Dr Seuss – SOLD OUT COLLECTIONS
Imagine owning an artwork by Dr Seuss that is no longer or rarely available for public viewing internationally!
Linton & Kay Galleries presents an exclusive opportunity to invest in Dr Seuss SOLD OUT artworks that are no longer available to order, their status being either ‘archived' or ‘rare’.
Linton & Kay Galleries is your Authorised Gallery in Western Australia.
An artwork by Dr Seuss is a keepsake guaranteed to bring joy for generations to come. Most of us know and love the artworks in his classic children’s books, from The Cat in the Hat and countless other all-time favourites. Yet, the Secret Art often shows a side of the artist that many have never seen and that that redefines Dr Seuss as an iconographic American artist.
Theodor Seuss Geisel’s artistic vision emerged as the golden thread that linked every facet of his varied career, and his artwork became the platform from which he delivered forty-four children’s books, more than 400 World War II political cartoons, hundreds of advertisements, and countless editorials filled with wonderfully inventive animals, characters and humour.
This is a tremendous opportunity to build on your existing collection of Dr Seuss art.
Register your interest for more information on archived or rare SOLD OUT collections and we will inform you of status changes and new opportunities
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“If you never did, you should. These things are fun, and fun is good!”
- Dr. Seuss
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED AUDREY GEISEL 50TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION - SET OF 4 SERIGRAPHS (EDITION A12/50)
50th Anniversary Green Eggs and Ham Audrey Geisel Edition A12/50
Hand pulled serigraph on Coventry Rag paper
Image and Paper Size: 138 x 66.5 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1960 book, Green Eggs and Ham.
Green Eggs and Ham was born out of a $50 wager between Dr. Seuss and his publisher, Bennett Cerf, who bet he couldn’t write an articulate, entertaining book using only fifty different words. The result was a 62-page volume composed of 49 monosyllabic words and a fiftieth three-syllable word “anywhere.” When Cerf heard Ted’s first reading of the book, he seemed dazed, shaking his head over the clear triumph of Green Eggs and Ham, which had begun as their private joke. Although he conceded the fiftydollar bet, Ted cheerily “complained” throughout his life that Cerf never paid up. A small price for what ultimately became a national treasure.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED AUDREY GEISEL 50TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION - SET OF 4 SERIGRAPHS (EDITION A12/50)
50th Anniversary King of the Pond
Audrey Geisel Edition
A12/50
Hand pulled serigraph on Coventry Rag paper
Image and Paper Size: 139 x 66 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1958 book, Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories.
The 1958 book, Yertle the Turtle, has a little-known and somewhat surprising origin. In a 1987 interview Ted said: “Yertle was Hitler or Mussolini. Originally, Yertle had a moustache, but I took it off.” During the run-up to WWII, FDR was battling the isolationist “America First” supporters who were seeking to keep us out of the war. Ted believed American isolationism was not an option and that Hitler needed to be stopped. He fought these battles with hundreds of WWII editorial cartoons during 1941 and ’42, and ultimately with his service in the Army as a captain in Frank Capra’s celebrated wartime documentary filmmaking unit.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED AUDREY GEISEL 50TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION - SET OF 4 SERIGRAPHS (EDITION A12/50)
50th anniversary
The Grinch at Mount Crumpit Audrey Geisel Edition A12/50
Hand pulled serigraph on Coventry Rag paper
Image and Paper Size: 138 x 65 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1957 book, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
Dr. Seuss felt people largely mistook
The Grinch for the ultimate villain saying, “Can't they understand that the Grinch in my story is the Hero of Christmas? Sure, he starts out as a villain, but it’s not how you start out that counts. It’s what you are at the finish.” This sentiment is what makes Dr. Seuss’s unorthodox creature so memorable—in the end he became his best self, he became the Hero of Christmas, and The Grinch himself carved the “roast beast.”
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED AUDREY GEISEL 50TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION - SET OF 4 SERIGRAPHS (EDITION A12/50)
50th Anniversary Ted's Cat Audrey Geisel Edition A12/50
Hand pulled serigraph on Coventry Rag paper
Authorized Estate Edition
Image and Paper Size: 140 x 66.5 cm
Adapted posthumously from the Cat in the Hat illustration created for a special 1970 project for Sears, Roebuck & Co.
