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Lot 12: Baron Adolf de Meyer , 1868-1949 the cup

Est: $25,000 USD - $35,000 USDSold:
Sotheby'sNew York, NY, USOctober 14, 2008

Item Overview

Description

flush-mounted to brown-paper-backed board, annotated in an unidentified hand in pencil on the reverse, affixed at the top edge only to another mount, inscribed 'Maria by Demeyer' in an unidentified hand in pencil on the mount, matted, circa 1910

Dimensions

measurements note 17 1/8 by 13 3/8 in. (43.5 by 34 cm.)

Artist or Maker

Literature

Other prints of this image:Camera Work Number 40 (New York, 1912), pl. 1Peter C. Bunnell, ed., A Photographic Vision: Pictorial Photography, 1889 - 1923 (Salt Lake City, 1980), p. 64 Anne Tucker, Target II: 5 American Photographers (The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1981, in conjunction with the exhibition), p. 19

Provenance

Collection of Baron Adolf de MeyerBy descent to his son, Ernest, 1946Bekins, Los AngelesPrivate collection, acquired from the above at a sale of unclaimed propertySotheby Parke Bernet, The Collection of Baron de Meyer, 20 October 1980, Sale 4437, Lot 89Acquired by the present owner from the above

Notes

PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF PAUL F. WALTER
The photograph offered here, one of Baron de Meyer's signature images, exemplifies the sophistication and elegance that characterized his best work. The image's interplay of iridescence and shadow, its brilliance of detail, its bravura rendering of textures--all combine to produce a picture of great visual seduction. The photograph radiates effortless opulence, a product of the photographer's own international and highly social lifestyle. The model's pose, her luxurious gown, her mystique, presage the extraordinary fashion work de Meyer would produce for Condé Nast in the coming decade. The identity of the model, 'Maria,' is unknown. The present image was titled 'The Cup' when it was reproduced in Camera Work Number 40 in 1912. The pose of a beautiful woman with a cup echoes other well-known Photo-Secessionist images of elegantly-robed women with bowls, vases, or other objects, including Steichen's The Brass Bowl and Cover Design from Camera Work Number 14, and George Seeley's The Black Bowl and The Firefly from Camera Work Number 20, and his Girl with Bowl, Autumn, and No. 347, all from Camera Work Number 29. Early prints of any of de Meyer's works are scarce, especially in the large format of the photograph offered here. The present print comes from the legendary 1980 de Meyer auction in these rooms, a landmark sale of the contents of a trunk from unclaimed storage. When Baron de Meyer died in Los Angeles in 1946, his adopted son Ernest gathered his personal belongings and stored them in a large steamer trunk that de Meyer had owned for most of his life. The trunk was then turned over to a Bekins storage facility in Los Angeles, where it remained for more than 30 years until Ernest's death. The contents of the trunk re-surfaced in the late 1970s, in a warehouse sale of unclaimed property, and were subsequently consigned to auction with Sotheby Parke Bernet. Lots 109 and 116 in the present sale were also offered in this memorable auction. Of the approximately 160 lots that comprised the Sotheby's 1980 sale, only five were what could be considered signature images by de Meyer in the large format of the print offered here. At the time of this writing, no other early prints of 'The Cup' have been located, in any size or any medium. Most often seen and reproduced is the photogravure from Camera Work Number 40.

Auction Details

Photographs

by
Sotheby's
October 14, 2008, 12:00 PM EST

1334 York Avenue, New York, NY, 10021, US