LOS ANGELES, CA.- Bonhams announces the auction of works by Old Master printmakers and modern and contemporary masters on April 19. Highlights include works by Joseph Albers, John James Audubon, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Max Beckmann, Richard Diebenkorn, Keith Haring, Edward Hopper, Ed Ruscha, Frank Stella, Wayne Thiebaud, Andy Warhol, and James McNeill Whistler.
Headlining the evening sale are rare selections from the Birds of America series by famed 19th- century naturalist painter John James Audubon (1785-1851). Around the year 1820, Audubon dedicated himself to studying birds with the intention to paint every bird in North America. His collection of 435 life-size detailed and meticulous hand-colored engravings of birds in their natural habitats, published as the Birds of America, took more 12 years to complete.
Sold in small sets, Birds of America is still considered one of the greatest examples of book art and among the finest ornithological works ever completed. Through the book, Audubon discovered 25 new species and 12 new subspecies; his influence in the study of birds and natural history is significant.
One of the highlights among the 33 Audubon prints in the Bonhams auction is Snowy Owl (Pl. CXXI), 1831, from the Havell edition of Birds of America. It is a framed hand-colored engraving with aquatint and etching on J. Whatman Turkey Mill paper, and estimated at U.S. $60,000-80,000.
Others from the Havel edition include Louisiana Heron (Pl. CCXVII), 1834, estimated at U.S. $80,000-120,000 and Great Blue Heron (Pl. CCXI), 1834, at U.S. $70,000-90,000. All three were sold at auction in 1985, before which the two Heron works belonged to the third Earl of Caledon who acquired it directly from the artist in 1842.
The Bonhams print department is extremely excited to offer at auction such important Audubon works, many of which have provenances dating back to Audubons original subscribers, said Director of Works on Paper Morisa Rosenberg.
BIRDS OF AMERICA
Audubon started his journey to produce this book in the autumn of 1820 when he boarded a flatboat and traveled down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to the Gulf Coast, in order to follow migrating birds. Although this trip was cut short, he returned to America several times on excursions throughout Canada and regions in the south to document more birds.
Audubon faced a number of hurdles while trying to finish the huge endeavor he started and, as a result, he traveled around America and England to find financial support for the project.
After a failed attempt with an engraver who finished only 10 of his plates, Audubon partnered with Robert Havell Jr. to complete the rest. Havell an engraver and colorist in London is known to be Audubons most important collaborator, often finishing his compositions by combining separate drawings and adding significant details.
Audubon completed the color-plate book in 1839 and 175-200 sets of the 435 engravings were produced. He is believed to have brought a handful of sets back to America, including the set he eventually sold to the third Earl of Caledon.