1099
John Lennon's Baldwin Concert Grand Piano
Estimate:
$1,000,000 - $2,000,000
Passed
Live Auction
September 30th, 2023 Gallery Auction I Historic John Lennon Piano, Fine Art, Furniture, Rugs, Decorative Arts, & Musical Instruments
ARTIST
John Lennon
Category
Description
John Lennon's 1929 Baldwin Concert Grand Piano Model D, serial number #59596. Length, 8’11” Satin ebony case on traditional squared tapered legs with brass ferrules, on grand piano dolly, having brass pedals, Schwander action, additionally a brass plaque on the fallboard engraved "For Sam Love From Yoko and John 1979."
John Lennon & Yoko Ono purchased this 1929 piano from the Baldwin showroom in New York, NY in 1978. It belonged to John Lennon for one year before it was gifted in private, without newspaper coverage, to Samuel Green, a close and dear friend who was included in John Lennon’s Last Will & Testament dated 1979. In a letter from Sam Green, he states that John and Yoko gifted him their beloved concert grand piano “partly because of our long friendship and partly because I had helped them to acquire several important art pieces and this was a way to show their gratitude.” This piano was not only a grand gesture, but also a heart-felt gift. The brass plaque engraved on the fallboard says it all, "For Sam Love From Yoko and John 1979."
In 1980, Samuel Green had the piano moved to his home on Fire Island, NY. Lennon and Ono were frequent visitors to Fire Island where Green owned several cottages. Ono thought the creative atmosphere on the island would help inspire John’s song writing for their new album, later titled “Double Fantasy”. In a handwritten letter, Green wrote “John came regularly to my home until he died and played and probably composed on the piano. He often played the piano just to have fun.”
On December 8th, 1980 John Lennon was tragically murdered outside of his apartment building, The Dakota, on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. This was a tragedy for his family and intimate friends, as well as his fans, who gathered outside immediately afterwards, and days and years later, still mourning his death.
This piano was present in the private lives of John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Samuel Green, and Andy Warhol. It is familiarly known as the Lennon-Ono-Green-Warhol piano. The piano has one of the most interesting provenances on record because of its celebrity-on-celebrity value, spanning music, art, and influential social circles in a pivotal time in cultural history. In 1983 Sam Green loaned the piano to Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine office, The Factory. It stayed there until 1986 and was played during notable social events with celebrities. In 1983 Andy Warhol co-founded New York Academy of Art.
Due to Sam Green’s close relationship with Andy Warhol, he joined the Board of Directors at New York Academy of Art in 1986. In 1987, Green loaned the piano to New York Academy of Art to be used for special events and creative outlets. In 2000, New York Academy of Art sold the piano without Green's consent. This scandal was widely publicized as “The Lost Lennon Piano.” Sam Green filed a $1.6M lawsuit in the New York State Supreme Court, seeking the return of his extraordinarily valuable piano, claiming that the piano was a loan to the Academy and not a gift. In a letter to the Academy dated June 4, 1999, Green wrote "Actually, no one but John (Lennon) and I knew how valuable and unique this piano was. It could be compared to the Stradivarius Violin. It was the last of an advanced technology to be used in American pianos before the crash of 1929."
The lawsuit was dropped in 2001 after the court determined the piano was a gift. The Academy sold the piano without legal repercussions. Green’s legal pursuit of the piano was abandoned, but there was still a lingering mystery surrounding its whereabouts. The piano changed hands over the years. In 2003 it was acquired by the Mansoor E. Shaool family in Hagerstown, MD. In 2018 It became part of the Shaool family trust and was donated to Mercersburg Academy in Mercersburg, PA, with a deed of trust that the proceeds of its sale would create a scholarship fund for the school.
In 2022, Mercersburg Academy, with the help of Alex Cooper Auctioneers, hired Karen Lile of Piano Finders to authenticate and research the piano’s history and provenance. Karen Lile and business partner Kendall Ross Bean, traveled to Mercersburg Academy with Alex Cooper, where they performed a thorough inspection of the piano, and began the provenance research. Lile spent three months in the Spring of 2022 researching the provenance and genealogy of the “Lost Lennon Piano.” She uncovered many undisclosed details about this historical piano. On August 5, 2022, Karen Lile established a Fair Market Appraisal Value on the Lennon-Ono-Green-Warhol piano at $5,012,500. Piano Finders has completed over 3,400 piano appraisals. They are considered one of the premier experts and historians in their field.
Proceeds from this auction will create a scholarship fund at Mercersburg Academy in the Shaool name.
