NEW YORK, NY.- The Thursday, June 15 sale of Fine Books & Manuscripts is set to auction by
Swann Galleries by a standout offering of rare autographs and books with a special selection dedicated to illustration art.
The autographs portion of the sale opens the auction with remarkable items signed by U.S. Presidents, musicians, and entertainers, as well as a special selection of autographs by historical figures who aspired to great heights, be they revolutionaries, writers, artists, or aviators. Of note is Pancho Villa, whose letter implores the governor of Chihuahua to persuade authorities to release him from prison. The letter was signed and written entirely in his hand while facing execution by firing squad ($7,000-10,000). Also on offer are letters and documents by Emiliano Zapata, Antonio López de Santa Anna and others.
Additional highlights feature three lots from Mahatma Gandhi, including an autograph letter signed to descendants of his old friend Dr. Pranjivan Mehta, urging that they take up a life of public service ($10,000-20,000), as well as autographs from Queen Elizabeth II, Oliver Cromwell and Napoléon.
A run of lots dedicated to Ernest Hemmingway are on offer, starting with a high school scrapbook kept by his classmate and signed thrice in 1917 by Hemingway using playful nicknames ($600-900), ending with film rights contracts and letters addressed to Hemingways attorney concerning Old Man and the Sea and A Farewell to Arms ($1,500-2500), bidders are offered a glimpse into the character that gave rise to such works. Additional offers include an archive of letters from Ezra Pound, a 1950 typed letter signed by J.D. Salinger mentioning the completion of Catcher in the Rye ($7,000-10,000), and a typed letter signed by Kurt Vonnegut warning his brother in 1946 of the imminent nuclear destruction of humanity ($3,000-4,000).
The autographs portion of the sale concludes with contributions from Andy Warhol, who stamped the heads of ten black cows on a card he signed and inscribed to Robert Indiana ($3,500-5,000), and six lots of Robert Indianas holograph sketches used as studies for larger artworks, nearly all signed ($600-900 to $3,000-4,000, apiece).
The nineteenth and twentieth-century literature portion of the sale is led by one of the earliest known copies of Charles Dickens The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, London, 1837, one of an early few deemed a Prime Pickwick with this copy bound in book form ($30,000-40,000); further Dickens titles include a first edition of A Christmas Carol in the original cloth ($4,500-6,000). Other notables include a finely bound first American edition of J.R.R. Tolkiens Lord of the Rings, Boston, 1954-56, trilogy ($9,000-12,000), a group of five first editions from Lewis Carroll that includes a copy of Alices Adventures in Wonderland, London, 1866 ($6,000-9,000), and one of 20 signed and numbered copies of Hugh Selwyn Mauberley, deluxe edition, London, 1920, by Ezra Pound, a limitation not seen at auction in two decades ($12,000-18,000).
Highlights from the art, press and illustrated book offerings include Das Werk von Gustav Klimt, Vienna, 1918, complete with all 50 plates ($25,000-35,000), a very elusive Edward Gorey item, Elefantômas, 1986, one of 26 signed and lettered sets ($10,000-15,000), and seldom seen artist proof copies of both Letters ($6,000-9,000) and Numbers, 1968 ($4,000-6,000), by Erté (Romain de Tirtoff).
The final portion of the sale consists of original illustration art, including cartoons and animation, examples of book and magazine works, fashion and theater-related material and others. Headlining this section is John Carleton Athertons Saturday Evening Post wartime oil Fall Bounty, 1943 ($10,000-15,000). Other notables include a substantial group of drawings by Charles Schulz with nearly all the Peanuts core characters represented ($8,000-12,000) and a fine Madeleine by Ludwig Bemelmans ($5,000-7,500).