Florida's Urban Culture Auctions Debuts With Entertaining Sale of Street Art, Celebrity Memorabilia and Pop Collectibles
Boston gangster Whitey Bulger's prison correspondence draws international attention
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., March 12, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Every auction has its surprises, but no one expected the prison correspondence of Boston gangster Whitey Bulger Jr., to steal the spotlight at Urban Culture Auctions' (UCA) Feb. 24 debut. The 289-lot Sunday session that piggybacked a modern design sale hosted by UCA's parent company, Palm Beach Modern Auctions, featured a lively mix of what auctioneer Rico Baca called "the fun stuff – from iconic pop furniture and graffiti art to street fashion, celebrity memorabilia and Space Age electronics." But it was the Bulger material that ignited a media frenzy.
Shortly after the national press became aware of the Bulger archive to be auctioned, the gallery phone started ringing off the hook, Baca said. "Associated Press was first. After their story broke in newspapers across the country, the national TV networks soon followed. There was coverage from as far away as Australia. Everyone wanted to know what was in the letters Bulger had written to his friend. Even though he was a ruthless killer and old-school crime boss, Whitey Bulger was still morbidly fascinating and obviously worthy of a headline," Baca said.
Bulger died at the hands of fellow prisoners within hours of his arrival at a U.S. penitentiary in West Virginia last October. Prior to that time he had maintained a correspondence from behind bars with Timothy Glass, a one-time prisoner he'd met years earlier while incarcerated at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York. Glass saved all of the handwritten letters, cards, mugshots and other ephemera he received from Bulger, which, as a whole, painted a picture of an elderly criminal who found it difficult to adjust to today's prison culture.
In his written recollections, Bulger longed for the "good old days" at Alcatraz. He even chose to use his 1959 Alcatraz mugshot on a 2015 holiday photo card that carried the greeting "Wishing You Peace & Cheer in the New Year." The card sold together with a handwritten letter for $1,430. The same price was achieved by a letter and St. Patrick's Day notecard with the image of a South Boston fence painted with Irish iconography.
Several other collections enjoyed a 100% sell-through rate (inclusive of after-sales). They included seven lots of NASA items signed by Apollo astronauts, art and photographs from the estate of fashion designer Michaele Vollbracht, and a colorful array of Swatch watches.
Midcentury electronics attracted many enquiries, Baca said. The top seller of the group was a Weltron GEC-2005 stereo system with a "Jetsonesque" look and a built-in 8-track player. It flew past its $300-$500 estimate to settle at $7,800.
An unusual advertising piece, a nearly 2ft tall cast-iron figure of the Michelin Tires mascot "Bibendum" had come from the personal collection of a prominent SoHo (New York City) art gallery owner. It sold for $2,080, more than six times its high estimate.
A sleek Vladimir Kagan "Serpentine" sofa in deep royal blue drew a winning bid of $16,900, while a small 1971 acrylic-on-wood artwork by Ilya Bolotowsky titled Miniature Yellow Tondo sold for an above-estimate $9,100.
"We were very happy with the way our first pop culture auction turned out. It was especially exciting to see how many young people were bidding via the Internet, since they are the future of our business. We're already receiving consignments for our next auction and can't wait to start planning the follow-up to what was a fantastic debut," Baca said.
Contact:
Wade Terwilliger, 561-586-5500
[email protected]
SOURCE Palm Beach Modern Auctions
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