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American art

Heritage assembles powerful lineup for May 7 American art sale

‘A Mountain of Loadstone-Arabian Nights,’ Thomas Moran, estimated at $150,000-$250,000
‘A Mountain of Loadstone-Arabian Nights,’ Thomas Moran, estimated at $150,000-$250,000

DALLAS – Heritage Auctions is honored to announce one of the most thoughtful, comprehensive and bountiful American art events in recent memory. The catalog for the May 7 American Art Signature Auction reads like a syllabus, a history, and a love letter to the men and women who have defined and defied the American landscape for centuries, among them such names as Norman Rockwell, Albert Bierstadt, Andrew Wyeth, Thomas Moran, Thomas Hart Benton, and Grandma Moses. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

The more than 190 works in the auction offer a journey across myriad landscapes and experiences, through time and space, from roiling seas to snowy plains, from the playful to the poignant. Within its lineup one will find the makers of mountains and seasides, the masters of magazine illustration, the visual storytellers who reflect and recount, the sculptors of powerful beasts, the painters of the people who have populated this land and told its tales.

“Clients and curators who have seen these collected works have told me our forthcoming auction overflows with quality material, the likes of which has not been seen since in one place since the auctions of the 1980s,” says Aviva Lehmann, Heritage Auctions’ New York City-based Director of American Art. “As someone who has been devoted solely to the study and love of American Art for decades, these words are music to my ears.”

‘Excuse Me!’ a 1917 cover illustration by Norman Rockwell, could sell for $400,000-plus
‘Excuse Me!’ Norman Rockwell, 1917, estimated at $400,000+

Befitting such an event, Norman Rockwell’s first cover for Judge magazine appears in the auction, marking its first public sale in more than century.

Excuse Me! appeared on the front of the July 7, 1917, issue. This rich, playful piece features a young woman in pink ruffles declaring her independence from one man to link arms with another, a soldier clearly delighted by his good fortune. This work, also known as Soldier Escorting Woman, was first sold at a Liberty War Bonds auction during World War I; from there, it found its way into private collections. It has not been to auction in more than a century, and is expected to sell in excess of $400,000.

“It embodies all the hallmarks one loves to see in a great Rockwell masterwork,” Lehmann says. “There is an engaging and timeless story being told, executed in Rockwell’s unmatched painting style. Above all else, Rockwell is one of the greatest storytellers of the 20th century.”

‘Beat-up Boy, Football Hero,’ J.C. Leyendecker, estimated at $150,000-$250,000
‘Beat-up Boy, Football Hero,’ J.C. Leyendecker, estimated at $150,000-$250,000

So, too, was his mentor and influence Joseph Christian Leyendecker, represented in the auction by Beat-up Boy, Football Hero, which appeared on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post on Nov. 21, 1914. Remarkably, this extraordinary portrait of a bruised, bandaged, scuffed-up but proudly defiant young boy has never before been to auction.

In fact, this delightful work from the creator of The Arrow Collar Man has resided with one family for nearly a century. And it looks today as it did upon its creation: The painting, estimated between $150,000-$250,000, has never been relined and remains housed on its original stretcher.

The Beat-up Boy joins another Leyendecker in this event, a Saturday Evening Post cover study from 1932 that likewise has never been available at auction: Easter Promenade is estimated at $15,000-$25,000.

‘St. George,’ Andrew Wyeth, estimated at $150,000-$250,000
‘St. George,’ Andrew Wyeth, estimated at $150,000-$250,000

Thomas Moran likewise began his career as a magazine illustrator, at Scribner’s Monthly, where he was hired by editor Richard Watson Gilder to document the wonders of the American West. As a result, Page Knox wrote in the Journal of Illustration in 2008, the pair helped introduce these glorious uncharted regions to an ever-expanding audience of readers back east.

Moran’s work bears the imprimatur of British painter J.M.W. Turner, whose landscapes he echoed and emulated on the way to finding his own voice, which is on display in 1898’s A Mountain of Loadstone-Arabian Nights. The work, estimated at $150,000-$250,000, features hallmarks of Moran’s Western works that pay homage to the fearsome beautify of nature.

‘Mount St. Helens, Columbia River, Oregon,’ Albert Bierstadt, estimated at $120,000-$180,000
‘Mount St. Helens, Columbia River, Oregon,’ Albert Bierstadt, estimated at $120,000-$180,000

A Mountain of Loadstone is one of many works starring Mother Earth offered in this event. Also included is Albert Bierstadt’s 1889 oil on canvas Mount St. Helens, Columbia River, Oregon, estimated at $120,000-$180,000. Bierstadt painted it at the height of his fame, and it is as representative of any of his works depicting his love affair with the snow-covered peaks of the American Northwest.

Andrew Wyeth’s St. George, estimated at $150,000-$250,000, is a far more still and serene work, an homage to the coastal Maine where he found his inspiration. This undated work, never before offered at auction, depicts one of the historic architectural landmarks of coastal Maine: The Finnish Congregational Church and Parsonage on St. George Road in South Thomaston. Like so many of his masterworks, it’s meant as tribute to people unseen, but whose presence remains deeply felt in the work and Wyeth’s memory.

Double-sided work by Thomas Hart Benton, estimated at $60,000-$80,000
Double-sided work by Thomas Hart Benton, estimated at $60,000-$80,000

One of the most unique offerings in the sale comes from Thomas Hart Benton – and the suitcase of Charles Pollock, brother of Jackson. The double-sided artwork is a rather small piece, measuring a few inches by a few inches, and its canvas is rather unconventional — a piece of tin, hardly what one expects for so renowned a muralist as Benton. On one side he offers Woodland Stream, Martha’s Vineyard; on the other, Chilmark Landscape. Most likely this work, estimated at $60,000-$80,000, is an early study for Benton’s first mural cycle, The American Historical Epic, which he worked on from about 1922 until 1928. But regardless of its origin, the work tells quite a lovely story, augmented by the coda that it wound up with Charlie Pollock, who, like Jackson, was a student of Benton’s.

‘The Wounded Comrade,’ Carl Akeley, estimated at $40,000-$60,000
‘The Wounded Comrade,’ Carl Akeley, estimated at $40,000-$60,000

Also available in the May 7 sale is The Wounded Comrade, a bronze of two African elephants made by taxidermist, conservationist, biologist, photographer and sculptor Carl Akeley. This work, made at the suggestion of fellow sculptor Alexander Phimister Proctor, was conceived in 1913 and cast 14 years later by his widow Mary, at the request of Tiffany & Company, where The Wounded Comrade remained until it was acquired by a Massachusetts family with whom this has remained ever since. The Akeley bronze is estimated at $40,000-$60,000.

“Even as the art world flirts with a digital future, I would venture to say American art is experiencing a renaissance,” Lehmann says. “And I am so honored and delighted to be part of it.”

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