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Lot 144C: Alfred Wertheimer, Elvis Fan, [Woman with Newspaper] Elvis Presley, c. 1956

Est: $1,000 USD - $1,200 USDPassed
Keith Delellis Gallery LLCNew York, NY, USFebruary 27, 2021

Item Overview

Description

Alfred Wertheimer, Elvis Fan [Woman with Newspaper], Elvis Presley, c. 1956, Vintage gelatin silver print, 14" x 11". Crop marks/reproduction notes in red on recto. Signed in pencil on verso. Artist's credit stamped on verso. Agency credits stamped on verso. "PRESLEY, Elvis" stamped on verso. Number stamped on verso. Artist Biography: In 1956 freelance photographer Alfred Wertheimer was assigned to photograph a 21-year-old singer whom RCA was promoting. It was Elvis Presley, a name the 26-year-old Wertheimer did not recognize when he trekked down to New York City’s Studio 50 (later to be named the Ed Sullivan Theater) to photograph Presley’s appearance on Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey’s Stage Show. At the time, Elvis had already recorded “Heartbreak Hotel” and was beginning to gain some notoriety, but he was nowhere close to becoming a cultural icon. He could still walk the streets unrecognized, without entourage and bodyguards, so Alfred Wertheimer was able to shoot reams of film of Elvis, up close and personal, both on stage and off, in the last remaining months before Elvis’s life would change forever. A series of extraordinary photographs document this brief moment in time when the 21-year-old Elvis Presley was on the cusp of national stardom. Manhattan is a sensory overload. As any visitor knows, it is easy to be staggered by the canyons of man-made buildings, and the raucous torrent of life that runs through them. It is this intense vitality that has made New York the muse of many of the 20th century’s great artists. From photographers like Charles Sheeler and Berenice Abbott, who celebrated its architectural feats as symbolic of progress, to those who recorded the price of modernity as reflected in the activities of its underworld, like painter Edward Hopper and photographer Weegee, almost every artist comes to New York to try their hand at success. It is a city that love it or hate it tows you in: and this is reflected in the work of generations of artists, from those like Charles Sheeler and Berenice Abbott, who celebrated its architectural feats as symbolic of progress, to those who recorded the price of modernity as reflected in the activities of its underworld, like Edward Hopper and Weegee. Almost everyone comes toNew York to try their hand at success. One day in 1956, a young man from the South came to New York to bring his music to a wider audience. This man, who was himself a force to be reckoned with, was as yet unknown outside of the South. He had come to play on Stage Show, a CBS program produced by brothers and big band leaders, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey. A series of extraordinary photographs document this brief moment in time when the 21-year-old Elvis Presley was on the cusp of national stardom. Alfred Wertheimer, a young photojournalist who had grown up in Brooklyn and attended Cooper Union, would go on to spend around 10 days with Elvis over the next two years, and shoot roughly 2,500 photographs. These intimate photographs of Elvis are a product of Wertheimer’s artistic brilliance and the history of photography. Wertheimer documented pivotal moments in the creation of rock and roll, the musical genre that would take over the world, and defined the stylings of rock-and-roll photography to come. As Wertheimer tells it, there was a bit of luck involved too. Wertheimer, who looks two decades younger than his 81 years, moves around his office with a sprightly step and a shock of whitish grey hair. He likes to joke around, and he says that he only remembers two things: the day he met Elvis and today. Yet he seems to have an encyclopedic knowledge of a wide range of subjects. In 1955 he was sharing a studio with a few other photographers on Third Avenue in New York. Among them were Paul Schutzer, who had attended Cooper Union for a year, and Jerry Yulsman, both of whom would become renowned photographers in their own right. Schutzer’s grand dream in life was to be a staff photographer for Lifemagazine. He would drop other assignments whenever Life gave him a call, happily passing on any other work to his friend Wertheimer, which he would do in addition to his own assignments. And this meant that Wertheimer was in the right place at the right time to take on an assignment that would become the turning point of his life. On March 12, 1956, the head of PR from RCA Victor, Anne Fulchino, called and asked if he could do a job the following week. She said, I want you to photograph the Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey Stage Show, Wertheimer says. He was pleased, as Tommy Dorsey was one of his heroes. But then Fulchino told him that he wouldn’t actually be photographing Dorsey: “I want you to photograph Elvis Presley, who’s playing on Dorsey’s program.” He explains that there was a silence on his part before he said, “Elvis who?” Wertheimer accepted the assignment, and that was how he found himself in the same room as Elvis Presley, who was on the verge of becoming a national star. Wertheimer’s photographs show a pensive Elvis just doing what he did: performing, spending time with his family or fans, napping, reading letters and papers, combing his hair, or listening to music. “From a photographer’s point of view,” he explains, “Elvis was unique in that he permitted closeness”—not six to eight feet away, which was standard, but right up close, three to four feet away. He was so intensely involved with what he was doing. Whether he was combing his hair or chatting up girls, he would be himself with a laser focus. “I didn’t realize how unique that was.” He thinks about it