Toomey & Co. Auctioneers to hold inaugural 'Prints & Multiples' sale on October 13 and 'Interiors' on October 14

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Toomey & Co. Auctioneers to hold inaugural 'Prints & Multiples' sale on October 13 and 'Interiors' on October 14
Keith Haring, Pop Shop II, 1988. Estimate $10,000-20,000.



OAK PARK, IL .- On Wednesday, October 13, Toomey & Co. Auctioneers will present its first sale dedicated exclusively to Prints & Multiples, featuring nearly 300 lots with lithographs, screenprints, etchings, woodcuts, and other works on paper by major figures from the 19th century to the present. Some of the important artists included in the auction are: Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Salvador Dalí, Christo & Jeanne-Claude, Ed Paschke, Paul Cadmus, Thomas Hart Benton, Frances Hammell Gearhart, Gustave Baumann, and James Abbott McNeill Whistler.

On Thursday, October 14, Toomey & Co. will conduct its fall Interiors auction, which includes a wide variety of fine art, early 20th century and modern furniture, pottery, glass, lighting, and more. Much of the material in Interiors is by renowned artists and makers, but the price points are generally more affordable, which allows collectors and designers greater access to desirable objects.

Highlights of Prints & Multiples on October 13

Post-War & Contemporary Art


In Prints & Multiples on October 13, two works by Andy Warhol will lead the contemporary offering, Grevy’s Zebra from Endangered Species, 1983 (estimate $50,000-70,000) and a first-edition Kiku Exhibition Catalog from Tokyo, 1983-1984 ($1,500-2,500). Keith Haring also has two works available, Pop Shop II, 1988 ($10,000-20,000) and International Volunteer Day, 1988 ($2,000-3,000). The sale includes three Pop art works by Peter Max and a cycling-themed screenprint by LeRoy Neiman (highest $800-1,200). In European art, Salvador Dalí’s Decameron Suite, 1972, Christo & Jeanne-Claude’s Wrapped Statues, 1985, and two works by Friedensreich Hundertwasser will be up for bid (highest $2,000-3,000). Several prints by recent Chicago artists are included in the sale, for example, Ed Paschke’s neon-hued lithograph, Kontata, 1984, two Roger Brown works, six abstractions by sculptor Richard Hunt, and seven lots from Tony Fitzpatrick, including an Autumn Etchings portfolio (highest $2,000-3,000).

19th & Early 20th Century Art

Tonalist innovator James Abbott McNeill Whistler has two bridge scenes in the auction and a fine etching, The Wine Glass, 1859 (highest $1,500-2,500). Paul Cadmus also has an etching in the sale showing a pair of muscular young men on bicycles, Going South, 1934 ($5,000-7,000). As a New York City artist, Cadmus emulated the urban scenes of Martin Lewis, John Sloan, and Reginald Marsh, all of whom have prints in the auction (highest $4,000-6,000). Midwestern Regionalists Thomas Hart Benton and John Steuart Curry each have a pair of works up for bid (highest $1,000-2,000). From Illinois, the sale features woodcuts from African-American artist Hale Aspacio Woodruff and views of Chicago landmarks from the 1930s by Charles Turzak (highest $2,000-3,000). Illinois native Frances Hammell Gearhart has multiple Western landscapes available as does Gustave Baumann (highest $3,000-5,000). Los Angeles artist Paul Landacre’s two high-contrast wood engravings depict an intimate domestic scene and desert mountains (higher $2,000-3,000). Finally, Mexican artists José Clemente Orozco and Rufino Tamayo portray revolution and peasants (highest $1,500-2,500).

Highlights of Interiors on October 14

The Interiors auction on October 14 offers a diverse range of works across all buying categories. In Fine Art, the sale has WPA artist John Drake Pusey’s group of four seasonal Midwestern landscape murals, Impressionist André Gisson’s riverside oil on canvas, an after Walt Disney animation cel and sketch of Jiminy Cricket from Pinocchio, a steel sculpture by Chicago's Joseph A. Burlini, and works by Outsider artists Lee Godie and Howard Finster (highest $2,000-3,000). Early 20th century design includes several pieces of original Arts & Crafts furniture and some recent productions, notably, an early chalet desk by Gustav Stickley and a contemporary drop-front desk from Warren Hile Studio (higher $1,000-2,000). Art pottery from venerable makers like Grueby, Teco, and Newcomb College is available as well as mid-century ceramics from Waylande Gregory, Beatrice Wood, and Edwin and Mary Scheier (highest $800-1,200). Modern furniture is likewise on offer from iconic designers such as Paul Frankl, Edward Wormley, Charles and Ray Eames, and Harry Bertoia (highest $1,500-2,500).










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