Sotheby’s to Offer
THE SHIRLEY TEMPLE BLUE DIAMOND
AS A CHILD STAR
AS ADULT DO-GOODER
A 9.54-carat Fancy Deep Blue diamond ring bought by
the legendary movie star’s father in 1940, around her 12th birthday
& the premier of her film The Blue Bird
Worn by ‘America’s Little Darling’ throughout her
life,
NOW ESTIMATED TO SELL FOR $25–35 MILLION
Leading Sotheby’s 19 April Auction of Magnificent
Jewels in New York
Sotheby’s 19 April 2016 auction of Magnificent
Jewels in New York will be led by a 9.54-carat Fancy Deep Blue diamond ring
owned by Shirley Temple throughout her long life – from a child star lifting
America’s spirits out of the Great Depression, to her decades of service as an
American diplomat (then Shirley Temple Black).
Shirley Temple’s father purchased the diamond ring in
early 1940, around the time of her 12th birthday as well as the
premier of her film The Blue Bird. That film may have served as inspiration
for purchasing a blue stone specifically, as colored diamonds were not as
coveted at the time as they are in today’s market*.
The traditional cushion-cut
stone remained in Shirley Temple’s collection until her passing in 2014, and it
is offered this spring in its original Art Deco-inspired setting.
Temple’s father paid $7,210 for the ring in 1940. The
9.54-carat Fancy Deep Blue, Potentially Internally Flawless, VVS2
clarity diamond ring now comes to auction at Sotheby’s this April with
an estimate of $25–35 million**.
Gary Schuler, Head of Sotheby’s Jewelry Department in
New York, said: “It’s
remarkable to have one stone illustrate the dramatic shift in attitude towards
colored diamonds over the course of the last century. Today we recognize these
stones as the definition of rarity, and they are eagerly sought-after in our
current market for that very reason.
"The Shirley Temple Blue in particular has
a traditional cushion cut that gives it a certain softness, charm and
personality, and its saturated, Fancy Deep Blue color imbues it with a
mesmerizing oceanic quality.”
Frank Everett, Sales Director of Sotheby’s Jewelry
Department in New York, commented: “It’s a privileged occasion when we are entrusted with a stone of such
exceptional quality and rarity. It’s rarer still that a stone would tell as
compelling a story as The Shirley Temple Blue.
"Shirley Temple helped to lift
America’s spirits out of the Great Depression, and served her country in many
capacities throughout the remainder of her life. Her ring and its original Art
Deco setting recall a time when she was nothing short of the biggest movie star
in the world.”
SHIRLEY TEMPLE – FROM AMERICA’S LITTLE DARLING TO
AMERICAN DIPLOMAT
Born on April 23, 1928, Shirley Temple quickly rose to
an unprecedented level of stardom and became a lasting American icon. After Fox
Films songwriter Jay Gorney caught a glimpse of Temple dancing in a theater
lobby, he was instantly hooked.
Temple was signed to Fox Films and was offered
a role in Stand Up and Cheer!, which premiered in 1934. It was
during this time at the height of the Great Depression that Temple’s star
exploded – with her innocence, cheerful can-do attitude and wholesome family
appeal, Temple filled millions of fans with feelings of hope and comfort that
seemed beyond grasp in reality.
The first of her many films, Bright Eyes, featured
the timeless jingle Good Ship Lollipop – a smash hit that sold over
500,000 copies of sheet music upon its release. By 1940 Shirley Temple’s face
and name were considered a national treasure.
She was the subject of a Salvador
Dalí painting, animated alongside Donald Duck, immortalized in front of
Grauman’s Chinese Theater and appeared in ads for countless brands and
products.
In 1969, Temple (then Shirley Temple Black) was in a
different form of spotlight when President Nixon appointed her U.S. Delegate to
the 24th United Nations General Assembly.
Later presidents followed
suit: President Ford appointed her United States Ambassador to Ghana in 1974,
and later named her the first woman Chief of Protocol of the United States,
while President Bush Sr. named her United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia,
where she served from 1989 to 1992 – during which time she witnessed the Velvet
Revolution.