for a minute, before adding, “I put him under my microscope and studied him, but my microscope was my camera lens.” This desire to document everyday habits and the details of life—to be a fly on the wall—is a longstanding tradition in East Coast American art. In fact, Wertheimer was taking a tried and true trope in photography realism and applying it to a new subject. Realism, in Wertheimer’s hands, was not about the down and out, but instead about the up-and-coming. The 20th century marked a turning point for art in the United States. A focus on realism and the urban were the new thing. New York City s art community in particular became enamored of realism. One influential movement of highly realistic art was created in Philadelphia in 1891 by artist Robert Henri, and included painters like John Sloan and Maurice Prendergast. This group would later be dubbed the Ash Can School of Painting, because their subject matter often depictedNewYork s working class neighborhoods, and some of the grittier sides of life in the big city. Their images were often dark not just in terms of subject matter, but quite literally in terms of tone. These painters found their subjects in poverty prostitutes and drunks, life in the tenements. Above all, their subject matter was thoroughly urban. By the 1930s, the New York School of Photography was nascent, though it truly came of age in the 1950s. These photographers took to the streets, often with small cameras and no flash, where they would catch life un-posed. Photography became poetic, a rendering of the drama of everyday lives; the photographers were witnesses, often unnoticed by their subjects, as they quickly and quietly took their shots. The artists who made up this movement reflected America’s ups and downs: the Great Depression, World War II, the postwar years, the wars in Asia, and the unrest of the 1960s and 1970s. Artists Walker Evans, Helen Levitt, and Weegee were all socially conscious exponents of straight photography. Later, heavyweights like Diane Arbus, Robert Frank, and Roy DeCarava, among many others, emerged starting in the 1950s. These artists added the vocabulary of photography to their images. This meant that the very components of imagery itself—grain, darkness and lightness, focus and frame—became as important as the subject matter. They sought the drama of the night, shooting in low light. “Different people come out at night,” says Wertheimer, who was deeply influenced by both the Ash Can School and the New York School. So he turned day into night, sleeping through the days to start wandering and shooting at night. By the same token, the attention he paid to the denizens of the night brought them up as subjects of study, shining a symbolic light onto their activities. By turning day into night, Wertheimer, in effect, also turned night into day. The 20th century was a seminal time for music as well as art, and Elvis changed everything by bridging many different worlds. Leonard Bernstein once said that Elvis was the greatest cultural force of the century. “It’s a whole new social revolution,” he said. “The 60s come from it.” Elvis was a Southern boy, raised by poor parents, who genuinely loved the blues music that he grew up with. He was able to bring what had customarily been black music to a white audience by bringing the blues into mainstream rock and roll, transforming both forever. Elvis not only challenged America’s conservatism in terms of race, but in terms of sexuality. Many people disparaged Elvis’s highly sexualized act, as reviews in The New York Times and the Daily News showed. Ed Sullivan initially refused to have him on his show on CBS, until the high ratings of rival shows where Elvis had appeared made him change his mind. Some, like Steve Allen on his NBC show, tried to make Elvis tone down his act. No matter how much ire there was against Elvis, one thing was certain, young people—and particularly girls—loved Elvis. Perhaps they responded to the pulse of his rockabilly hits, his good looks, or his performances. What is certain is that he was an amazing artist, a talented singer who emoted genuinely. Wertheimer is convinced that what made Elvis different was his pure, raw emotion. “Elvis made the girls cry,” he explains—a talent that comes from a performer’s ability to go deep into a fan’s psyche. And Wertheimer’s photos of Elvis bear witness to this. This is not an easy task, especially with teenagers. To make them cry, that' s a talent that only somebody who was getting deep into their psyche would be able to get. All of these ingredients can be found in Wertheimer sphotos of Elvis. His photographs document an incredible time in the history of photography, as well as the birth of a star and a new chapter in the history of music. Wertheimer coined the term “available darkness” to explain his philosophy that the darker a place is visually, the easier it is to capture a person’s true self. He used this technique to portray Elvis in a way that nobody could match, and he was there for the performances that won the heart of America. Elvis was conscripted into the military in 1958, and Wertheimer photographed him as he shipped out to Germany. After this, he never saw Elvis again. It wasn’t until almost 20 years later, upon the death of Elvis in 1977, that there would be a sudden surge in demand for Wertheimer’s photographs from this era. Wertheimer’s life didn’t stop with Elvis. He continued to freelance, and luminaries Eleanor Roosevelt and Nina Simone were among the people he subsequently photographed. He also spent a great deal of time as a cameraman for well-known programs like Granada Television’s World in Action and Mike Wadleigh’s filmWoodstock. “You have all these experiences,” says Wertheimer, “and they become part of the collective memory. It takes a while to realize that your perspective is an important ingredient.” (Fahey Klein Gallery)

