Banner

Newest LiveDealer Ads

Vase
Vase
( / Ancient Art & Antiquities)
ADVERTISEMENT
Banner


Get Free ACN Daily Headlines by Email

Now, you can get the latest headlines from Auction Central News delivered right to your mailbox every day! It's free, secure, and the best way to stay up to date with everything in the world of auctions, art, antiques and more. Just complete the form below and reply to the confirmation email - it's that easy.

Enter your email address:

Search Auction Central News

Monthly Columns in ACN

Right Now on ACN

We have 688 guests online
Banner

France-based Bilingual Arts Writer Wanted

Auction Central News is seeking a bilingual freelance correspondent based in France to write regular reports on the auction market in French and English, in blog format. The ideal candidate would be knowledgeable about antiques and fine art, familiar with the auction process and acquainted with influential members of the auction community. On occasion it may be necessary to cover important events in person. A lively, observational writing style is essential, and the ability to take good-quality digital images would be a plus. Reply with a brief c.v. or letter stating appropriate qualifications to editor@liveauctioneers.com.

Bookmark and Share
Collectibles Worldwide
Jackson items soar in value, but for how long? PDF Print E-mail
Written by MARK JEWELL, Associated Press   
Monday, 29 June 2009 13:23
Sheer custom-made shirt with pearls and Swarovski crystals worn by Michael Jackson during The Jacksons' 1984 Victory tour. Provenance: David Gest collection. Sold in Julien's June 26 Las Vegas auction for $52,500.

BOSTON (AP) - Deb Elliott is saddened by Michael Jackson's sudden death, but she's also a little wealthier because of it.

The response was underwhelming earlier this month when the Volant, Pennsylvania, resident tried to auction a pair of 1980s Jackson dolls for a starting price of $9.95 apiece on eBay Inc. She turned to the e-commerce site after six months of Craigslist postings drew little interest.

"I would have been happy if they sold for $20," said Elliott, a 55-year-old homemaker.

But within minutes of Jackson's death Thursday, eBay bids started coming in. A doll depicting Jackson at the American Music Awards fetched $265 after 21 bids. A Grammy Awards Jackson doll got 36 bids and sold for $227.50 on Friday.

"This was definitely a cause for mixed emotions,"' Elliott said. "I finally got rid of the dolls, but now Michael is gone, too."

The singer's death triggered a surge in the Jackson collectibles market Friday, including newly minted items such as T-shirts hawked online with "R.I.P." and "June 25, 2009" alongside his image. On Friday afternoon, an Internet search for Jackson items turned up more than 24,000 offerings from auctions on several sites and fixed-price "buy-it-now" sales.

In addition to surging volume, eBay reported the average selling price for Jackson items jumped 31 percent on Thursday from daily averages last week. Among the items up for sale were a signed fedora hat, offered at $9,795.

For anyone selling now, there's some uncertainty: Can you get a better price by waiting? And if you're a buyer, should you delay until the frenzy subsides?

"People are telling me I should've held out, maybe they'd be worth even more in a week, month or year from now,'' said Elliott, who added that she is "not one that was taking advantage of Michael Jackson's untimely death."

Another question for collectibles marketers is whether the damage Jackson's reputation suffered from his eccentricities and late-career pedophilia allegations will erode the value of memorabilia once the shock of his death passes. Or, like Elvis, who had his share of late-life troubles, will the collectibles hold value because the power of the legend prevails?

"Is he Elvis or Marilyn Monroe, or is he Mike Tyson?" said Jim Lentz, chief operating officer of American Royal Arts, a Boca Raton, Florida-based memorabilia dealer that holds publishing rights with a firm overseeing commercial use of Presley-related items. "Does the controversy get downplayed, and does his career get played up, or do people continue to hold the strangeness and rumor against him?"

The singer struggled financially following his 2003 arrest on charges that he molested a 13-year-old boy. A jury acquitted him of all charges.

Jackson's problems and death might help the marketing of some, but not all of his memorabilia.

"Notoriety might be great for say, the autograph market," said Martin Brochstein, senior vice president at the New York-based Licensing Industry Merchandisers' Association. "He's not signing any more, to put it bluntly.'

