NEW YORK, NY.- On December 5, Hilary Knights original Plaza Hotel portrait of Eloise achieved $100,000 at
Bonhams Fine Books and Manuscripts sale. Once lost and now rediscovered, this portrait captures the irrepressible spirit of one of the most influential children's book characters in history. The World of Hilary Knight continues online through December 13 with estimates ranging from $100 to $5,000 and open to established and new bidders alike.
The original portrait of Eloise:
Toting a history as lively as its inspiration, this portrait was painted as a birthday gift by Hilary Knight for Eloise co-creator Kay Thompson in 1956, on the eve of Kay's appearance on Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person on CBS, where she proudly displayed the painting to guest host Jerry Lewis. Shortly thereafter, she loaned the work to the Plaza Hotel where it hung ceremoniously in the lobby as an homage to their most famous (imaginary) resident. However, on the night of a Junior League Ball at the Plaza, November 1960, it disappeared. As Mr. Knight tells the story, "Kay called me, 'Drunken debutantes did it!' And soon it was all over the news, in the columns, and Walter Cronkite confirmed it on the evening news." The famed portrait of Eloise had been stolen. Despite the press and the hubbub, the portrait failed to reappear. Some years later, Mr. Knight received a call: "The painting had been found in a dumpster, frameless." Once identified as the missing artwork, it was returned to Mr. Knight, who had already replaced the Plaza portrait with a new one: an oil painting that still hangs there today. Mr. Knight rolled up the original and put it in his closet, forgetting about it for the next 50 years, until it was revived for an Eloise exhibition at the New York Historical Society 2017. It is now being offered at auction for the first time.
Additional highlights from the collection included:
An Archive Of Hilary Knight Illustrations For The Owl And The Pussycat. Price realized: $26,250 (estimate: $5,000-8,000)
SENDAK, MAURICE. 1928-2012. Where the Wild Things Are. New York: Harper & Row, 1963. First Edition, Presentation Copy From Artist To Artist In The Month Following Publication. Price realized: $31,250 (estimate: $10,000-15,000)