
Artwork that once decorated the Michigan Avenue offices of Johnson Publishing Co., which filed for bankruptcy in April, fetched nearly $3 million at auction last week — more than doubling expectations.
The 87 pieces of African American art was sold in a live auction Jan. 30 in New York City.
Topping the list was artist Henry Ossawa Tanner’s oil on canvas entitled “Moonrise by Kasbah (Morocco),” which sold for $365,000.
A piece by Carrie Mae Weems that chronicles the black migration to Chicago from Southern states through a series of seven real-life images sold for $305,000.
Other noteworthy sales: Dindga McCannon’s oil on canvas entitled “The Last Farewell” sold for $161,000, Kenneth Victor Young’s oil on canvas entitled “Upper Egypt” sold for $87,500 and Walter H. Williams’s oil on canvas entitled “White Butterfly” sold for $125,000.
The auction represented the last major piece in the piecemeal selloff of Johnson Publishing assets.
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A collection of dresses and other fashion items were auctioned Dec. 6. They had been part of a traveling fashion show by the company, which published Ebony and Jet magazines and Fashion Fair cosmetics.
In July, the company’s historic photo archive fetched $30 million from a consortium of philanthropic groups that pledged to donate the trove to museums and research centers.
And in November, a group of investors that included former Johnson Publishing executive Desiree Rogers bought the cosmetics line, Fashion Fair, for $1.85 million.
In 2016, Ebony and Jet were sold to Clear View Group, an equity firm in Texas. Johnson Publishing’s Michigan Avenue headquarters, the only Chicago high-rise ever designed and owned by an African American, were sold in 2017 and have since been converted into apartments.
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Two of the major bankruptcy claimants are Rogers, who also served as White House social secretary under then-President Barack Obama, and former Johnson Publishing heiress Linda Johnson Rice.
Pending court approval, the net proceeds of the art sale will go to Rogers, said Neville Reid, a bankruptcy attorney who’s working with the court-appointed trustee who’s responsible for investigating assets, selling them, and distributing the proceeds to creditors.
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