As an adult, Shirley Temple Black made sure to remind
the women who grew up alongside her of the power of their voices. A 1972 breast
cancer diagnosis led the star to have a mastectomy, and just a few days after
surgery she held a news conference from her hospital bed, reminding women that
only they held the power to make their own medical decisions.
More than 50,000
letters and cards flooded her hospital room, and to this day she is seen as one
of the first women who spread the word of early detection and prevention of
breast cancer.
*BLUE DIAMONDS AT SOTHEBY’S
In November 2015, Sotheby’s set a new world auction
record for any diamond or any gemstone – as well as a record price-per-carat
for any diamond or gemstone – when a 12.03-carat Fancy Vivid Blue diamond sold
for $48,468,158 ($4,028,941 per carat) in Geneva.
Previously called the Blue
Moon diamond, the magnificent stone was purchased by a private collector
from Hong Kong who renamed it The Blue Moon of Josephine.
The previous world auction record for any blue diamond
was established by Sotheby’s in November 2014, with the sale of the Zoe
Diamond: a Fancy Vivid Blue Diamond weighing 9.75 carats that was offered
from the collection of Mrs. Paul Mellon.
Its final price of $32,645,000
($3,348,205 per carat) at the time also marked a new a world auction record
per-carat for any diamond.
SOTHEBY’S CURRENTLY HOLDS WORLD AUCTION RECORDS FOR
ANY BLUE, PINK, YELLOW, GREEN OR COLOURLESS DIAMOND:
World Auction Record & Record Price-per-carat for
any Diamond or Gemstone
The Blue Moon of Josephine
12.03-carat Cushion-Shaped Fancy Internally Flawless
Vivid Blue Diamond
Sotheby’s Geneva, November 2015
Sold for US$48,468,158 (US$4,028,941 per carat)
World Auction Record for any Pink Diamond
The Graff Pink
24.78-carat Emerald-cut Fancy Intense Pink Diamond
Sotheby’s Geneva, November 2010
Sold for US$46,158,674 (US$1,862,739 per carat)
World Auction Record for any Colourless Diamond
118.28-carat Oval-shaped D colour Flawless Type IIa
Diamond
Sotheby’s Hong Kong, October 2013
Sold for US$30,600,000 (US$258,708 per carat)
World Auction Record for any Yellow Diamond
The Graff Vivid Yellow
Fancy Vivid Yellow diamond weighing 100.09 carats, VS2
Clarity
Sotheby’s Geneva, May 2014
Sold for US$16,347,847 (US$163,331 per carat)
World Auction Record Price-per-carat for any Green
Diamond
Cushion Modified Brilliant-Cut Vivid Green Diamond
weighing 2.52 Carats
Sotheby’s Geneva, November 2009
Sold for US$3,078,914 (US$1,221,791 per carat)
Sotheby’s has been uniting
collectors with world-class works of art since 1744. Sotheby’s became the first
international auction house when it expanded from London to New York (1955),
the first to conduct sales in Hong Kong (1973), India (1992) and France (2001), and the first international fine
art auction house in China (2012).
Today, Sotheby’s presents auctions in 10
different salesrooms, including New York, London, Hong Kong and Paris, and
Sotheby’s BidNow program allows visitors to view all auctions live online and
place bids from anywhere in the world.
Sotheby’s offers collectors the
resources of Sotheby’s Financial Services, the world’s only full-service art
financing company, as well as private sale opportunities in more than 70 categories,
including S|2, the gallery arm of Sotheby's Contemporary Art department, and
two retail businesses, Sotheby’s Diamonds and Sotheby’s Wine.
Sotheby’s has a global
network
of 90 offices in 40 countries and is the oldest company listed on the New York
Stock Exchange (BID).
**Estimates
do not include buyer’s premium and prices achieved include the hammer price
plus buyer’s premium.
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