Dimensions

14" x 11"

Artist or Maker

Medium

Gelatin silver print

Date

1956

Condition Report

Good condition. Wear to corners. Creases to upper right, lower right, lower center, lower left, center left, and upper left.

Payment & Shipping

Payment

Accepted forms of payment: American Express, MasterCard, Paypal, Personal Check, Visa, Wire Transfer

Shipping

In House Shipping: The Gallery has in house shipping available. Buyers are responsible for all taxes, customs fees and VAT that may apply to their purchase and shipment.

Auction Details

VINTAGE PHOTOGRAPHY: 19th & 20th CENTURY HISTORY

by
Keith Delellis Gallery LLC
February 27, 2021, 02:00 PM EST

41 E 57th St. 703, New York, NY, 10022, US

Terms

Live bidding may start higher or lower

Buyer's Premium

$0 - 499:25.0%
$500 - 999:25.0%
$1,000+:25.0%

Bidding Increments

From:To:Increment:
$0$199$20
$200$499$50
$500$999$100
$1,000$4,999$250
$5,000$9,999$500
$10,000$19,999$1,000
$20,000$49,999$2,500
$50,000$99,999$5,000
$100,000$249,999$10,000
$250,000+$25,000

Terms & Conditions

1. Bidders Bound by These Terms and Conditions of Sale set forth here are the complete and only terms and conditions on which all property is offered for sale. By registering and/or bidding on Invaluable or by written absentee or telephone bid, or by any other means, the buyer agrees to be bound by these Conditions of Sale.

2. Sole Remedy for buyer in event of a dispute or any other issue. The buyer's sole remedy under these Terms and Conditions of Sale shall be the rescission of the sale and refund of the original purchase price paid for the item, and this remedy shall be exclusive and in lieu of any other remedy which might otherwise be available to the buyer as a matter of law.

3. Right to Withdraw Lots, Errors and Omissions. Gallery reserves the right to withdraw any property at any time before the auction and shall have no liability whatsoever for such withdrawal. Offerings in this catalog are subject to errors or omissions in descriptions.

4. Hammer Price. The hammer price is the price at which a lot is sold or hammered down by the Auctioneer. On the fall of the auctioneer's hammer, title to the offered lot or article will pass to the highest acknowledged bidder, who thereupon immediately assumes full risk and responsibility, and will within 72 hours pay the full Purchase Price therefor.

5. Purchase Price. The purchase price paid by the winning bidder is the aggregate of (a) the hammer price, (b) a Buyers Premium of 20% plus any applicable tax, shipping, handling and processing including applicable New York state tax in the amount of 8.875% of the entire purchase price. New York state and local taxes will be collected except where sold to a purchaser outside of New York and shipped to the purchaser or the purchaser has a valid New York resale license and provides such documentation to Keith de Lellis Gallery. A 3% processing fee will be added to any invoice that is being paid via Credit Card or Live Auctioneer credit card payments.