"But in terms of licensed merchandise bearing his likeness, the notoriety is not necessarily such a good thing."

The rich Jackson collectibles market is the legacy of his huge popularity in the 1970s and '80s, when all sorts of mass merchandise emerged, from Jackson dolls to posters to commemorative coins. That period also produced a trove of signed valuables, from autographed album covers to the signature white sequined gloves he wore on stage.

Jackson "was a guy who toured the world, and signed autographs, and was very public," Lentz said. "There is a fair amount of inventory out there."

There's also a market for Jackson's personal belongings. However, a Beverly Hills auction was canceled in April after Jackson and Julien's Auction House reached a settlement to their dispute over whether 2,000 of his personal items from his Neverland property in Southern California were ever intended for sale.

At another celebrity auction that coincidentally occurred Friday in Las Vegas, Julien's Auctions sold 21 pieces of Jackson memorabilia for a total of $205,000. A crystal-beaded shirt worn by the performer during his 1984 Victory tour was the top-selling item in the collection, at $52,500.

The auction, at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino, had been planned for months and also featured Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe items. Bidders participated worldwide via the Internet through LiveAuctioneers.com.

Arlan Ettinger, president of Guernsey's, a New York-based auction house, helped conduct a Las Vegas auction in 2007 during which more than 1,200 Jackson items grossed about $1 million. On Friday, he spoke a bit wistfully about that event's timing.

"Things would have been different had they come to auction now," Ettinger said. The items "got infinitely more valuable just a short while ago."

"The world," Ettinger said, "clearly is sort of willing to forget all of what has happened before of a less-than-thrilling nature, and really honored the memory of Michael Jackson, which is as it should be."

His death is also expected to inspire an array of commemorative gear of potentially dubious value, such as T-shirts.

"I'm honestly expecting to see a Web site pop up by the end of the day selling Michael Jackson commemorative plates," said Allison Southwick, a spokeswoman with the Better Business Bureau.

Elliott, the Pennsylvania woman who sold Jackson dolls on eBay, says she has other collectibles, but they have more personal than market value. Although she made money from selling the dolls, she won't part with other items.

"My kids grew up with him - they're the reason I went to two concerts," she said. "I still have several CDs, 45s and VHS tapes. I even have my son's little ‘Beat It' jacket, too - and no, I won't be trying to sell it."

_____

AP Business Writers Dave Carpenter in Chicago and Ryan Nakashima in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-06-26-09 2137EDT

 

Last Updated on Monday, 29 June 2009 13:32
 
Movie artifacts caught in lawsuit over museum PDF Print E-mail
Written by Auction Central News Staff   
Friday, 26 June 2009 09:01

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) - A lawsuit over a failed effort to open a Hollywood memorabilia museum may force the sale of items owned by actress Debbie Reynolds.

In 2002, Gregory J. Orman lent more than $1 million at 10 percent interest to the project, intended to showcase Reynolds' Hollywood memorabilia.

But now the proposed Hollywood Motion Picture and Television Museum hasn't opened, the project is in bankruptcy and Orman, an Olathe businessman, wants his money and interest back - even if it means selling some of the collection.

"I have no desire to hurt the museum or Debbie," Orman, 40, said on Tuesday. "After almost six years of nonperformance, I just wanted them to live up to their agreements."

Reynolds' collection, valued at between $30 million and $60 million, includes such iconic items as the white dress worn by Marilyn Monroe in The Seven Year Itch, the fur coat worn by Orson Welles in Citizen Kane, and Judy Garland's blue gingham dress from The Wizard of Oz.

"My mom has virtually single-handedly worked to preserve what is the most significant piece of Hollywood history anywhere," Reynolds' son, Todd Fisher, told The Kansas City Star on Tuesday. "It's not about the money to her but about preserving that history. She's dedicated her life to this."

Fisher, Reynolds' son from her marriage to 1950s crooner Eddie Fisher, runs the museum. He said there's no dispute that the museum owes Orman money. It's just a question of how much.

"We originally borrowed $1.6 million. Now he wants to collect more than $8 million," Fisher said. "So you can understand why our board, which consists of some pretty savvy people, isn't thrilled."

