
A photo negative of actress Jean Harlow lounging on a white bearskin rug may sell for as much as $30,000 at an auction of glamorous Hollywood images this week.
The negative and a custom print of the 1934 photograph by George Hurrell are among thousands of items in the auction, which will be held March 26 and 27 at Profiles in History in Calabasas, California.
The sale is expected to generate $3 million to $5 million, according to the auction house’s president, Joe Maddalena. The photographs were purchased over several decades by collector Michael H. Epstein.
The collection has “every iconic image of ‘30s and ‘40s glamour photography by every major photographer,” Maddalena said. “It’s all beautiful photography. His eye is uncanny.”
Epstein, whose mother was a model who posed for Richard Avedon, began collecting art and photography when he was a teenager. Over the decades, his collection grew large enough to fill three Hollywood warehouses with photographs of Gary Cooper, Bette Davis, Clark Gable, Joan Crawford, Veronica Lake, Johnny Weissmuller, Greta Garbo and other stars from Hollywood’s golden age.
“I kept buying and buying and buying, and I didn’t really know what I had until Joe Maddalena and I went to the warehouses,” Epstein, 55, said in an interview. “They were so stuffed with photos and memorabilia and archives that I didn’t have room to walk around.”
Charity Donation
Epstein said he and his partner Scott E. Schwimer will donate a “substantial portion” of the sales proceeds to to the Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center. Epstein served on the center’s board for seven years. Sales also will benefit the Trevor Project, a nonprofit organization promoting acceptance of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youths.
The negative of the Harlow photograph is expected to sell for $20,000 to $30,000, according to Profiles in History. The photo was taken at Harlow’s home on Oct. 18, 1934, a month after the death of her husband, producer Paul Bern. It ran in the January 1935 issue of Vanity Fair, and was Hurrell’s first photograph for the magazine.
“The Harlow bear rug portrait was immediately regarded as the perfect expression of Hurrell’s technical and stylistic achievements and is his most important Hollywood portrait,” the auction catalog says.
Sources : dtaub@bloomberg.net.

