for $72,000. 


Swann has previously sold two other images advertising Titanic, the broadside above and another image by painter Montague Birrell Black, both of which set auction records. 


Sale 2230-Lot 60: Montague Birrell Black, White Star Line / "Olympic & Titanic,"circa 1910. Sold November 15, 2010 for $36,000. 


For more dynamic travel and ocean liner posters, take a look at our complete catalogue

Records & Results: American Prints from a Private Collection

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Swann Galleries' November 3, American Prints from a Private Collection saw numerous auction and artist records made, particularly for artists like Gustave Baumann and Martin Lewis, who built careers making fine prints. Todd Weyman, Swann Vice President and Director of Prints & Drawings, commented "that both new and seasoned collectors alike flock to the eclectic and historically-rich 20th century American print field." 


Lot 65: Gustave Baumann, Summer Shadows, color woodcut, 1917. 
Sold November 3, 2015 for $42,500, an auction record for any work by the artist.


Collectors came out in force for works by Baumann, with two prints selling at record prices. Summer Shadows had only been seen once at auction in the past 30 years, and sold for more than four times its high estimate at $42,500–not only a record for the print, but for the artist overall. Superstition Mountain also sold for an auction record of more than twice its pre-sale estimate, ultimately realizing $23,750. 

Lot 67: Baumann, Superstition Mountain, color woodcut, 1949. Sold November 3, 2015 for an auction record of $23,750. 

Lot 172: Thomas Hart Benton, The Race, lithograph, 1942. Sold November 3, 2015 for an auction record of $37,500.

Thomas Hart Benton's lithograph based on his oil painting of the same name, The Race, sold for an auction record of $37,500. Fellow regionalist John Steuart Curry's lithograph John Brown brought a record price for any print by the artist, selling for $11,875.

Lot 180: John Steuart Curry, John Brown, lithograph, 1939. Sold November 3, 2015 for $11,875, an auction record for any work by the artist.

Lot 135: Howard Cook, Chrysler Building, wood engraving, 1930. Sold November 3, 2015 for an auction record of $17,500.

A wood engraving of New York's famous landmark, Chrysler Building by Howard Cook brought a record price at $17,500.

Lot 108: Martin Lewis, Wet Night, Route 6, drypoint, 1933. Sold November 3, 2015 for $72,500, an auction record for any work by the artist


For some, the most exciting result from this sale was a new auction record for Martin Lewis's luminous print, Wet Night, Route 6, which sold to a collector for $72,500. The previous artist record for Lewis was also held by Swann at $52,500 for his gritty drypointGlow of the City



View full results here.

Leather Bindings, Decorative Dust Jackets and Beyond

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While the old adage tells us that we certainly shouldn't judge a book by its cover, it's hard to ignore the artistry that goes into binding books and creating dust jacket images that catch the eye and tell a story all their own. Here's a tour through various types of book covers featured in our upcoming auction of Art, Press & Illustrated Books


Intricately Crafted Leather Bindings


Lot 36: George Barbier's own copy of Vies Imaginaires by Marcel Schwob, with illustrations by Barbier and F.L. Schmied, Paris, 1929. Estimate $20,000 to $30,000. 

George Barbier's livre d'artiste was bound by Georges Cretté, successor to the great Marius Michel. The binding features an Art Deco design of intertwining gold and silver fillet diamonds, white morocco inlaid centers and dotted shadows which are repeated on the spine. All edges are trimmed and gilt, with white morocco doublures with silver, gold, and bronze zig-zag diamond design and rose silk moiré endleaves. 

 Lot 240: François-Louis Schmied's illustrated version of René de Chateaubriand's Les Adventures du Dernier Abencérage, with 37 color wood engravings by Schmied, Paris, 1930. Estimate $5,000 to $7,500. 

This contemporary brown morocco Art Deco binding by Jean Lambert was created after a design by François-Louis Schmied. The covers are decorated with horizontal gilt fillets and dots, central rectangular panels in coral, green and brown morocco inlaid geometric designs, with a gilt-lettered spine, silk moiré endleaves and calf doublures. 


Lot 85: Maurice Denis, La Vie de Frère Genièvre, translated by André Pératé, Paris, 1923. Estimate $600 to $900. 

Custom-bound in green morocco leather with gold and silver Art Deco decorations and watered silk endpapers, by Lagrand. 



Lot 188: Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Sonnets from the Portuguese, illustrated and hand-colored by Stuart Mason, London, 1900/. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. 

Bound in plum morocco leather with intertwining border design in gold and green by Andrée M. Clark. 



The Era of the Dust Jacket


Beginning in the 1900s, art migrated from the book binding to the dust jacket, primarily since dust jackets were cheaper to produce than intricate bindings. Today, dust jacket art has become incredibly recognizable, and important and collectable texts are often valued much higher if their dust jackets remain intact. 

 


 

Lot 97: Collection of 84 Weimar era Book Jackets from 1926-32. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. 

This collection of Weimar-era book jackets demonstrates a range of techniques showcasing the height of German avant-garde graphic design including photomontage, illustration, color printing, type design and layout. 




Lot 143:  Rockwell Kent's illustrated edition of Melville's Moby Dick, from a group of 3 volumes. Estimate $600 to $900. 

At the time of publication of Rockwell Kent's illustrated version, both Moby Dick and author Herman Melville had fallen into relative obscurity. Originally a commercial failure, Moby Dick is now often touted as the Great American Novel, a position of popularity that was certainly helped by the attention Kent's illustrated edition garnered.



Non-traditional Book Covers and Bindings

Occasionally, bindings are a little more outside-the-box, blurring the line of how we traditionally view books. 


Lot 161: Heinrich Harrer, Seven Years in Tibet, number 43 of 300 copies signed by the author, Limited Editions Club, New York, 1993. Estimate $1,000 to $1,500. 

This Limited Editions Club version of Heinrich Harrer's autobiographical travel book is bound in imported Indian white silk with a Tibetan good luck charm blind-stamped on the front cover, then further encased in a protective cloth wrap nestled between two carved magnolia panels with straps. 

Lot 108: H. Boylston Dummer, The Robin Book, singed twice by Dummer, Rockport, circa 1925. Estimate $300 to $400. 

H. Boylston Dummer's illustrated children's books toe the line between book and toy.

Lot 109: H. Boylston Dummer, Santa Claus Aeroplane Book, two versions, New York, Rockport, Cape Ann, circa 1925. Estimate $500 to $750. 


Lot 21: Edwin A. Abbott, Flatland, Arion Press, San Francisco, 1980. Estimate $1,000 to $1,500. 

Edwin A. Abbott's experimental satirical novel is printed in accordion format and housed in a futuristic aluminum binding that sits in a top-latched metal frame. 

Lot 33: Enrico Baj, La Cravate ne vaut pas une médaille, color lithographs with silkscreen and collage, Geneva and Milan, 1972. Estimate $2,500 to $3,500. 

The slipcase to Enrico Baj's work is mounted with a 3-dimensional lego brick and metal multiple signed by the artist. 



For a look at more bindings and dust jackets, have a look at the complete catalogue

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