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Auction archive: Lot number 72

AN EXCEPTIONALLY RARE DODO BONE, MAURITIUS, BEFORE 1690

Estimate
£800 - £1,200
ca. US$962 - US$1,443
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 72

AN EXCEPTIONALLY RARE DODO BONE, MAURITIUS, BEFORE 1690

Estimate
£800 - £1,200
ca. US$962 - US$1,443
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

AN EXCEPTIONALLY RARE DODO BONE, MAURITIUS, BEFORE 1690
a vertebra, Raphus cucullatus, in cardboard display box, together with a certificate of authenticity recently prepared by Errol Fuller, with a photograph of the bone on the reverse,
the bone 3.4cm in length
Dodo bones very rarely come on to the open market, and the privileged private collectors who own them are very few. Viktor Wynd sold a dodo bone last year at Chiswick Auctions, which reached £5000 and he wrote at the time:
"My life as a collector has taken me to strange and faraway places and I have sometimes been blessed with luck, the sort of luck that perseverance sometimes brings. In the 2000's I visited a grand house in Suffolk to view a spectacular collection, and in a nineteenth century collector's cabinet I came across a small group of dodo bones – to my knowledge none had come on the open market since 1934 and as far as I have been able to establish only a tiny handful of private collectors – perhaps less than ten worldwide, own one. I bought all five and they are truly one of the greatest treasures I have ever or will ever own. One I sold to a client, one I swapped for something spectacular, one I sold with Christies and it is a great personal wrench to sell this one – but needs must, the last will remain in the museum’s collection forever."
The other Dodo bone that Wynd refers to, that was bought from the same private collection, was sold at Christie's, London, 24 April, 2013, lot 47, sold £8125. At the time Christie's stated:
"This is believed to be the first dodo bone to come to auction since 1934. This exciting discovery is one of the few pieces of dodo material in private hands, and it is a privilege, and humbling experience, to have been entrusted with the bone. It is a reminder of the effect humans have on the natural world, and presents a rare opportunity to engage with this now lost and most enigmatic bird.”
Christie's sold a full Dodo skeleton from another collection for £491,250, 24 May 2019, lot 155.
Errol Fuller is the author of the following:
Extinct Birds, Oxford University Press, 2000
The Great Auk, Abrams, New York, 1999,
Dodo, Harper Collins, 2002,
The Passenger Pigeon, Princeton University Press, 2014,
Lost Animals, Princeton University Press, 2013.

Auction archive: Lot number 72
Auction:
Datum:
13 Jul 2022
Auction house:
Curated Auctions
744 Sidcup Road
London, SE9 3NS
United Kingdom
info@curatedauctions.co.uk
+44 (0)207 101 3907
Beschreibung:

AN EXCEPTIONALLY RARE DODO BONE, MAURITIUS, BEFORE 1690
a vertebra, Raphus cucullatus, in cardboard display box, together with a certificate of authenticity recently prepared by Errol Fuller, with a photograph of the bone on the reverse,
the bone 3.4cm in length
Dodo bones very rarely come on to the open market, and the privileged private collectors who own them are very few. Viktor Wynd sold a dodo bone last year at Chiswick Auctions, which reached £5000 and he wrote at the time:
"My life as a collector has taken me to strange and faraway places and I have sometimes been blessed with luck, the sort of luck that perseverance sometimes brings. In the 2000's I visited a grand house in Suffolk to view a spectacular collection, and in a nineteenth century collector's cabinet I came across a small group of dodo bones – to my knowledge none had come on the open market since 1934 and as far as I have been able to establish only a tiny handful of private collectors – perhaps less than ten worldwide, own one. I bought all five and they are truly one of the greatest treasures I have ever or will ever own. One I sold to a client, one I swapped for something spectacular, one I sold with Christies and it is a great personal wrench to sell this one – but needs must, the last will remain in the museum’s collection forever."
The other Dodo bone that Wynd refers to, that was bought from the same private collection, was sold at Christie's, London, 24 April, 2013, lot 47, sold £8125. At the time Christie's stated:
"This is believed to be the first dodo bone to come to auction since 1934. This exciting discovery is one of the few pieces of dodo material in private hands, and it is a privilege, and humbling experience, to have been entrusted with the bone. It is a reminder of the effect humans have on the natural world, and presents a rare opportunity to engage with this now lost and most enigmatic bird.”
Christie's sold a full Dodo skeleton from another collection for £491,250, 24 May 2019, lot 155.
Errol Fuller is the author of the following:
Extinct Birds, Oxford University Press, 2000
The Great Auk, Abrams, New York, 1999,
Dodo, Harper Collins, 2002,
The Passenger Pigeon, Princeton University Press, 2014,
Lost Animals, Princeton University Press, 2013.

Auction archive: Lot number 72
Auction:
Datum:
13 Jul 2022
Auction house:
Curated Auctions
744 Sidcup Road
London, SE9 3NS
United Kingdom
info@curatedauctions.co.uk
+44 (0)207 101 3907
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