07 April 2008

support this (especially if you're a writer)!

Rather than paraphrase I copied this from Tayari Jones' blog. The auction still has between 5 and 6 days to run. Help if you can:

Let's Help The Dunbar Village Survivors!

The ebay auction is up! Go there now to bid on manuscript critiques by me, George Saunders, Nichelle Tramble, Sarah Schulman, Laila Lalami, Joy Castro, Martha Southgate, D. Nurkse, and Honoree Fanonne Jeffers! Carleen Brice is offering to critique your non-fiction book proposal. (Having sold three books this way, she knows how it's done!) There are books up for grabs-- a full set of George Saunders titles and a set of memoirs and a collection of debut novels. Natasha Trethewey is giving a signed hardcover of her Pulitzer Prize winning collection, Native Guard. Erika Dreyfus, the "Practicing Writer", has offered her three e-books on how to find paying markets for what you write! This is just in: Rachel Eliza Griffiths will take your photo if you live the NY area. (Trust me. You want her to take your photo.)

We got the good stuff.

If you'd like to contribute directly to the victims of the Dunbar Village tragedy here's the info.

Individuals who would like to donate money to the victims can go to any Wachovia Bank and donate to the St. Ann’s Victim’s Assistance Fund. Donations will go directly to the mother and her son.
St. Ann’s Catholic Church will accept donations. Checks can be made payable to the "Dunbar Village Victim Assistance Fund - St. Ann’s".
Donations can be mailed to: St. Ann’s Catholic Church, 310 N. Olive Avenue, West Palm Beach, FL 33401

If you go this route, let me know. At the end of the week, I want to post the results of our hard work and I want to make sure I include you.

On that note, I received the first contribution last night at KGB Bar. Alicia, a member of our blog community, slipped me some cash. "This is for Dunbar Village," she said.

Ashe.

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27 February 2008

UPDATED: Swann Galleries African-American Fine Art auction

ANOTHER RECORD-SETTING AUCTION OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN FINE ART AT
SWANN GALLERIES ON FEBRUARY 19

Artist Records Set for Aaron Douglas, Elizabeth Catlett, Beauford Delaney, Hale Woodruff and
Other Well-Known Artists

New York—Swann Galleries' third auction of African-American Fine Art on February 19 was their largest and highest-grossing sale of that category to date, bringing in more than $2.7 million. Once again benchmarks were set for works by important and lesser-known
African-American artists.

The top lot, Building More Stately Mansions, an oil painting by famed Harlem Renaissance artist Aaron Douglas, sold for $600,000—an auction record for the artist's work. It was purchased by the Rhode Island School of Design Museum where it will be exhibited in their new galleries of Twentieth Century art and design. The RISD Museum faced fierce competition from other bidders in the auction room and on the telephones, including other museums.

This previously unknown work is a variant of Douglas's famous larger painting with the same title, which is in the Fisk University collection. It employs the artist's signature combination of Art Deco and African forms in a visionary scene of soaring architectural achievement. The painting had been purchased directly from the artist by a colleague at Fisk and passed down in the family of the original owner. It had never been on public exhibition.

Another newly discovered work by Douglas in the auction was Emperor Jones, a black gouache drawing from 1926. One of few known studies for the artist's celebrated woodcut series, it sold to a private collector for $90,000.

Nigel Freeman, Director of Swann's African-American Fine Art Department, said, "We are thrilled with the results achieved by these important works and others in the sale."

An auction record price was also set by Elizabeth Catlett's Torso, Portrait of Joan, a painted terra cotta sculpture from 1960, which brought $216,000. The previous top price for a work by Catlett was for Nude Torso, a 1976 carved mahogany sculpture, which sold at Swann in February 2007 for $120,000.

Also surpassing earlier artist records were Hale Aspacio Woodruff's Europa and the Bull, oil on canvas, circa 1958, $120,000; Beauford Delaney's Untitled, a heavily impastoed abstract oil on canvas, circa 1958, $102,200; Ernie Barnes's Pool Hall, oil on canvas, circa 1970, $19,200; Alexander Skunder Boghossian's The Bark of the Hanging Tree, acrylic on bark-cloth, 1977, $19,200; and James Denmark's Untitled, mixed paper, fabric collage and oil on masonite, circa 1980, $24,000.

Highlights among many fine prints included William H. Johnson's Self-Portrait, woodcut, circa 1930-35, $36,000; Catlett's Negro Woman, lithograph, 1945, $24,000, a record price for a print by the artist; John Wilson's Straphangers, lithograph, 1947, an artist record $10,800; Romare Bearden's Uptown Looking Downtown, photostat print mounted on masonite, 1964, $24,000; and Charles White's Missouri C., etching, 1972, $24,000, a record for a White print.

