SOLD. Peter Beard 60th Bday Invitation Card 1998, New York
Authentic Peter Beard 60th Birthday Part Invitation Card, 1998, New York. Measures 8 x 5 inches when folded, and 16 x 5 inches opened. Excellent Condition. Suitcable for Framing. Much research shows thse are not listed for sale online.
Info in interior of card says” The Pleasure of Your Company is requested as We Celebrate Peter Beard’s 60th Birthday. Date: January 22, 1998. Time: 7pm to Midnight-is (probaly later…). Place: The Time is Always Now, 476 Broome Street, New York City (between Greene and Wooster). Attire: Unimportant. Really Good Grazing, Libations & Party Favours. NO GIFTS). In the background, is an image of Beard’s birth certifictate.
What is interesting about this printed invitation card, which was designed & paid for by the gallery, was that they made a rather big error on the title of the image on the cover. It says: “Cover Photo: Peter Beard Self-Portrait”
(which is you look closely, it is actually the image of a man who had been attacked & killed by a crocodile. I researched the image (see above), and the same image has the following credit: “Homage to the Peace Corps. … and the one eaten by a 12′ croc. From ‘Eyelids of Morning / the Mingled Destinies of Crocodyles and Men’.
Since another gallery invitation had been printed previously, with the infamous self portrait of Beard, lying half inside a dead crocodile, writing in his journal, I can see how the error happened.
Being present at this fantastic event, I definitely recall hearing several patrons saying:
“Hold on to your invitation; it’ll be worth alot one day”.
A rather crude but to be expected comment, with the type of crowd that was present, even though Beard’s friends were all insanely cool, the invitation was sent out also to buyers & collectors as well.
A tad surreal this was almost 25 years ago, and that I will turn 60, like Beard, in a few months.
SOLD.
Quote:
“In 1993, Beard struck up an informal partnership with Peter Tunney, an investor whose Soho gallery, the Time Is Always Now, became the site of a nonstop party hosted almost nightly by Tunney and Beard (and almost never attended by Nejma). “It was fashion and art, creativity, models, socialites, and drugs,” says Jeffrey Jah, the nightclub investor, who attended several of the events.
“People were crazy.” Over the years, Tunney became Beard’s de facto financial manager. “If Peter needed money, I gave him some money,” Tunney tells me. “We literally spent every day together.” No one really kept track of the work Beard created during his nine years with Tunney. “He didn’t want to do editions or stuff like that,” Tunney says. “He wanted each piece to be a living, breathing work of art.”
– New York Magazine, February 2013
On a fun side note, if you’d like to see Beard running naked in the snow, in this hidden gem of a film I recently discovered, have a peek here:
HALLELUJAH THE HILLS a film by ADOLFAS MEKAS with Peter Beard, Martin Greenbaum, Jerome Hill & Taylor Mead. 1963, USA, 82 min. A joyous, visually stunning classic of the American New Wave.
Peter Beard, Wildlife Photographer on the Wild Side, Dies at 82
Called “the last of the adventurers,” Mr. Beard photographed African fauna at great personal risk, and well into old age could party till dawn. He had been missing for 19 days.
Peter Beard in 1982. He was known for his photographs of African wildlife and for his exploits as a man about town. Credit: Gerard Malanga
Peter Beard, a New York photographer, artist and naturalist to whom the word “wild” was roundly applied, both for his death-defying photographs of African wildlife and for his own much-publicized days — decades, really — as an amorous, bibulous, pharmaceutically inclined man about town, was found dead in the woods on Sunday, almost three weeks after he disappeared from his home in Montauk on the East End of Long Island. He was 82.
He had dementia and had experienced at least one stroke. He was last seen on March 31, and the authorities had conducted an extensive search for him.
“We are all heartbroken by the confirmation of our beloved Peter’s death,” the family said in a statement, adding, “He died where he lived: in nature.”
Mr. Beard’s best-known work was the book “The End of the Game,” first published in 1965. Comprising his text and photographs, it documented not only the vanishing romance of Africa — a place long prized by Western colonialists for its open savannas and abundant big game — but also the tragedy of the continent’s imperiled wildlife, in particular the elephant.
Peter Beard, “The End of the Game”
Peter Beard Studio
In later years, Mr. Beard became famous for embellishing his photographic prints with ink and blood — either human (his own) or animal (from a butcher) — yielding complex, cryptic, multilayered surfaces.
He was also known for the idiosyncratic, genre-bending diaries that he had kept since he was a boy — profuse assemblages of words, images and found objects like stones, feathers, train tickets and toenail clippings — and for the large, even more profuse collages to which the diaries later gave wing.
But as renowned as he was for his work (he received solo exhibitions at the International Center of Photography in Manhattan, the Centre National de la Photographie in Paris and elsewhere), Mr. Beard remained at least as well known for his swashbuckling, highly public private life.
Even by the dashing standards of wildlife photography, his résumé was the stuff of high drama, full of daring, danger, romance and tall tales, many of them actually true. Had Mr. Beard not already existed, he might well have been the result of a collaborative brain wave by Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Paul Bowles.
He was matinee-idol handsome and, as an heir to a fortune, wealthy long before his photographs began selling for hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece.
Besides documenting Africa’s vanishing fauna, he photographed some of the world’s most beautiful women in fashion shoots for Vogue, Elle and other magazines. He had well-documented romances with many of them, including Candice Bergen and Lee Radziwill, the sister of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.
“The last thing left in nature is the beauty of women, so I’m very happy photographing it,” Mr. Beard told the British newspaper The Observer in 1997.
He discovered one supermodel, Iman, and spun a fabulous legend about her origins. He was married for a time to another, Cheryl Tiegs.