Rosenthal photos up for auction
NEW YORK—Bonhams is honored to announce its upcoming 22 February sale, World War II: the Pacific Theater, the first-ever auction to focus entirely on the war’s historic events in the Pacific Ocean and western Pacific Rim. The chronologically structured sale begins in December 1941 with the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and concludes with signing of the peace treaty in Tokyo bay on the USS Missouri in September, 1945. From iconic monuments to ships models, this sale offers powerful, authentic WWII material sure to interest individuals and institutions alike.
“We only have a few more years to learn from our WWII veterans during their lifetimes, so the timing of the sale is important to collectors,” explained Tom Lamb, the Director of the Books & Manuscripts Department at Bonhams in New York, and one of the specialists for this sale.
The sale’s top lot is the original 1945 Iwo Jima Monument, a symbol of wartime bravery and national unity which was unveiled on Constitution Avenue in Washington DC in November, 1945 (est. $1,200,000 – 1,800,000). It is one of the most potent images of heroism in battle of the 20th century. The world-famous monument depicts the raising of the Stars and Stripes on the summit of Mt. Suribachi by five Marines and a Navy Corpsman. Joe Rosenthal, an Associated Press photographer, captured the Pulitzer-Prize winning scene that inspired the monument’s creator, Felix de Weldon. The monument is perhaps best known in its secondary incarnation, the eighty-ton bronze Marine Corps Memorial in Arlington, Virginia. Bonhams will auction de Weldon’s original cast stone version, which until 2007 had been drawing crowds at New York’s distinguished Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum.
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