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Audubon

Audubon painting, 16th C. map climb to top of Swann’s Maps & Atlases sale

Audubon
John Woodhouse Audubon, California Gray Squirrel, oil on canvas, circa 1853. Sold for $42,500

NEW YORK – Swann Galleries closed out 2020 with a marathon sale of Maps & Atlases, Natural History & Color Plate Books on Thursday, December 17. “Ninety-two percent of the 405 lots hammered down, with about a third above estimate — participation numbers which exhibit a very interested, willing, and active market for this material,” said Swann Specialist Caleb Kiffer. LiveAuctioneers facilitated absentee and Internet live bidding for the sale.

The star of the session was an original 1853 oil painting of a California gray squirrel by John Woodhouse Audubon, the son of John James Audubon. The work came to auction after having descended through John Woodhouse’s family, and sold for $42,500.

John James Audubon’s Night Heron or Qua Bird, 1835, from Birds of America, brought $30,000. Additional natural history included William Jardine’s The Naturalist’s Library, 1843, complete with 40 volumes containing over 1,200 hand-colored engraved plates of animals, birds, fishes and insects, at $7,800.

World cartography proved to be popular with buyers, making up nearly half of the top 20 lots by value. Bernardus Sylvanus’s 1511 world map, one of the earliest attainable printed maps to show the New World, earned $42,500; a prize example of Johannes Blaeu’s striking Nova et Accuratissima Totius Terrarum Orbis Tabula, a 17-century Dutch world map, garnered $23,750; and Sebastian Münster’s Typus Cosmographicus Universalis, Basel, 1532, with elaborate woodcut borders designed by Hans Holbein the Younger, reached $16,250.

Audubon
Bernardus Sylvanus, Untitled World Map, double-page woodcut, Venice, 1511 AD. Sold for $42,500

Atlases and books with maps included Nicolas Sanson’s Atlas Nouveau, Paris, 1693, which brought $11,250; Arnoldus Montanus’s survey of the Americas, Die Unbekante Neue Welt oder Beschreibung des Welt-teils Amerika, Amsterdam, 1673, translated into German by Olfert Dapper, $8,750; and Robert Laurie and James Whittle’s A New and Elegant Imperial Sheet Atlas, London, 1800, $7,500.

“I was very pleased to close out the season with a strong sale of maps and atlases. Interest was wide-ranging with aggressive bidding from around the world on lots from the modest range to the more expensive. That’s one of my favorite aspects of curating these sales, offering collectors at any level of experience or means the chance to find an interesting piece which they would be happy to call their own,” Kiffer concluded.

Swann is currently accepting quality consignments for the spring 2021 season. For the house’s most up-to-date auction schedule please visit swanngalleries.com.

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Audubon