Museum board members include Reynolds' daughter Carrie Fisher, director George Lucas and actress Elizabeth Taylor.

The museum has been under construction in Pigeon Forge, Tenn., where developers are trying to build a tourist destination called Belle Island. The developers filed for bankruptcy in March, however, and the museum is in limbo.

The museum has had its own financial problems, which prompted Orman to grant it loan extensions in 2003 and again in 2005. In return for not going after the memorabilia securing the loan at that time, the museum agreed to pay various fees and interest that amounted to a 30 percent interest rate.

In 2007, with the loan still unpaid, Orman sued the museum in San Luis Obispo County, Calif. In addition to the principal - another loan brought the amount to just over $2 million - the lawsuit sought interest that by then approached $3 million.

In June 2008, Orman voluntarily dismissed the lawsuit and refiled it in Johnson County, Kan. There it sat until last weekend, when the museum, having filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection itself two weeks ago in California, moved to have the case consolidated with the bankruptcy case.

The bankruptcy filing was intended to stop Orman's suit, according to the museum's attorney, Peter Susi.

Orman "is by far and away the major creditor" in the case, he said.

Orman's attorney, Grant Davis, said his client had "bent over backwards to accommodate the museum."

"The fact that they haven't repaid him is driven by choice, not necessity," he said.
___

Information from: The Kansas City Star, http://www.kcstar.com

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Received Id 1230296764 on Jun 24 2009 14:33

 
O.J. Simpson's memorabilia likely to be auctioned PDF Print E-mail
Written by JOHN ROGERS, Associated Press Writer   
Wednesday, 03 June 2009 12:57

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The footballs, jerseys and framed photographs that put O.J. Simpson in a Nevada prison are in the hands of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and headed for the auction block, an attorney for longtime Simpson nemesis Fred Goldman said Monday.

Simpson's attempt to retrieve the items by leading a handful of cohorts in a bungled stickup of memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas resulted in his being sentenced last year on armed robbery, kidnapping and other charges.

Simpson is serving nine to 33 years but on Monday asked the Nevada Supreme Court to let him out of prison while it decides whether to overturn his conviction. Simpson has said he was attempting to retrieve property that had been stolen from him and never meant to hurt anybody.

The memorabilia items that could clearly be identified as Simpson's were boxed and shipped from Las Vegas to Los Angeles last week.

 

Read more...
 
Indiana stadium items up for auction before razing PDF Print E-mail
Written by ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Monday, 01 June 2009 10:39

FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - There aren't any peanuts or popcorn at Fort Wayne's former minor league baseball stadium, but bargain hunters can find popcorn warmers, ice cream machines and beer dispensers there.

The 15-year-old Memorial Stadium is set for demolition starting June 8, and the items inside are being auctioned off Saturday.

The stadium's digital scoreboard, seats and pitcher's mound dirt may prove most useful to other teams. But officials hope others may be interested in items such as cabinets, picnic tables, sinks, snowplows or chain link fencing.

Memorial Stadium is open to the public Friday so that people can look at the items that will be sold Saturday.

Memorial Stadium's replacement, Parkview Field, is already up and running.

___

Information from: The Journal Gazette,

http://www.journalgazette.net

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-05-29-09 0902EDT


 

 
No auction bids received for photos of Mexico's Diego Rivera PDF Print E-mail
Written by ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Monday, 01 June 2009 08:54
Portrait of Diego Rivera with wife Frida Kahlo, 1932, from the Carl Van Vechten photograph collection, Library of Congress.

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Unpublished photos of Mexican muralist Diego Rivera at work received no bids at an auction Saturday in Mexico.

The negatives included images of Rivera painting two of his most famous murals, of wife Frida Kahlo, and of Mexican muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros and exiled Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky.

The 37 negatives were offered in two packages, but no one met the minimum bids of 80,000 pesos ($6,000) and 25,000 pesos ($1,900).

Last Updated on Monday, 01 June 2009 14:11
Read more...
 
Thief gets head start on Ted Williams auction items in NH PDF Print E-mail
Written by ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Monday, 01 June 2009 08:33
 Autographed picture of famed Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive.

