NEW YORK, NY.- Bonhams will offer a rare poppy portrait from Irving Penns (1917-2009) floral series at its Photographs sale in New York on October 6. Penn began photographing his enchanting botanical still-lifes in 1967 on assignment for Vogue and continued to publish the portraits in the magazines annual Christmas issue through 1973. Each issue highlighted a different blossom, including the tulip, rose, lily, peony, orchid, begonia and the poppy. Offered in the sale is a dye transfer print of Poppy: Glowing Embers, estimated at $150,000 $250,000, which first debuted in December 1968 in the feature titled Free, Profuse, Strong as a Wolf, the Poppy is Vital, Persistent.
Irving Penns perspicacious pursuit of truth and beauty in all of his photographic subjects is the cornerstone of his work, from his 1950s fashion images to his eye-opening still-life studies, and certainly his floral portraits are no exception. His meticulous investigations portray each flower as something divine and invite viewers to observe its intricate form from his intimate, distinct perspective, says Kelly Sidley, Bonhams Head of Photographs. Penn presented Glowing Embers as the ne plus ultra among his 13 poppy portraits. Unlike other poppies photographed well past their prime, Glowing Embers celebrates the poppy at its most vibrant and animated.
The sale also features Richard Avedons (1923-2004) Francis Bacon, artist, 4-11-79, estimated at $150,000-250,000. This year marks the centennial of Avedons birth and many exhibitions have paid tribute to the artist, including 2023 solo presentations at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Gagosian in New York, and Hamiltons Gallery in London. A photographer who profoundly influenced visual culture, Avedon captured portraits of hundreds of subjects from a wide variety of backgrounds, including musicians, pop icons, writers, models, political activists, artists and thought leaders. This eminent double portrait of artist Francis Bacon mirrors the narratives painted in the painters own portraits, which he often created in diptych and triptych formats. Two additional portraits by Avedon of Andy Warhol are also included in the sale, estimated at $12,000 $18,000 and $10,000 $15,000 respectively.
Additional highlights of the sale include
·A group of 137 cyanotypes by Edward S. Curtis (1868-1952), nearly all unique works, estimated at $70,000 $100,000
·Ansel Adams (1902-1984), Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, printed in the 1960s, estimated at $80,000 $120,000
·William Eggleston (born 1939), En Route to New Orleans, c. 1971-74, estimated at $30,000 $40,000
·Valie Export (born 1940), Action Pants: Genital Panic, estimated at $25,000 $35,000
·Massimo Vitali (born 1964), Picnic Alternatif 1, estimated at $20,000 $40,000
·David Wojnarowicz (1954-1992), Untitled (Buffaloes), from a memorial edition of 12, estimated at $10,000 $15,000
·Six lifetime photographs by Dorothea Lange (1895-1965), estimates ranging from $3,000 $5,000 to $5,000 $7,000