6. Dispute Between Bidders. If any dispute arises between two or more bidders, the Auctioneer may decide the sale or may immediately put the lot up for sale again, and resell to the highest bidder. The decision of the Auctioneer shall be final and absolute. The Auctioneer reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Invaluable bids are executed with and against outside competing telephone and absentee bids. In the case of ties, the auctioneer has sole and final discretion to determine the successful bidder. In the event of any dispute between bidders or in the event the auctioneer doubts the validity of any bid, the auctioneer shall have sole and final discretion either to determine the successful bidder or to re-offer and resell the article in dispute. If any dispute arises after the sale, our sales records shall be conclusive in every respect.

7. Withdraw Lots. Gallery reserves the absolute right (a) to withdraw any property at any time before its actual final sale, including during the bidding, and (b) to refuse any bid from any bidder. The auctioneer is the sole judge as to the amount to be advanced by each succeeding bid.

8. All Lots Sold "AS IS". Neither the Gallery nor Auctioneer nor Consignor make any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to the property or correctness of the advertisement, catalog, Lot descriptions and any other medium used to announce this auction or any other description of the physical condition, attribution, provenance, genuineness, description, condition of the property, estimate of value, quality, importance, size or authenticity of the property offered and described either online or via telephone, text, email or any other communication.

9. Condition: A condition report may be obtained by viewing the online catalog, or you may contact the Gallery. Not withstanding any condition reports or catalog descriptions provided, all lots are offered and sold AS IS In most cases, we describe the quality of the impression of the print. We have never seen perfect prints as they can have wipe marks and abrasions made by the photographer etc.


10. Estimates: Keith de Lellis would describe estimates based on being a retail gallery for over 20 years.
High Estimate: Gallery Retail
Low Estimate: This would be a Gallery bulk purchase price or in some cases dealer wholesale price.
Starting price: Bulk purchase price.

11. Copyright: Neither the Gallery nor Auctioneer nor Consignor make any representations whatsoever that the Purchaser of a work of art will acquire any reproduction rights thereto and copyright to work. Purchaser's ownership of the work shall remain subject to the copyrights of the artist.

12. Amending Catalog, Entire Agreement: This on-line catalog may be amended 2 hours before posting time and represents Keith de Lellis Gallery LLC (Gallery) entire agreement with any and all Purchasers of the property listed herein.

13. Absentee Bids: Absentee bids for Auction Lots will be executed by the Gallery on behalf of the Client during the auction. The Gallery shall not be responsible for any errors or omissions or failure to execute such absentee bids. To reduce the chance of error, the Gallery requests the Client make absentee bidding arrangements as soon as possible. Every effort will be made to carry out the bidder's instructions, but Keith de Lellis Gallery shall in no event be responsible for failing correctly to carry out instructions, and Keith de Lellis Gallery reserves the right to decline to undertake such bids.

14. Telephone Bid: Telephone Bidding is a convenience to Gallery clients who are unable to attend the auction. A limited telephone bid service will be offered as staff and time allow. The Gallery shall not be responsible for any errors or omissions or failure to execute such telephone bids. To reduce the chance of error, the Gallery requests the Client make telephone-bidding arrangements as soon as possible.

15. Credit Card for Telephone and Absentee Bids; A valid major credit card number will be required in order to execute telephone or absentee bids.

16. Credit: Absentee and Telephone Bidders whose credit is unknown to Keith de Lellis Gallery must submit a Credit Card deposit of 25% of their maximum bids. If successful, the deposit will be applied to the purchases; if unsuccessful, the deposit will be returned.

17. Institutional Buyers may make separate payment arrangements to coincide with their fiscal year planning. These arrangements must be discussed and approved prior to the auction.

18. Terms for all Purchases: Accepted payments are cash, wire transfer, personal check, Visa, Mastercard, American Express and LiveAuctioneer. Payments by credit card and LiveAuctioneer will be charged a 3% additional processing fee. Unless exempt by law, the Purchaser will be required to pay any and all applicable New York state taxes. In the event of deliveries outside of New York, it is the Purchaser's responsibility to pay any compensating use tax of another state on the purchase price. All monies shall be made payable to Keith de Lellis Gallery, LLC. At the Gallery's discretion, payment will not be deemed to be complete until funds represented by checks or credit cards have been processed by Seller's bank, usually within 1-3 days.