In 2007, the 50th birthday of The Cat in the Hat was commemorated with the release of Ted’s Cat, a very personal, practically life-size, Dr. Seuss drawing, which occupied a spot in Ted’s studio for untold years. We consider it no less than Ted’s alter ego keeping an eye on the master while he creates.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED 50TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTIONINDIVIDUAL ARTWORKS (EDITION OF 295)
The Grinch at Mount Crumpit 67/295
Hand pulled serigraph on Coventry Rag paper
Image and Paper Size: 138 x 65 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1957 book, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
Dr. Seuss felt people largely mistook
The Grinch for the ultimate villain saying, “Can't they understand that the Grinch in my story is the Hero of Christmas? Sure, he starts out as a villain, but it’s not how you start out that counts. It’s what you are at the finish.” This sentiment is what makes Dr. Seuss’s unorthodox creature so memorable—in the end he became his best self, he became the Hero of Christmas, and The Grinch himself carved the “roast beast.”
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED 50TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTIONINDIVIDUAL ARTWORKS (EDITION OF 295)
Green Eggs and Ham
50th Anniversary
137/295
Hand pulled serigraph on Coventry Rag paper
Image and Paper Size: 138 x 66.5 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1960 book, Green Eggs and Ham.
Green Eggs and Ham was born out of a $50 wager between Dr. Seuss and his publisher, Bennett Cerf, who bet he couldn’t write an articulate, entertaining book using only fifty different words. The result was a 62page volume composed of 49 monosyllabic words and a fiftieth three-syllable word “anywhere.” When Cerf heard Ted’s first reading of the book, he seemed dazed, shaking his head over the clear triumph of Green Eggs and Ham, which had begun as their private joke. Although he conceded the fifty-dollar bet, Ted cheerily “complained” throughout his life that Cerf never paid up. A small price for what ultimately became a national treasure.
The Rather Odd Myopic Woman riding piggy-back on Helen’s many cats
Edition 780/850
STATUS: ARCHIVED
Serigraph on Coventry Rag paper in plain champagne-coloured frame
Image Size: 86 x 41.5 cm
Adapted posthumously from the original pencil and watercolour on illustration board.
Dr. Seuss was keenly aware of the many cultural and artistic movements which took shape throughout his career. In fact, his hometown of Springfield, Massachusetts hosted one of this country’s first surrealist exhibitions, which no doubt had a lifelong impact on Seuss. Myopic Woman is unmistakably Seuss, but at the same time is a nod and a wink to cubists Picasso and Braque, as well as surrealists Miro, Magritte, and Dali.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED SECRET ART COLLECTION
Self-Portrait as a Young Man Shaving
Edition 316/850
STATUS: ARCHIVED
Serigraph on Archival canvas in black frame with bronze trim
Image Size: 41 x 31 cm
Adapted posthumously from the 1964 original ink and watercolor on board.
This is Dr. Seuss’s 1964 painting, Self-Portrait as a Young Man Shaving. Ted, who lived in a New York City apartment in the 1930s, portrays himself as a modern man who uses an electric shaver. Apparently, he also kept a “shaving file” filled with ideas and concepts that came to him while shaving. Photographs verify that his stance here at the sink mirrors his stance at the easel.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED SECRET ART COLLECTION
Oh, I'd love to go to the party but I'm absolutely dead
Edition CP24/55
STATUS: ARCHIVED
Serigraph on Arches black paper framed in plain champagne-coloured frame
Image Size: 33 x 40 cm
55 Collaborators’ Proofs
Adapted posthumously from the original pencil, ink, and watercolour on paper.
As one of the few men in La Jolla who worked from home, Dr. Seuss called himself a “bird watcher on the social scene,” always looking to create gentle spoofs of his chic female friends. The result was Ted’s series La Jolla Birdwomen, a spicy collection of eleven known paintings with lyrical titles, works that could have sprung only from the mind of a genial witness—for example, My Petunia can Lick Your Geranium, Martini Bird, and Gosh! Do I Look as Old as All That!
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED ILLUSTRATION ART COLLECTION
A Plethora of Fish
Edition 186/850
STATUS: ARCHIVED
Mixed-Media Pigment Print on Archival Canvas
Image Size: 60 x 90 cm with additional canvas border
The original painting of Plethora of Fish was created for McElligott’s Pool. One of the few books to include fully-developed watercolour paintings for each and every page. McElligot’s Pool beautifully delivers Seuss’s message to “use your imagination.”
SOLD OUT AND RARE ILLUSTRATION ART COLLECTION
Yawning Cat
Edition 592/850
STATUS: RARE
Mixed-Media Pigment Print on Archival Somerset Paper
Image and Paper Size: 43 x 134 cm
The Yawning Cat debuted in 1967, stretching across two pages of Dr. Seuss’s Cat in the Hat Songbook.
