Sotheby’s eclectic “The One” sale on February 2 at its York Avenue saleroom features 25 extraordinary lots, including an astonishing 71-piece Meissen tableware for 1,740 It was produced by Graf von Bühl, the chief director of porcelain works in the 1960s, and has a high reputation. Estimate $200,000. In fact, it was a steal – the pieces were made at the world-famous Saxon site for its Saxon earl, who worked in factories as well as during his time as Prime Minister under the Saxon king August the Great. Walked through many other places on German and Polish soil in the 18th century. . The company also defrauded collectors of a remarkable envelope (known in philately as a “cover”) bearing Britain’s first ever penny stamp, the famous “Penny Black”, dated May 1840. It was sent to an ironworks manager on the 2nd of September. Clearly, though, the headline star of this Friday’s show will be the sports world’s Lot 10, the line of Air Jordan shoes that Jordan wore in each of his six NBA championship games, which the Bulls won. , is expected to be worth an eye-watering $7 million to $10 million.
The first gavel will fall into the mansion’s York Avenue room shortly after 10 a.m. If you want some fine 18th century china, or a pair of second-hand high-top sneakers for one left foot and five right feet, be sure to show up or show up. .
In other words, it’s fair to say that these six pairs of shoes, known in hyperbolic sports parlance as the “Dynasty Series” (a reference to Jordan’s still-unbelievable NBA championship with the Bulls), sold within the estimated any location. $3 million wide area, promising for sellers. Restored: These six pairs of shoes are not “pairs”; rather, they are personal gaming memorabilia. Presumably, the 60-year-old basketball legend himself owns six additional pairs of matching shoes, unless he retires the pair himself.
Despite the strange ingredients in Batch 10, the provenance of this pair is impeccable and even a little cute:
After each championship, Jordan would give them as his only game token to then-Bulls publicist Tim Hallam. Hallam asked Jordan for his first pair before the 1991 NBA Championship Game, but only if the Bulls won. As far as we know, they did. Jordan – the gambler – is and was a rather superstitious man, especially when it came to his own behavior towards and surrounding Lady Luck, so before the Bulls’ 1992 championship game, the 1992 Bulls player The man who redefined the word “air” in basketball terms and redefined the sport before the 2016 Bulls championship game dutifully gave publicist Hallam another pair of shoes. Wait, every championship final he won with the Bulls.
It was from this anonymous and theoretically disillusioned second collector that Hallam sold them, and the shoes were mercilessly auctioned off by Sotheby’s on Friday morning. In other words, the shoes on sale this time do not come from Haarlem. From this perspective, therefore, Sotheby’s clearly chose wisely to subsume their incongruity by elevating and emphasizing the special nature of the shoes by selling them as exquisite and mainly European rarities. This is a special market move for a special set of shoes.
In other words, no matter how exorbitant the prices for “vintage” sneakers have become, and they are quite high, it is unusual to sell them alongside 18th-century china and rare Spanish colonial silver, regardless of whether those prices are consistent with the sneakers’ ultimate price. What Sotheby’s tells us in this extraordinary 25-piece “The One” sale is the items worn by Michael Jordan, specifically his namesake “Player” during his six famous NBA championship games. Time” mass-market publishing platform game with many extraordinary moments – belongs to such a company.
That still leaves one question: Will one left sneaker and five other pairs of right sneakers worn by a late-20th-century sports icon really fetch seven or even eight figures? Avid basketball memorabilia crowd? Another way to pose the question is to ask: Now, this week, how crazy do we think the basketball memorabilia crowd really is? That will be told at Friday’s 10am meeting on York Avenue. Whatever it is, the inclusion of shoes and their valuation is a contest for the unknown.
The irony of this auction is that the legend who wore these size 13 and 13.5 basketball boots was also an avid gambler.