Finally, James Van Der Zee's Eighteen Photographs, a portfolio with 18 mounted photographs, from an edition of 75 numbered copies, 1905-1938, brought a record $26,400.

Once again, the sale presented works by many artists appearing at a major auction for the first time and the strong prices served to establish public benchmarks for them.

For complete results, an illustrated auction catalogue with prices realized is available for $35 from Swann Galleries, Inc., 104 East 25th Street, New York, NY 10010, or online at www.swanngalleries.com.

For further information, please contact Nigel Freeman at 212-254-4710, extension 33, or via email at nfreeman@swanngalleries.com.

# # #


Title: AFRICAN-AMERICAN FINE ART
Date: February 19, 2008
Time: 1:30 PM
Exhibition: Wednesday, Feb. 13, 10-6
Thursday, Feb. 14, 10-6
Friday, Feb. 15, 10-6
Saturday, Feb. 16, 10-4
Monday, Feb. 18, 10-6
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 10-noon

Contact Person: Nigel Freeman
nfreeman@swanngalleries.com




Sale 2136 Lot 45

ROY DECARAVA (1919 - )
Pickets.

Color screenprint on thin wove paper, 1946. 260x325 mm; 10 1/4x12 7/8 inches, 1/8- to 1/2- inch margins. Signed in ink, lower right. Numbered 8 in pencil, lower margin. A very good impression with strong colors of this scarce print.

Roy Decarava is known today as an important African-American photographer. But until the late 1940s, he was a painter and printmaker who had trained in screenprinting during the WPA. Another impression is in the collection of the Library of Congress, exhibited in Creative Space: Fifty Years of Robert Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop; Blackburn and DeCarava met at the Harlem Community Art Center.
Estimate $3,000-5,000



On Tuesday, February 19 Swann Galleries will conduct the third auction organized by our new African-American Fine Art department. The sale offers 250 paintings, drawings, collages, prints and sculpture by notable African-American artists—from Henry Ossawa Tanner to Faith Ringgold. Many of the works are recognizable because they have been included in important museum exhibitions and illustrated in catalogues and monographs.

Varied sale highlights include three stellar examples of Elizabeth Catlett's sculptures, among them Sister, a green marble bust of a woman, 1971 (see top illustration); several paintings that span the length of Hale Woodruff’s career and display his varied styles, including the stunning, modernist Woman by the Sea, 1930, painted while the artist was living in France (second illustration); Beauford Delaney’s Portrait of a Youth, oil on canvas, a gift to James Baldwin, painted in Istanbul in the summer of 1966 (third illustration); a monumental charcoal and crayon drawing by Charles White, Lo, I am Black, 1978 (fourth illustration); and Faith Ringgold's Tar Beach II, color screenprint on quilted fabric, 1990-1992 (see final illustration).


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05 October 2007

and did I really think for a brief moment I could bid on this?

(Happy to hear it sold above estimate; I noticed whoever wrote the catalog used my text. Funny. Go, Maudelle!)

Full Catalogue Entry BEULAH WOODARD (1895 - 1955) Maudelle.
$7000
to
$10000
Sold for $12000


Sale 2122 Lot 5

BEULAH WOODARD (1895 - 1955)
Maudelle.

Fired terra-cotta painted brown, with white and green additions, circa 1937-38. Approximately 305x310x202 mm; 12x12 1/4x8 inches. Indistinctly incised initials "BW" lower edge verso.

Illustrated in Selected Pieces from the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Co. Afro-American Art Collection.

This bust displays Woodard's powerful realism in the careful modelling of the subject's features and in the detailed description of her hair and earrings. Woodard made a similar African woman in terracotta with the same treatment of color on the earrings, and another version of Maudelle in fired clay. Throughout her career, Woodard faithfully recorded African styles of dress and decoration from her own research. Farrington pp. 94-94, ills. 4.16 and 4.18.

Maudelle Bass Weston (1908 – 1989) was an African-American dancer and artists' model known professionally as Maudelle. She went on to pose for such painters as Diego Rivera, Abraham Baylinson, Nicolai Fechin, and Robert M. Jackson and photographers Johan Hagemeyer, Sonia Noskowiak, Edward Weston, Weegee, Carl Van Vechten, Manuel Alvarez Bravo, and Lola Alvarez Bravo. She moved to Los Angeles in 1933; she became a sculptor herself in 1976.
Estimate $7,000-10,000

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