In this ambitious project, the Cat and an additional host of characters illustrate a collection of songs written by Ted Geisel (aka Dr. Seuss) that were eventually recorded into an album. The artwork generated for this project, from Ted’s early concept drawings to his final pen and inks, are some of the most engaging of his entire catalogue.
SOLD OUT AND RARE ILLUSTRATION ART COLLECTION
Black Fish Blue Fish Old Fish New Fish
Edition 1402/2500
STATUS: RARE
Hand pulled Lithograph on Somerset Paper
Image Size: 20 x 30 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1960 book, One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish. Dr. Seuss didn’t dedicate One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish to any particular person, as was his custom. Rather he wrote these words on the flyleaf:
“From there to here, from here to there, funny things are everywhere.”
SOLD OUT AND RARE ILLUSTRATION ART COLLECTION
YERTLE THE TURTLE
Edition 526/2500
STATUS: RARE
Hand pulled Lithograph on Somerset Paper
Image Size: 22 X 32 cm
Adapted posthumously from the illustration for the 1960 book, One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish
Dr. Seuss didn’t dedicate One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish to any particular person, as was his custom. Rather he wrote these words on the flyleaf:
“From there to here, from here to there, funny things are everywhere.”
SOLD OUT AND RARE BRONZE TRIBUTE COLLECTION
The Cat in the Hat - Maquette
Edition 4/195
Bronze Maquette Sculpture
Authorized Estate Edition
Sculpture Dimensions: 15”h x 10”w x 12”d
Base Dimensions: 1.25”h x 8.5”w x 13”d
Inspired by Dr. Seuss’s character and created by artist Leo Rijn.
The first in this much anticipated series, The Cat in the Hat debuted in 2006 on live television in New York City to a standing ovation. The Cat in the Hat is unquestionably the most famous and iconic character from Dr. Seuss’s pantheon of creatures.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED TAXIDERMY COLLECTION
MULBERRY STREET UNICORN
Edition 645/950
Hand-Painted Cast Resin Sculpture
Dimensions: 35 x 18 x 22 cm
Adapted posthumously from the original 1930s plaster, horn, and oil on wood mount sculpture.
In 1938 Paul Jerman, who had graduated from Dartmouth with Ted, wrote a brief biography of him for the alumni newspaper. Jerman said in part, “Another iron in the fire is what the doctor himself calls The Seuss System of Unorthodox Taxidermy Not satisfied with drawing strange beasties, Ted modelled the heads of some of his animals and mounted them. Put on display in bookshops around New York to promote And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, many people wanted to buy the weird animal heads.”
Shortly after Ted created this unique collection of artworks, Look Magazine dubbed Dr. Seuss “The World’s Most Eminent Authority on Unheard-Of Animals.” To this day, Ted’s Collection of Unorthodox Taxidermy remains as some of the finest examples of his inventive and multidimensional creativity.
SOLD OUT AND ARCHIVED TAXIDERMY COLLECTION
SEMI NORMAL GREEN LIDDED FAWN
Edition 788/850
Hand-Painted Cast Resin Sculpture
Dimensions: 58 X 76 X 45 cm
Adapted posthumously from the original 1930s plaster, horn, and oil on wood mount sculpture.
In 1938 Paul Jerman, who had graduated from Dartmouth with Ted, wrote a brief biography of him for the alumni newspaper. Jerman said in part, “Another iron in the fire is what the doctor himself calls The Seuss System of Unorthodox Taxidermy Not satisfied with drawing strange beasties, Ted modelled the heads of some of his animals and mounted them. Put on display in bookshops around New York to promote And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, many people wanted to buy the weird animal heads.”
Shortly after Ted created this unique collection of artworks, Look Magazine dubbed Dr. Seuss “The World’s Most Eminent Authority on Unheard-Of Animals.” To this day, Ted’s Collection of Unorthodox Taxidermy remains as some of the finest examples of his inventive and multidimensional creativity.
2023 ILLUSTRATION ART NEW RELEASES
Hop On Pop Sixtieth Anniversary
Illustration Art
Pigment print on acid-free paper
(right)
Look At Me! Look At Me Now!
Illustration Art
Fine art pigment print on acidfree paper
(below)
An Intolerable Situation for a Cat
Secret Art
Mixed media pigment print on canvas
It’s Our First… Don’t You Think It Looks Like George?
Secret Art
Mixed media pigment print on archival canvas