Autographs from the Arts, Science, Politics, etc. From David Schulson
Houdini on the cover of David Schulson's latest catalogue.
By Michael Stillman
Recently discovered in our mailbox was Catalogue 133 from David Schulson Autographs. Schulson offers a nice mix of autographed documents, letters, and photographs, from both Europe and America. There is a particularly large concentration from persons in the arts - musicians, writers, artists, and actors. However, those who collect signatures of political leaders, scientists, inventors, or even a woman "known by her husbands and lovers" (Alma Mahler) will find items of interest. Here are a few samples of what we found in this most recent Schulson catalogue.
Item 47 is pictured on the cover of this catalogue. It is a young-looking Harry Houdini (birth name Erich Weiss), a Hungarian born American immigrant who became the greatest escape artist of all time. His ability to escape from chains, shackles, and all other sorts of restraints is still legendary, though he has been gone for over 80 years. Offered is a postcard of the magician with arms and legs shackled together. It is signed, "Best wishes, Houdini." It is believed to have been printed around 1905, when Houdini was approximately 30. Priced at $3,500.
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy fascinated and charmed a nation as its first lady, but once upon a time, she too was a giddy high school girl. At some point in the mid-1940s, when she was between the ages of 15 and 17, she penned this letter to "Woodley," a friend at Miss Porter's School in Connecticut. In a perhaps startling joke for the time, she writes, "At that cocktail party Nicky said you were a wonderful girl & I agreed so heartily I'm sure he thought I was a Lesbian!" The rest of the time, Miss Bouvier notes, they talked about French Vichy leader Petain. "I tried to look intelligent & nod at the right intervals -- I know I'm no authority on anything -- but he sounded like a little boy who's just read a big book & is having a lovely time expounding it all to a little country urchin without really knowing what it was all about..." She then says she is going to a football game with John (presumably not Kennedy), but that Buddy will be there without a girl. She admits to being ashamed she likes Buddy: "Its all physical -- but no one else can see it at all & looks at me as though I'm insane or have queer glands & I'm beginning to think so myself!" She concludes, "Neither of them have kissed me - I'd upchuck if John did - & love it if Buddy did except I wouldn't let him the 1st time." I'll bet John had a wonderful time at that football game. Item 50. $3,850.
Johannes Brahms was one of the greatest composers, but music isn't all he wrote. Here he writes a letter to music critic and biographer Max Kalbeck, who wrote an eight-volume biography of him. Brahms states (in German) that he was looking forward to welcoming in the winter's festivities with "Mr. K.," "but the ghastly weather and dampness make it impossible for me to attend..." The letter is undated, but would have been late 19th century. Item 11. $3,400.
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Autographs from the Arts, Science, Politics, etc. From David Schulson
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Item 32 is a postcard with several of America's most notable figures of the time - 1924. Pictured are President Calvin Coolidge, his wife and daughter, Harvey Firestone and son, Henry Ford, and Thomas Edison. It is signed by Edison, who invented or developed just about every electronic appliance of the time -- the light bulb, phonograph, motion picture projector, etc. In time, Ford was shown to be a bigot, Coolidge perhaps the worst pre-21st century president, Firestone's tires began blowing up, but Edison remains essentially unscathed. $1,850.
Item 20 is a 1905 letter from Winston Churchill. Churchill had just crossed from the Conservative to the Liberal Party, the primary issue being his opposition to protective tariffs. "The harm is now done," writes Churchill. "The Conservative party...is wholly identified with protection." Churchill would migrate back to the Conservatives in the 1920s with the virtual disintegration of the Liberal Party, and it was as the leader of that party that he would lead Britain through the Second World War. $4,850.
David Schulson Autographs may be found online at www.schulsonautographs.com or reached by phone at 212-629-3939.
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