LONDON (AP) – A skull and other bone fragments discovered last year in the home of an elderly British academic were handed over to the Australian government in a solemn Aboriginal ceremony Thursday.
The handover was part of Australia’s effort to recover indigenous remains held across the world. The government has retrieved remains of more than 1,100 people from the UK since 1990.
Remains were sold to museums and trophy-hunters in the 19th century, Australia’s High Commissioner John Dauth said in a telephone interview.
LONG ISLAND CITY, N.Y. – Ro Gallery, specialists in Latin-American art, will conduct a May 28 auction featuring 324 lots, with highlights including works by Montoya, Soto, Matta and many other collectible artists. Live Internet bidding will be provided LiveAuctioneers.com.
One of the top-estimated lots in the sale is a 1962 oil on canvas by Raimundo de Oliveira (Brazilian, 1930-1966) titled Jonah and the Whale. Signed and dated, the colorful 28½ inch by 39½ inch work is expected to make $40,000-$50,000.
An untitled Wellington de Sousa (Brazilian, 1929-1988) oil-on-panel painting of three children cradling a cat measures 24 inches by 29.5 inches. The 1962 artwork could be one of the auction’s high fliers and carries a $40,000-$50,000 estimate. Continue reading
LONDON – Famous and familiar faces will be in focus as Bloomsbury Auctions offers important photographs of the 19th and 20th centuries and contemporary works at an auction Thursday, May 21. Among the 269 lots is an impressive group of portraits. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.
Celebrity and fashion are celebrated in this sale with three impressive oversize prints by Terry O’Neill of Brigitte Bardot, Spain, 1971, Paul Newman and Lee Marvin in costume for Pocket Money, Denver, Colo., 1971 and Frank Sinatra, 1968 (estimates £3,000-£5,000, $4,600-$7,600).
No group of portrait photographs is complete without examples from British photographer David Bailey. Bloomsbury is offering six lots of his Live Aid Portraits, which were originally sold on behalf of the Band Aid Ethiopian Relief Fund in 1985. All the prints are framed with glass backs showing the signatures of both the photographer and the musicians, including Madonna, David Bowie and Paul and Linda McCartney. The prints are an edition of three, and estimates begin at £400-£600 ($610-$915).
Andrew Catlin’s portrait of Sinead O’Connor, 1988, is held in the collection of the National Gallery in London and a large variant shot will be offered, standing at over a meter tall, as edition 2/3. It is estimated at £2,500-£3,500 ($3,800-$5,340).
Hollywood icons such as Sid Avery’s James Dean on the set of Giant, Marfa, Texas, 1955 (est. £1,000-£2,000, $1,500-$3,000) will appeal to a large audience together with a large Cibachrome print of Marilyn Monroe, Mount Sinai, Long Island, N.Y., 1952, by Eve Arnold, printed on the occasion of the 1996 retrospective Eve Arnold, In Retrospect, Barbican, London. (est. £2,000-£3,000, $3,000-$4,600).
Nine lots feature photogravures from Camera Work with an attractive selection of photogravures by Alfred Stieglitz from the most desirable issue, no. 36, including The Steerage (1907), The Terminal (1892) and Spring Showers, New York (1900) (est. £5,000-£8,000, $7,600-$12,200).
Another highlight from the 20th Century items on offer, is Untitled (Nude) by Erwin Blumenfeld, a gelatin silver print, printed circa 1943 by the photographer, stamped on verso, 13 by 10inches.
Contemporary photographs are also in this auction and include Izima Kaorou’s Tsuruta Mayu wears Dries Van Noten, no.191, 1998 (est. £4,000-£6,000, $6,100-$9,100) and six lots of Andrew Moore’s gigantic cibachrome prints from his series of Montages, such as Towers of Light, 1991 (est. £4,000-£6,000, $6,100-$9,100).
Among the 19th-century photographs are four photographs by Paul Nadar from the interview between the French chemist Michel Eugène Chevreul and Nadar, taken on the occasion of Chevreul’s 100th birthday in 1886. The gelatin silver prints are considered to be the earliest “photo-interview.” The original negatives were made on Aug. 31, 1886. (est. £8,000-£12,000, $12,200-$18,300).
Previews are scheduled for Monday, May 18, and Tuesday, May 19, from 9.30 a.m. to 5.30 p.m.; Wednesday, May 20, from 9.30 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Thursday, May 21, from 9.30 a.m. to 1 p.m. The auction begins at 3 p.m.
View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.
View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.
FORT WORTH, Texas – The Torment of Saint Anthony, a painting described by Michelangelo’s earliest biographers, has been acquired by the Kimbell Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas. Its purchase was announced Wednesday, May 13, 2009, by the Kimbell’s newly appointed director, Dr. Eric McCauley Lee.
Executed in oil and tempera on a wooden panel, this work is the first painting by Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) to enter an American collection, and one of only four known easel paintings generally believed to come from his hand. The others are the Doni Tondo in Florence’s Uffizi Gallery and two unfinished paintings in London’s National Gallery, The Manchester Madonna and The Entombment. Continue reading
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) – EBay is eliminating some upfront fees to attract more sellers who occasionally auction off items. The California-based online giant said users will soon be able to offer up to five items for auction every 30 days without paying the fees that eBay usually charges to list goods. Those listing fees usually run 10 cents to $4, depending on the item.
EBay users will still have to pay fees for items sold. Under a new fee schedule that applies to no-listing-fee items, sellers pay a flat 8.75 percent of the sale price, with a cap of $20 per item. Usually, sellers pay different rates depending on the sale price, with no cap.
EBay spokesman Usher Lieberman said Tuesday that the change, which takes effect June 16, is meant to make it simpler for consumers to list items on the site. Continue reading