19. In House Shipping: The Gallery has in house shipping available. Flat rate shipping and transit insurance is noted on each Lot for shipping in the lower 48 States of USA. Shipping costs to Alaska, Hawaii and foreign countries will be quoted individually. Buyers are responsible for all taxes, customs fees and VAT that may apply to their purchase and shipment.

Please provide a correct street address, email address and telephone number for our shipper in order to expedite the receipt of your purchase. Items not removed or shipped from our warehouse after 30 days will be subject to a storage charge. Shipment generally occurs within ten business days after payment has been received.

20. Pickup at the Gallery is available by appointment beginning September 25, 2020. Buyers may make their own arrangements for shipping with pick-up at the Gallery by their designated shipping agent.

Miscellaneous Provisions:
21. Authenticity of Work Return: A condition report may be obtained by viewing the online catalog or by contacting the Gallery. Notwithstanding any condition reports or catalog descriptions provided, all lots are offered and sold AS IS in accordance with paragraph 3 of the Procedures, Terms and Conditions of Auction. However, if within 21 calendar days after the receipt of the purchase of any lot, as long as the art was received within 30 calendar days of the Auction date, the purchaser provides two opinions by recognized authorities on the artist, and gives notice in writing to the Gallery that the lot is not authentic, and within 7 calendar days of such notice the purchaser returns the lot to the Gallery in the same condition as when sold, the Gallery will refund the full purchase price.

22. Limitation of Rights. Any right of the purchaser under this agreement or under the law shall not be assignable and shall be enforceable only by the original purchaser and not by any subsequent owner or any person who shall subsequently acquire any interest. No purchaser shall be entitled to any remedy, relief or damages beyond return of the property, rescission of the sale and refund of the purchase price; and without limitation, no purchaser shall be entitled to damages of any kind.

23. Remedies: These Procedures, Terms and Conditions of Auction and any other applicable conditions, as well as the Purchasers and Gallery's rights and obligations herein shall be governed by, construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of Arizona. Purchases that have gone unpaid twenty (20) business days after the sale are subject to any or all of the following including without limitation the right to hold the Purchaser liable for the purchase price stated on the invoice, either (a) cancel the sale and retain as liquidated damages any and all payments made by the Purchaser or (b) resell the property privately or at public auction on three day's notice to the Purchaser for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase price and all costs including handling charges, warehousing, the commissions, attorney's fees, any and all other auction-related charges due and incidental damages. In the event of a default, the Gallery reserves the right to charge the Purchaser's credit card on file in the full amount owed as stated on the invoice.

24. Bull Payment: In order to prevent inaccuracy in delivery or inconvenience in the settlement of a purchase, no lot can be transferred. Each buyer must pay for the whole of his purchases before any lot can be removed.

25. Not Assignable: The benefits of these warranties are not assignable and are applicable only to the original buyer of the lot, and are conditioned on the buyer returning the work in the same condition as at time of sale and in the time period specified.

26. Misc: Dimensions are given in inches, with height preceding width in all cases. Illustrations in the catalogue are for identification only and should not be used as a basis for determining the condition of the lot. First Date used in the lot description entries refers to the creation of the negative or original electronic capture; a second date indicates the approximate print date. The term "signed" means that, in our opinion, the signature is by the artist.

Payment

Payment by American Express, Visa, Mastercard, Bank/wire transfer, personal check, or PayPal (Paypal email: defoto@earthlink.net).

Shipping Terms

In House Shipping: The Gallery has in house shipping available. Buyers are responsible for all taxes, customs fees and VAT that may apply to their purchase and shipment.

Taxes

New York state and local taxes will be collected except where sold to a purchaser outside of New York and shipped to the purchaser or the purchaser has a valid New York resale license and provides such documentation to Keith de Lellis Gallery.

Condition

All Lots Sold "AS IS". Neither the Gallery nor Auctioneer nor Consignor make any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to the property or correctness of the advertisement, catalog, Lot descriptions and any other medium used to announce this auction or any other description of the physical condition, attribution, provenance, genuineness, description, condition of the property, estimate of value, quality, importance, size or authenticity of the property offered and described either online or via telephone, text, email or any other communication.

A condition report may be obtained by viewing the online catalog, or you may contact the Gallery. Not withstanding any condition reports or catalog descriptions provided, all lots are offered and sold AS IS In most cases, we describe the quality of the impression of the print. We have never seen perfect prints as they can have wipe marks and abrasions made by the photographer etc.