As a bookseller involved in buying and selling rare books, I am naturally focused on the object itself-the book. Naturally, I'm also interested in my customers, and when I can I try to spend time finding out more about them and their interests, in order to provide better service and increase our company's sales. When I study, I am looking at the books-whether to learn more about bindings, editions, the fine points of the books' historical contexts, the life of the authors. So, it is rare for me to study collectors themselves, collectors as the object of my interest.
When I was young, however, due to an early marriage into a very interesting family, I got to spend time with one of the country's premier art collectors, Paul David Magriel, Sr. At the time I met him, in the early 1960s, Paul had already established his reputation among the wealthy, museums across the United States, and the cognoscenti on Madison Avenue, as having one of the finest eyes in art collecting.
Paul lived on the Upper East Side in Manhattan, striding distance from his favorite haunts in the galleries and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He had decorated his ground-floor apartment to be a veritable gallery, and whenever I visited with his son, Paul (the backgammon player, not to be confused with Paul Sr.) there was always something interesting to see.
Paul began his career working for Lincoln Kirstein, established the dance and theatre archives at the Museum of Modern Art and authoring what are still the standard biographies of Pavola, Nijinsky, and Isadora Duncan, as well as the bibliography of dance published by the New York Public Library. During World War II Paul managed to continue his work collecting - putting together a book on soldier's art at Keesler Field. After the war, ever fascinated with the human body he collected images and ephemera related to boxing, now housed at Columbia University library, and authored what is still the standard bibliography on the subject. Paul did not just collect; he was a scholar as well.
Sotheby's Fine Books & Manuscripts Available for Immediate Purchase
Sotheby’s: Balthus, Emily Brontë. Wuthering Heights, New York: The Limited Editions Club, 1993. 6,600 USD.
Sotheby’s: Charles Dickens. Complete Works, Philadelphia & London: J.B. Lippincott Company & Chapman & Hall, LD, 1850. Limited Edition set of 30 volumes. 7,500 USD.
Sotheby’s: John Lennon, Yoko Ono. Handwritten Letter from John Lennon and Yoko Ono to their Chauffer. 1971. 32,500 USD.
Sotheby’s: Winston Churchill. First edition of War Speeches, Cassell and Company, Ltd., 1941. Set of 7 volumes. 5,500 USD.
Sotheby’s: Andy Warhol, Julia Warhola. Holy Cats First Edition, Signed by Andy Warhol. 1954. 30,000 USD.
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 11. Blaeu's Superb World Map on a Polar Projection (1695) Est. $5,500 - $7,000
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 36. Schedel's Ancient World Map with Humanoid Creatures (1493) Est. $14,000 - $17,000
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 49. One of the First Lunar Globes to Show the Far Side of the Moon (1963) Est. $1,000 - $1,300
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 5. The First World Map with Lavish Allegorical Vignettes of the Continents (1594) Est. $15,000 - $17,000
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 55. Anti-British Propaganda Map with Churchill as an Octopus (1942) Est. $2,000 - $2,300
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 197. One of the Most Influential Maps of Westward Expansion (1846) Est. $9,500 - $12,000
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 10. Scarce Pitt Edition of Carte-a-Figures Map of the World (1680) Est. $9,500 - $11,000
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 220. A Fine, Early Rendering of San Francisco (1874) Est. $2,200 - $2,500
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 707. Hand-Colored Image of the Presentation of Jesus with Gilt Highlights (1450) Est. $1,600 - $1,900
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 80. One of the Most Important Maps Perpetuating the Myth of the Island of California (1680) Est. $3,250 - $4,000
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 725. Homann's Atlas Featuring 26 Folio-Sized Maps in Original Color (1715) Est. $4,500 - $5,500
Old World Auctions (Feb 11): Lot 169. One of the Earliest Maps to Show Philadelphia (1695) Est. $4,750 - $6,000