Records & Results: Illustration Art

Theater Portraits & Set Designs Lead Illustration Art 

Miriam Troop makes a stellar auction debut at $40k

 

Caricature illustration of Paul Robeson as Othello on Broadway in 1943 by Al Hirschfeld.
Lot 99: Al Hirschfeld, Paul Robeson as Othello, illustration for the 1943 revival of Shakespeare’s tragic play, detail, published in The New York Times, August 9, 1942. Sold for $68,750

Our Illustration Art sale on June 4 saw a bustling auction room with bidding wars delivering strong prices:

“I was extremely pleased with the collector participation in all subject areas of the sale, but Broadway legends stole the show today, as it were, with two outstanding Hirschfelds and the Mielziner,”

Illustration Specialist, Christine von der Linn

 

Theater Portraits & Set Designs

The sale was led by Al Hirschfeld’s Paul Robeson as Othello, published on August 9, 1942 in The New York Times, which captures Robeson in his groundbreaking moment as the first time an American production of Othello cast a black actor in the titular role with a white supporting cast. The only portrait of the actor by Hirschfeld, it brought $68,750, the second-highest price for the artist at auction. Also of note by the caricaturist was The Merry Widow, published in The New York Times, August 15, 1943, which earned $20,000.

 

Set design of a city at night for Pal Joey by Joe Mielziner.
Lot 104: Jo Mielziner, Pet Shop Drop, backdrop design for Act One, Scene Two of the 1940 Broadway production of Pal Joey. Sold for $55,000, a record for the designer.

 

Additional theater illustrations included the backdrop design for Act One, Scene Two of the 1940 Broadway production of Pal Joey by Jo Mielziner. The work brought a record for the legendary scenic designer at $55,000 after a determined round of bidding between two collectors drove the price over its $6,000 high estimate.

 

Magazine Cover Designs

 

Illustration of a woman handing laundry on a clothes line by Miriam Troop.
Lot 90: Miriam Troop, Rain on Laundry Day, oil on canvas, cover illustration for The Saturday Evening Post, published June 15, 1940. Sold for $40,000, an auction debut for the artist.

 

Magazine cover designs were highly sought-after: Miriam Troop made her auction debut with the illustration for the June 15, 1940 issue of The Saturday Evening Post ($40,000); Frederick Cooper’s pen, ink and watercolor drawing for a special issue of LIFE magazine published on May 12, 1927 also made its auction debut ($9,375). 

 

Lot 119: Lee Brown Coye, cover illustration for the 25th anniversary issue of Weird Tales, acrylic on board, 1944. Sold for $18,750.

 

The recently rediscovered Cat Fancy, 1993, by Edward Gorey featured on the December 10, 2018 issue of The New Yorker ($16,250); and Lee Brown Coye’s acrylic painting for the 25th anniversary issue of Weird Tales ($18,750).

 

Literary Illustrations

Mead Schaeffer’s frontispiece and dust jacket design for the 1922 reissue of Moby Dick brought $50,000. Also by Schaeffer was an oil on canvas scene for A Tale of Tombarel’s Past published in Cosmopolitan magazine in 1930 ($16,250).

 

Pen and ink drawing of cowboys tending to their horses by Frederic Remington.
Lot 43: Frederic Remington, story illustration for A Scout with the Buffalo Soldiers, pen & ink on board, published in The Century magazine, April 1889. Sold for $17,500.

 

Further illustrations for literary works included a pen-and-ink drawing by Frederic Remington for his short story A Scout with the Buffalo Soldiers published in The Century magazine in 1889 ($17,500), and Richard Powers’ rear cover illustration for Star Science Fiction Stories, 1953 ($7,500).

 

Complete Results.

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