Chicago Imagists from Roger Brown’s New Buffalo, Michigan Collection Among the Highlights at Hindman’s Post War & Contemporary Art Auction
Works from the wareHOUSE, Atlanta and Remarkable Works by John Craxton and Ed Clark are also Expected to Draw Significant Attention
CHICAGO – Hindman’s May 11th Post War & Contemporary Art auction will feature two prominent deaccessions by Chicago Imagists Jim Nutt and Karl Wirsum from the Roger Brown Collection at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (New Buffalo, Michigan), being sold to support The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) Scholarship Fund. A distinguished Chicago Imagist himself, Brown bequeathed his estate to his beloved alma mater SAIC, to serve as invaluable resources to students, alumni and the greater public at large in perpetuity.
In addition to the deaccessions from the Roger Brown Collection, works released from the uniquely specific personal collection of John and Sue Wieland also known as the wareHOUSE will be available. The Wieland’s began collecting in the mid-1980’s and their collection, which now includes works by more than 350 national and international artists in an extraordinary array of variations on the themes of residences, architecture and dwellings, is displayed in Atlanta’s Westside District, appropriately in a 27,000 square foot warehouse.
Rounding out the offerings in the auction are exceptional examples by Jean Dubuffet, Roberto Matta, Stanley Whitney, Larry Poons, Jules Olitski, Alexander Calder, George Rickey, William Turnbull and Harry Bertoia. Following the record-setting sale at Hindman in February of Gertrude Abercrombie’s The Dinosaur, four more equally compelling paintings by the artist will be offered, including a charmingly miniature work that was originally gifted to jazz icon and friend Dizzy Gillespie.
A Pair of Works from the New Buffalo, Michigan Roger Brown Collection, Sold to Support the School of the Art Institute of Chicago Scholarship Fund

Lot 6 | Jim Nutt, Do you See Something?, 1985 | Estimate: $30,000 – $50,000
Roger Brown was not only a world-renowned artist, but also an avid collector of works by his fellow Chicago Imagists along with folk and indigenous art, textiles, decorative arts and other genres. The complete collection at the Veronda Pavilion and Roger Brown Studio and Guest House in New Buffalo, Michigan encompasses contemporary art, tribal sculpture and textiles, folk art and works by self-taught artists, as well as pieces by Brown himself (SAIC website).

Lot 7 | Karl Wirsum | Any One? Ten Is!, 1979 | Estimate: $30,000 – $50,000
The leading highlight from the wareHOUSE consignment is Thomas Ruff’s Substrat 9 III (lot 62; estimate: $50,000-70,000), a prime example of the artist’s innovative and boundary pushing photography. Another noteworthy piece from the collection is AfriCOBRA founding member Wadsworth Jarrell’s vibrantly eye-catching Cookin’ N Smokin’ (lot 17; estimate: $30,000 – $50,000).

Lot 62 | Thomas Ruff, Substrat 9 III, 2002-03 Estimate: $50,000 – $70,000
The top lots to be offered in the auction are British ex pat painter John Craxton’s iconic Creten taverna scene Still Life with Three Sailors (lot 18; estimate: $150,00-250,000) and Ed Clark’s Creation (lot 65; estimate: $150,000- $250,000), a powerfully physical abstract, painted with a push broom, by an artist, once overlooked and now highly in demand.

Lot 18 | John Craxton, Still Life with Three Sailors, 1982-1987 | Estimate: $150,000 – $250,000
How to Bid:
Bidding for the May 11th Post War & Contemporary Art auction will begin at 10am CT, and will be available in-person, via phone, and online via Hindman’s Digital Bid Room, and additional online bidding platforms. Additional information about the auction can be found via the website page and the catalogue.