The largest private collection of
doodles, comic drawings and nonsensical poems by John will be sold by Sotheby's in New York next Wednesday.
Ranging
from gibberish descriptions of Lennon's native city Liverpool, in
northern England, to a drawing of a ‘National Health Cow’ in an apparent
jab at Britain's National Health Service, the collection reveals a
lesser known side of the celebrated British singer, who was shot dead in
1980.
The drawings and
original manuscripts are part of a collection of publisher Tom Maschler,
creator of the prestigious literary award the Booker Prize, who
published them in two books, In His Own Write (1964), and A Spaniard in
the Works (1965).
The collection, named You Might Well Arsk, has a pre-sale estimate of around $800,000 for 89 lots, Sotheby's said.
The sale coincides with the 50th
anniversary of the Beatles' first appearance in America on the Ed
Sullivan show in 1964. Watched by 73 million Americans, it shot the band
to stardom.
The drawings and poems all date back to the early 1960s at the height of 'Beatlemania', Sotheby's said.
The collection
reveals a lesser known side of the celebrated British singer, who was
shot dead in 1980 - this ink drawing is set to fetch up to $15,000
One of the unpublished typescripts
contains a reference to the record-breaking British band's first single
Love Me Do, released in 1962.
'The Beatles (a band) hab jud make a regord ... a song they whripe themselves called 'Lub Me Jew'," Lennon wrote in his characteristic gibberish style.
Another highlight in the sale is a cartoon of a boy with six birds.
It appeared in A Spaniard in the Works and was used 30 years later as the cover for the Beatles' release of Free as a Bird, written by Lennon in 1977.
It has a pre-sale estimate of $12,000 to $15,000.
'The Beatles (a band) hab jud make a regord ... a song they whripe themselves called 'Lub Me Jew'," Lennon wrote in his characteristic gibberish style.
Another highlight in the sale is a cartoon of a boy with six birds.
It appeared in A Spaniard in the Works and was used 30 years later as the cover for the Beatles' release of Free as a Bird, written by Lennon in 1977.
It has a pre-sale estimate of $12,000 to $15,000.
'It's
very much like Lewis Carroll. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and
Through the Looking Glass were two of Lennon's favorite books from
childhood and he read them on a yearly basis,' said Philip Errington,
director of printed books and manuscripts at Sotheby's.
'It is gibberish, it is gobbledygook, and yet it's funny, it's humorous verse.'
But not everyone was as convinced of their literary value.
In
a parliamentary debate in 1964, a Conservative politician, Charles
Curran, used Lennon's nonsense verse to attack Britain's education
standards.
'He [Lennon] is in a state of pathetic near-literacy,' Curran said.
'He
seems to have picked up bits of Tennyson, Browning and Robert Louis
Stevenson while listening with one ear to the football results on the
wireless.'
Maschler
tracked Lennon down at a concert after coming across the drawings and
writings in 1962 and convinced him to make a book out of them.
The New York sale will take place on June 4.
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