SWANZEY, N.H. (AP) - Someone apparently couldn't wait for the latest auction of Ted Williams memorabilia - his hunting license and personal notes on fishing holes were swiped during an auction preview in Swanzey, N.H., last week.

Auctioneer John Pappas told the New Hampshire Sunday News the stolen items had drawn strong interest and could have brought $1,000 or more at Saturday's auction. The 1970 license for "Theodore Williams" was in a small holder attached to a fishing cap, and the notes were tucked inside.

Saturday's auction was the second time Knotty Pine Auction Service has sold items for Dolores Wettach Williams, a model and actress who was married to the famed Red Sox hitter from 1967 to 1973. The items come from their Vermont home.
___

Information from: New Hampshire Union Leader,
http://www.unionleader.com

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


AP-ES-05-31-09 0940EDT

Last Updated on Monday, 01 June 2009 09:23
 
Paris lender sells off stash of top wines for cash PDF Print E-mail
Written by SCOTT SAYARE, Associated Press Writer   
Thursday, 14 May 2009 15:52
PARIS (AP) - One fears the natural order of things has been upended if the French are giving up their wine. But financial woes have driven many to do just that.

Over the past year, cash-strapped Parisians have handed over thousands of bottles of grand cru to the Credit municipal de Paris in exchange for cash or loans.

The city-run lender and pawnbroker of sorts has seen demand for new loans soar in recent months. To help meet that growing need, it auctioned off about 2,500 bottles on Tuesday, May 12, bringing in nearly euro200,000 ($272,000) in fresh funds.

"In the wine cellars of Paris, and even in the wine cellars of the provinces, there are veritable treasures," said Robert Gorreteau, wine expert at Credit municipal.

As the financial downturn deepens, more and more Parisians are converting those treasures to cash.
Read more...
 
Flea market yields early Clinton political treasure PDF Print E-mail
Written by ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Tuesday, 12 May 2009 16:01
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) - Politicians know that a walk through a flea market is often a good place to pick up a few votes, but longtime Newton County poll worker Sue Brown found something else of value, a handful of ballots that has become part of an exhibit at the Clinton House Museum.

While at a flea market in Kingston, Brown recognized a pair of wooden boxes as old ballot boxes. Inside one were six marked ballots from Bill Clinton's first run for public office, a 1974 congressional race. The other box contained several dozen ballot stubs.
Brown left the boxes behind, but her daughter, Jennifer Price of Fayetteville, bought them for $35 as a birthday gift for her mother.

"They were dusty, like they had been there for a while," Brown told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. "It was quite a shock to open it and see it was a Bill Clinton election."
Last Updated on Tuesday, 12 May 2009 16:03
Read more...
 
Investment consultant banking on old movie posters PDF Print E-mail
Written by DAVID PORTER, Associated Press Writer   
Tuesday, 12 May 2009 07:56
A one-sheet poster for the 1931 horror classic Frankenstein sold for $180,000 in April. Image courtesy Profiles in History and LiveAuctioneers.com Archive.

MADISON, N.J. (AP) - While many lose sleep over each twist and turn of today's economy, New Jersey collector Ralph DeLuca has found a hedge against the recession in the memorabilia of Hollywood's past.

A former private investment consultant, DeLuca hardly batted an eye when he bought a vintage poster from the 1932 cult movie Freaks at auction in March for more than $100,000. The poster had cost $10 in the early 1970s.

A few minutes later he outbid competitors for a rare poster of the original Dracula from 1931, owned by actor Nicolas Cage, snapping it up for more than $300,000.

"It's just a matter of what your passion is," DeLuca said. "I don't have bad vices. I don't gamble. I don't drink. This is like enforced savings for me. People tell me, ‘You could sell some of your stuff and buy a Bentley,' but to me a car is a depreciating asset."

Icons of American pop culture adorn DeLuca's still-being-furnished town house: Orson Welles in Citizen Kane (signed by the director); the Marx Brothers in garish caricature in Duck Soup; Charlie Chaplin in City Lights; Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca.

All the posters date back to the movies' original release, and give the room the feel of an old theater lobby.

