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Follow on Google News | Attic find of unseen original arrtworks by Warhol and Basquiat will be auctioned December 2ndAn attic find of original artworks which includes some by Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat – literally unseen by anyone since being stored away more than 30 years ago – will finally see the light of day in an auction planned for December 2nd.
By: John McInnis Auctioneers Those that are familiar with Andy Warhol will recognize the name of Jon Gould as his closest companion in the 1980's. Jon was a collector of art and many pieces he purchased and acquired were exhibited in Vermont a number of years ago and are not part of this sale. The items found here in the family home were hidden away, many, more personal in nature. The artworks, plus other items relating to Warhol and Basquiat and other pop art luminaries of the era such as Keith Haring and Kenny Scharf, were only recently unpacked now that the home is to be sold to settle the estate, as Mrs. Gould passed away in Dec. 2016. Jon, Harriett's son, not only ran in the same circles as Warhol and Basquiat, he was a close friend and confidante of both artists. Offered will be an intentionally broken stretched canvas abstraction- Jon Gould died at age 33 on Sept. 18, 1986, six months prior to Warhol. Jon led a double life of sorts, one with Andy in New York City and another in his work life in Los Angeles. He held a high-power corporate job as vice president at Paramount Pictures in Hollywood. But in his other life, he was a major part of the '80s New York pop art scene, where he cultivated an intimate relationship with Warhol and his circle. It's well documented that Warhol showered Gould with gifts during their time together, after first meeting towards the end of 1980. The items uncovered here bring to life the complex love and relationship they had for and with each other. The auction includes many of these very items, which Jon kept at his homes in Manhattan and Beverly Hills. Upon Jon's death, his mother packaged up virtually everything her son owned and shipped it all back to Amesbury. That is where these items sat, undisturbed, these many years. Perhaps no other item in the sale expresses the complexity of Warhol and Gould's relationship than the synthetic polymer on stretched canvas painting that Warhol intentionally fashioned, a painting/sculpture. Titled Abstraction – A Gift to Jon Gould, the 16 inch by 25 inch work is emotional and thought-provoking. To understand the reality of expression in Andy's work, the lot includes several copies of poems, previously unseen, that Jon penned to Andy. Nothing could be more familiar to an artist such as Andy, as a stretched canvas. Andy broke the stretchers, forming it into a shape, then painted it. A tragedy of sorts, this moving piece seems to symbolize what was going on in their relationship and evokes much thought. That is the expected top lot of the sale, with an estimate of $500,000-$1 million, but not all the items are pricey. The copy of Exposures (Grossett & Dunlap, N.Y., 1979), for example, signed once on the dust jacket ("To John / Andy") and once on the title page, rather cryptically ("To Jon, Without Love – Love, Andy Pandy"), carries a reasonable pre-sale estimate of $150-$300. The synthetic polymer and silkscreen ink on aluminum sheeting sculpture by Warhol, borrowing a front page from the New York Post and titled Marine Death Toll Hits 172, 24 inches by 20 inches, signed "Jon / Andy Warhol '83", should bring $40,000-$60,000; While the Warhol items, and the relationship between the artist and Jon Gould, will dominate the auction, short shrift should not be given to the five lots pertaining to Jean-Michel Basquiat, who, like Gould, died young (at age 27, from a heroin overdose, in 1988), especially since he holds the current record for an artwork by an American artist at auction, at $110.5 million. The untitled painting, from 1982, eclipsed the previous record of $104.5 million set by Andy Warhol in 2013. Being sold are gifts to Jon from Jean-Michel, a pair of untitled, 9-inch-tall painted vases by Basquiat, signed "J.B." under the base and each estimated at $40,000-$80,000; John McInnis Auctioneers is always accepting quality consignments for future auctions. To consign a single piece, a collection or an estate, you may call them at (978) 388-0400; or, you can e-mail them at mcinnisauctions@ End
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