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Friday, July 3, 2026 |
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| Heritage presents the Estate of Alan Bean in landmark space exploration auction July 23-24 |
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Skylab II (SL-3): Alan Bean's Flown and Worn NASA A7LB Spacesuit Pair Extravehicular Gloves Directly from the Estate of Mission Commander, Moonwalker, and Artist Alan Bean, with Letter of Authenticity.
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DALLAS, TX.- Heritage announces its upcoming Space Exploration Signature® Auction on July 23-24, featuring The Estate of Moonwalker and Artist Alan Bean. Heritage is honored to present an extraordinary collection of artifacts, documents and memorabilia spanning the history of American spaceflight. From the pioneering days of Mercury and Gemini to the triumphs of Apollo and the Space Shuttle era, this auction brings together treasures that capture the courage, ingenuity and spirit of exploration that define our journey into space.
Alan LaVern Bean (1932-2018) stands among the most singular figures in the history of human spaceflight: a naval aviator, test pilot, aeronautical engineer, Apollo astronaut, Skylab commander and, ultimately, the only artist to paint the Moon from the lived experience of walking across the lunar surface, which he accomplished on November 19, 1969 becoming just the fourth human to do so.
Four years later, Bean returned to space as commander of Skylab 3, the second crewed mission to Americas first space station. At the time, the mission set a new record for human duration in space and helped establish the operational model for long-duration spaceflight. After retiring from the Navy and later from NASA, in 1981, Bean cultivated an extraordinary second career as an artist. He devoted himself to painting the Apollo experience, not as an observer imagining the Moon but as a participant preserving memory, texture and emotional truth.
A highlight of the auction is Alan Beans lunar surface-flown LMP wrist checklist with Playboy magazine prank images and hand-drawn cartoons. Carried by Alan Bean to the lunar surface and used during mankinds second Moon landing, this cuff-mounted checklist is one of the most visually compelling and culturally famous artifacts from Apollo 12: a serious piece of lunar field equipment that also preserves one of the best-known private jokes ever smuggled onto the Moon. Bidding begins at $100,000.
Another highlight is Alan Beans Apollo 12 lunar module flown and surface-used geological hammer, later used by Bean in the creation of his lunar artwork. Bidding begins at $75,000.
Auction highlights include:
Alan Beans lunar-module-flown and surface-worn PLSS patch remnants, comprised of an American flag patch, a partial NASA insignia patch, three partial A. BEAN name tag sections and a narrow metallic or metalized strip mounted above. Bidding starts at $50,000.
Alan Beans lunar-surface-worn spacesuit patch remnants were used by Bean in the creation of his paintings. These textile fragments represent what remained after Bean cut up the original patches for use in his post-NASA fine art practice. Bidding begins at $50,000.
On mission, Alan Bean wore this NASA A7LB spacesuit pair of extravehicular gloves. Manufactured by the International Latex Corporation (ILC), these gloves were specifically adapted from the late Apollo lunar landing missions to handle station maintenance, film retrieval and emergency repair tasks in low Earth orbit. Bidding will begin at $50,000.
A Thiokol XLR99 rocket engine for the North American X-15: Developed in the late 1950s, the XLR99 was the worlds first fully throttleable man-rated liquid rocket engine and among the few large liquid-fueled rocket engines ever installed in a piloted aircraft. Bidding will begin at $50,000.
An Apollo 14 lunar-surface-used camera-lens dust brush: Bidding will begin at $30,000.
An Apollo 11 lunar module flown section of the Wright Flyers wing fabric: Coming directly from The Armstrong Family Collection, this relic spans two monumental events. This square section of muslin fabric comes from the left wing of the Wright Brothers Flyer; it was flown as part of the first successful powered, controlled flight at Kitty Hawk in 1903, and remarkably, it also journeyed to the surface of the moon during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969. Bidding begins at $25,000.
Alan Beans legendary handwritten CDRS CREW LOG book: This is the actual in-flight diary that Commander Bean kept on a near-daily basis from July 28 (day 209) through September 21 (day 264) in 1975. It offers a never-before-offered look into the daily activities and sometimes very personal thoughts of this space veteran during a long-term mission aboard an orbiting space station. Bidding begins at $25,000.
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