Quentin Blake at 90 White Glove Sale at Bonhams
Quentin Blake at 90: A Birthday Auction in Support of the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration at Bonhams raised £390,023. Each of the 139 lots found a buyer making it a white glove sale. The online auction ran on bonhams.com from Friday December 2 - Friday December 16, the day the illustrator turned 90.
Highlights included:
- Amazing Performing Dogs No 3. Sold for £10,838 ($13,100)
- Amazing Performing Dogs No 1. Sold for £10,200 ($12,400)
- Measuring a Dragon No 1. Sold for £8,288 ($10,000)
- Jumping for Joy. Sold for £8,288 ($10,000)
Janet Hardie, Bonhams Senior Specialist in Modern British and Irish Art and head of the sale, said: "I am delighted at the result. Estimates for the works were set at a competitive level to encourage as many people as possible to participate. I am glad to say that this approach paid dividends. Every drawing found a new home and the 'white glove sale' raised a very impressive sum for an excellent cause."
The proceeds of the sale go to benefit the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration. Founded by Quentin Blake in 2002 as House of Illustration, the Quentin Blake Centre is the UK's national centre for illustration. The proceeds raised in this sale will help in the restoration of a fascinating but forgotten 18th and 19th century heritage site, New River Head in Clerkenwell, London, to create a home for the organisation. The Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration will offer a dynamic, distinctive programme of exhibitions, and will also provide a home for the 40,000-work archive of the UK's best-loved illustrator, Quentin Blake.
Lindsey Glen, Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration Director said, "The campaign for a national centre for illustration came about through Quentin's vision, tenacity and generosity. We are so grateful to him, and to Bonhams, for raising such an amazing sum of money towards the project, through an auction filled with the intriguing stories, eccentric characters and warm humour for which he is so beloved. Happy birthday Quentin!"