Media Relations
Press Release - April 29, 2025
Masterworks by Ernie Barnes, Norman Rockwell, Maurice Sendak, Frederic Edwin Church and More Celebrate the Imagination and Storytelling of a Nation in Heritage’s American Art Event
The May 16 auction is joined on the day by the second installment of the auction house’s work with Property from the BSA Settlement Trust DOWNLOAD DIGITAL PRESS KIT "American Art has always been the beating heart of our nation's story, and it's an extraordinary privilege to bring together such a dynamic, narrative-rich collection for this auction," says Aviva Lehmann, Heritage's Senior Vice President of American Art. "This auction is a tribute to the artists who have captured our collective dreams, struggles, and triumphs with honesty and beauty. We're honored to present a selection that feels both timeless and urgently alive." Barnes, the former pro footballer who the Denver Broncos' head coach once fined for sketching during team meetings, is one of the 20th century's most distinctive painters and in the 1980s was befriended by John Mecom Jr., at the time the seasoned owner of the NFL's New Orleans Saints. Mecom Jr. commissioned Barnes — known for his incisive and expressionist take on bodies working in unison and in tension — to produce a handful of sports-themed paintings during Barnes' runup to create official works for the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. The resulting Barnes paintings for Mecom Jr.'s collection anchor the May 16 auction and are a tour de force of the artist's fluid neo-mannerist depiction of the physicality of his world — the way bodies merge, move, interact and dissolve into one another. They are slices of a warm and thriving community life of movement: Sandlot Saints (1983) with its depiction of an informal and joyous football game that's broken out in an abandoned city lot; Anchor Leg (1983) which captures the climactic moment of a group of relay-race sprinters' last explosive burst across the line; Hold the Pocket (1982) which invites the viewer into the heart of the frenzied immediacy of the football scrum; and Opening Ceremonies (1984), with its triumphant panorama of communal elation at the start of a Olympic Summer Games. "Here, with near-Bruegelian density, Barnes renders a vibrant crowd bursting with energy that draws the viewer in not as an observer but as a participant," says Lehmann. "Never before has a Maurice Sendak drawing of this historical and artistic magnitude been offered publicly," says Lehmann. "This pivotal watercolor directly inspired the final, award-winning illustrations published in the seminal book, revealing Sendak's meticulous visual development from initial concept to finished masterpiece." The 1963 work depicts the now-iconic moment when Max, the young protagonist, arrives by boat at the fantastical island inhabited by the "Wild Things," and here the monsters appear leaner, somewhat gentler, yet still vibrant, reflecting Sendak's early conception of characters who would become enduring symbols of imagination and childhood adventure. On May 16, immediately following the American Art event, Heritage hosts the second installment of its auction work with Property from the BSA Settlement Trust — anchored by charismatic paintings and works on paper by Rockwell, Dean Cornwell, Joseph Csatari and more — with proceeds benefiting survivors of sexual abuse. The selection here encompasses some of the most celebrated and iconic art created for the Boy Scouts of America, including Rockwell's charming paintings Scouting Outing (1966), Mighty Proud (1958) and All Together (1947), Cornwell's patriotic calendar illustration Wright Brothers (1953), and Csatari's evocative cover illustration The Ordeal (1968). "A true celebration of American culture and the great American narrative told through art, these auctions will resonate with seasoned collectors and newcomers alike," says Lehmann. "With museum-quality highlights across genres and eras, this is a rare opportunity to acquire the very best." Images and information about all lots in Heritage's May 16 American Art Signature® Auction can be found here, and images and information about all lots in its May 16 Property from the BSA Settlement Trust American Art Signature® Auction can be found here. Select works will be previewed in Heritage's New York headquarters May 7-10 and its Dallas headquarters May 12-15. Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Hong Kong and Tokyo. Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1,750,000 registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of 6,000,000 past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit. For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases . Hi-Res images available: Christina Rees, Director of Communications 214-409-1341; CRees@HA.com |