A Centurys Worth Of Animation Art Makes History
Walt Disney Favorites Hit New Highwater Marks
October 22, 2021
Biographer John Canemaker once wrote that Mary Blairs conceptual paintings for such films as Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan and Cinderella were as delicious as feasting on rainbows. Blair was Walt Disneys favorite artist, and over the three-day weekend sale held Aug. 6, 7, and 8, she was the favorite, too. More than 4,400 bidders participated in Heritage Auctions record-setting $4.5-million Animation Art Signature Auction. It was a thrilling three days, as hundreds of works throughout the century-spanning event shattered their estimates, with record prices realized from every single major animation studio: Disney, Warner Brothers, Hanna-Barbera, Fleischer Studios, MGM and Melendez Films. The auction had a record turnout and was a near sellout, with more than 1,700 production cels, conceptual paintings, drawings, sketches and even statues finding new homes, where they will dazzle new generations as they delighted previous ones. And a bulk of works featured in this auction were consigned by a whos-who of animation greats, as well as their estates and archives. Among the estimable lot contributing to this landmark sale: Chuck Jones, Ham Luske, Peter and Harrison Ellenshaw, Don Duckwall, David Hand, Ted Berman, Joe Hale, Jeff Carlson, Paul Terry and Del Connell, to name but a few. Quite clearly, the looney tunes of yesterday are the museum pieces and collectors items of today. It is so satisfying to see this great art form reach new historic levels of interest, stated Jim Lentz, Heritage Auctions vice president and director of Animation and Anime Art. This year has already seen record prices for this department in The Art of the Disney Theme Park and the Disney Storybook Art Collection and Anime Animation Art, and now comes this all-time record for vintage animation art. The artwork that brings a lifetime of smiles has hit a new benchmark. Blairs name appears over and over at the top of the list of prices realized during the sale, which totaled $4,547,071. Eight of the top 10 pieces sold last weekend were Blairs, feasting on rainbows, indeed. It was a staggering, record-setting run, one that was interrupted only by two Warner Brothers rarities featuring Bugs Bunny and Marvin the Martian, which likewise hit highwater marks at auction. At the top of the weekends list was one of Blairs conceptual paintings for Peter Pan made in 1953, in which Tinker Bell and Peter Pan lead Wendy, John and Michael past Big Ben on their way to Never Land. It was joined atop that list by a work painted a decade later, when Disney summoned Blair to help create a boat ride celebrating the children of the world for the 1964 Worlds Fair in New York City, which became Its a Small World. Each painting sold for $72,000, setting new world records for Blairs works sold at auction. The previous record was the $66,000 realized in 2019 for a castle faade concept painting made for Its a Small World. On Saturday, another of Blairs concept paintings made for the attraction likewise sold for $66,000. Blair, one of the queens of animation, dominated the sales top spots: Her concept painting of Peter Pan and Wendy watch Captain Hook and Mr. Smee row their way to shore sold for $48,000. A Peter Pan painting of four mermaids and the Jolly Roger realized $45,600. A concept painting of the castle from 1950s Cinderella sold for $43,200. And a conceptual painting of Alice and the White Rabbit made for 1951s Alice in Wonderland brought $40,800. One of the rarest vintage Warner Brothers cels ever to flicker at Heritage Auctions, a moment from 1946s Hair-Raising Hare featuring Bugs Bunny and the hirsute Gossamer, cracked the top 10 when it sold Friday for $52,800. Not far behind was a work so extraordinary and iconic that 25 years ago it was displayed at the Warner Brothers Animation Art Exhibit at Youngstown State University: the raygun-pointing Marvin the Martian as seen in 1952s Hasty Hare, directed by Chuck Jones. The work sold in this auction for $48,000. Another Jones-directed classic, Dr. Seuss How the Grinch Stole Christmas, also stole the hearts of bidders during this sale. Two production cels from one heartwarming scene, during which the reformed, blue-eyed Grinch shares dinner with Cindy-Lou Who and his dog Max, sold for $15,600. From Disneyland itself came Disney animation great Eyvind Earles signed painting of Sleeping Beauty Castle featuring Auroras cradle being visited by the three good fairies Flora, Fauna and Merryweather. This stunning, massive work, created in 1956 for the Sleeping Beauty Castle in Disneyland and originally sold at the theme park, realized $36,000. Dozens of pieces throughout the event sold for five figures, ranging from the unmade, concept art from Roger Rabbit II: The Toon Platoon, which sold for $18,000, to the previously unsold Jasmine and Aladdin maquettes from the collection of a Disney artist, which realized $13,200, to the simply unbelievable, an animation drawing from 1928s landmark Steamboat Willie featuring Minnie Mouse, which sold for $16,800. There was something for everyone, of all ages and checkbook size. To learn more, visit www.HA.com.
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