DeLuca's first purchase was in the early 1990s, a poster for Mel Brooks' The Producers. He figures he now owns tens of thousands of archival pieces, including rare photographs, original movie scripts and concert posters, for a collection worth upward of $10 million.

Far fewer posters were printed in Hollywood's early years, he said, and often they were leased to the theaters and were not intended for public collecting in the same way as baseball cards or comic books. Consequently, finding posters can take years, even with the coming of online auction sites.

DeLuca has bought posters from people who saved them for decades without realizing their worth; one seller used them for insulation.

Grey Smith, director of vintage movie posters at Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries, said the subculture of collectors who specialize in movie poster art has managed to keep prices steady even during the economic downturn.

"When you get to the much rarer pieces such as the Freaks insert, there doesn't seem to be any decline," said Smith, who conducted the March auction. "Many collectors realize that when something comes up that is a rarity, they have to jump or else they may never have an opportunity again."

DeLuca concedes the hobby isn't recession-proof and is subject to the vagaries of any collectors' market. He notes, for example, that interest in Western movie collectibles has fallen off in recent years.

Still, he feels vindicated when he recalls his decision to cash out of the market before it collapsed and focus on collecting.

"All my friends said I was nuts, but I'd rather have this," he said, gesturing toward the posters. "It's tangible, it's here, it's rare. You buy a share of stock and you own one-millionth of one percent of some company that has 50 vice presidents they don't need. It's not worth it. I own a hundred percent of these, and they're not making any more of them."

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-05-10-09 1303EDT

Last Updated on Tuesday, 12 May 2009 12:10
 
Antique toys stolen from Wykoff museum in Minnesota PDF Print E-mail
Written by ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Monday, 11 May 2009 10:18
Unrelated to a similar example stolen from Ed's Museum in Wykoff, Minn., this tinplate wind-up Merrymakers mouse band was produced by Marx around 1931. Photo courtesy LiveAuctioneers Archive and Old Barn Auction.

WYKOFF, Minn. (AP) - Several metal antique toys were stolen from Ed's Museum in Wykoff, including a rare tin wind-up toy of a band of four mice.

The Fillmore County Sheriff's Office is investigating the burglary, which happened sometime between April 28 and May 4.

The most valuable item was a Marx Merrymakers set in its original box. It was made in the late 1920s and consists of a band of four mice with a piano and two chairs. It's worth about $1,000.

The museum houses thousands of antiques, from movie posters to grocery products such as Jack Sprat Gloss Starch from the 1950s.

Museum tour guide Esther Evers said she believes the stolen antiques might be sold through Internet sites and hopes people will also look for them at antique shows.

Sheriff's deputies are investigating.

___

Information from: Post-Bulletin, http://www.postbulletin.com

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-05-07-09 1407EDT 

Last Updated on Monday, 11 May 2009 10:48
 
Say 'aloha' to Hawaiian shirts again PDF Print E-mail
Written by NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS, Associated Press Writer   
Wednesday, 06 May 2009 12:50
The tag on this 1940s aloha shirt reads: 'Made in Hawaii.' Image courtesy Dirk Soulis Auctions and LiveAuctioneers.com Archive.

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - Spring is here, and that means the season has arrived for tropical print camp shirts, better known as Hawaiian shirts.

After a harsh winter, a change of attire can spark a change of attitude.

"The minute you put them on, you feel a little more relaxed," said Doug Wood, chief operating officer of Seattle-based Tommy Bahama, one of the nation's top sellers of upscale versions of Hawaiian shirts.

Hawaiian shirts have been riding one of their periodic waves of popularity in recent years, thanks to the influence of surfer chic. Despite their humble 1930s origins and iconoclastic image, Hawaiian shirts are a serious business and subject of academic study. And they are popular everywhere, said Linda Arthur, a textile professor at Washington State University in Pullman who has written several books about Aloha shirts, the preferred name among aficionados.

"The Aloha shirt has covered the globe," Arthur said.

Aloha shirts were invented in the 1930s, when mom-and-pop tailors in Hawaii began making Western-style garments out of a common material, colorful Japanese kimono fabric. The shirts at first were sold to tourists, but eventually caught on with locals.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 06 May 2009 16:13
Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next > End >>

Page 1 of 7


Banner Banner