Los Angeles Times

Didion auction tops $1.9 million

$27,000 for a pair of sunglasses? Yes. Sales of writer’s belongings surpass expectatio­ns.

- By Jonah Valdez

“We all know that if we are to live ourselves there comes a time when we must relinquish the dead, let them go, keep them dead.”

Joan Didion wrote that in “The Year of Magical Thinking,” her 2005 memoir in which she grieved the 2003 death of her husband, fellow writer John Gregory Dunne.

“Let them become the photograph on the table,” Didion added.

On Wednesday, nearly one year after Didion’s own death, an online estate sale of her belongings was held in New York City. Among the 224 items up for grabs, both the photograph (a 1968 portrait of Didion by Julian Wasser) and the table (an oak desk she used in her office) were sold for a combined total of $87,000 — far beyond their projected worth.

Along with other pieces of furniture and her book and fine-art collection­s, the items were from Didion’s apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, according to Stair Galleries, the auction house behind “An American Icon: Property From the Collection of Joan Didion.” Proceeds will go toward the Sacramento Historical Society and Parkinson’s research and patient care at Columbia University.

Didion, a Sacramento native, died in December 2021 due to complicati­ons from Parkinson’s disease at age 87 in her New York home.

By the close of the sale late Wednesday, the auction had generated more than $1.9 million, according to the Bidsquare website, which hosted the auction.

Didion, whose work is the “elusive” subject of a new exhibition at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, was a major influence on the literary world. Perhaps in an attempt to memorializ­e her, fans paid massive sums in Wednesday’s sales, often exceeding estimated values.

Lisa Thomas, director of the Fine Arts Department at Stair Galleries, said it’s common for sales at a high-profile auction to surpass their typical market value. But even so, some of the bids exceeded even her own expectatio­ns.

“Some of these prices are unusually high, even given where they come from,” Thomas told The Times. “$27,000 for a pair of sunglasses seems like a lot. I was pleasantly surprised.”

Thomas was referring to arguably the buzziest of items in the auction, a pair of Céline faux tortoise-shell sunglasses, which were expected to fetch several hundred dollars but sold for $27,000. In some of the more iconic images of Didion, she is seen donning such thickframe­d sunglasses.

Didion wrote in a 2011 essay for Vogue that among her childhood fantasies was to stand in front of a South American public building, recently divorced, “wearing dark glasses and avoiding paparazzi.”

Several other pairs of sunglasses sold for a more modest $4,250, while a bundle of prescripti­on glasses went for $10,000.

Though Didion’s final days were spent in New York, she lived much of her life in California — and was deeply associated with it. The aforementi­oned photo, which sold for $26,000, was a framed portrait of Didion from the iconic 1968 Time magazine shoot, where she is seen with a cigarette in hand, leaning against her Stingray Corvette parked in the driveway of the Hollywood house she shared with her husband.

Some of the items at Wednesday’s sale were originally from California before making their way to Didion’s Manhattan apartment, including one of the largest sales, an office desk with a blend of oak, maple and walnut, built in Sacramento, which sold for $60,000.

The largest sale of the auction was an oil painting of Didion from 1977, which was estimated at $3,000 to $5,000. It sold for $110,000. Didion was photograph­ed in front of the painting numerous times, the auction house said.

For the item that received the most bids — 49 — buyers scrambled over a framed 6by-4-inch paper cutout of an invitation to an art exhibition by American artist Bruce Nauman. Estimated value: $200 to $300. Final sale: $32,500.

In Didion’s 1968 collection, “Slouching Towards Bethlehem,” she wrote an essay, “On Keeping a Notebook,” where she ruminated on her impulse to write things down in notebooks in order to “record what we see around us.”

The romance of that essay wasn’t lost on buyers, who snatched up bundles of Didion’s blank notebooks for $11,000 a piece.

Thomas was also pleased by the hefty price tags on smaller items, such as a paperweigh­t and other desk items, which collective­ly sold for $8,000.

The auction, which began Wednesday morning after accruing pre-bids, wrapped up late in the afternoon with its final sale: six silver candlestic­ks for a mere $8,000.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Kathy Willens JOAN DIDION died last December at 87.
Associated Press Kathy Willens JOAN DIDION died last December at 87.

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