PRE-SALE REGISTRATION BY FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 29TH IS REQUIRED TO BID ON THIS LOT. TO REGISTER PLEASE CALL 410-828-4838 x110 or EMAIL DOUG HARDESTY at DOUG@ALEXCOOPER.COM
John Lennon & Yoko Ono purchased this 1929 piano from the Baldwin showroom in New York, NY in 1978. It belonged to John Lennon for one year before it was gifted in private, without newspaper coverage, to Samuel Green, a close and dear friend who was included in John Lennon’s Last Will & Testament dated 1979. In a letter from Sam Green, he states that John and Yoko gifted him their beloved concert grand piano “partly because of our long friendship and partly because I had helped them to acquire several important art pieces and this was a way to show their gratitude.” This piano was not only a grand gesture, but also a heart-felt gift. The brass plaque engraved on the fallboard says it all, "For Sam Love From Yoko and John 1979."
In 1980, Samuel Green had the piano moved to his home on Fire Island, NY. Lennon and Ono were frequent visitors to Fire Island where Green owned several cottages. Ono thought the creative atmosphere on the island would help inspire John’s song writing for their new album, later titled “Double Fantasy”. In a handwritten letter, Green wrote “John came regularly to my home until he died and played and probably composed on the piano. He often played the piano just to have fun.”
On December 8th, 1980 John Lennon was tragically murdered outside of his apartment building, The Dakota, on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. This was a tragedy for his family and intimate friends, as well as his fans, who gathered outside immediately afterwards, and days and years later, still mourning his death.
This piano was present in the private lives of John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Samuel Green, and Andy Warhol. It is familiarly known as the Lennon-Ono-Green-Warhol piano. The piano has one of the most interesting provenances on record because of its celebrity-on-celebrity value, spanning music, art, and influential social circles in a pivotal time in cultural history. In 1983 Sam Green loaned the piano to Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine office, The Factory. It stayed there until 1986 and was played during notable social events with celebrities. In 1983 Andy Warhol co-founded New York Academy of Art.
Due to Sam Green’s close relationship with Andy Warhol, he joined the Board of Directors at New York Academy of Art in 1986. In 1987, Green loaned the piano to New York Academy of Art to be used for special events and creative outlets. In 2000, New York Academy of Art sold the piano without Green's consent. This scandal was widely publicized as “The Lost Lennon Piano.” Sam Green filed a $1.6M lawsuit in the New York State Supreme Court, seeking the return of his extraordinarily valuable piano, claiming that the piano was a loan to the Academy and not a gift. In a letter to the Academy dated June 4, 1999, Green wrote "Actually, no one but John (Lennon) and I knew how valuable and unique this piano was. It could be compared to the Stradivarius Violin. It was the last of an advanced technology to be used in American pianos before the crash of 1929."
The lawsuit was dropped in 2001 after the court determined the piano was a gift. The Academy sold the piano without legal repercussions. Green’s legal pursuit of the piano was abandoned, but there was still a lingering mystery surrounding its whereabouts. The piano changed hands over the years. In 2003 it was acquired by the Mansoor E. Shaool family in Hagerstown, MD. In 2018 It became part of the Shaool family trust and was donated to Mercersburg Academy in Mercersburg, PA, with a deed of trust that the proceeds of its sale would create a scholarship fund for the school.
In 2022, Mercersburg Academy, with the help of Alex Cooper Auctioneers, hired Karen Lile of Piano Finders to authenticate and research the piano’s history and provenance. Karen Lile and business partner Kendall Ross Bean, traveled to Mercersburg Academy with Alex Cooper, where they performed a thorough inspection of the piano, and began the provenance research. Lile spent three months in the Spring of 2022 researching the provenance and genealogy of the “Lost Lennon Piano.” She uncovered many undisclosed details about this historical piano. On August 5, 2022, Karen Lile established a Fair Market Appraisal Value on the Lennon-Ono-Green-Warhol piano at $5,012,500. Piano Finders has completed over 3,400 piano appraisals. They are considered one of the premier experts and historians in their field.
Proceeds from this auction will create a scholarship fund at Mercersburg Academy in the Shaool name.
PRE-SALE REGISTRATION BY FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 29TH IS REQUIRED TO BID ON THIS LOT. TO REGISTER PLEASE CALL 410-828-4838 x110 or EMAIL DOUG HARDESTY at DOUG@ALEXCOOPER.COM
Condition
Piano was professionally tuned August 2023 by Peabody Institute. Piano case with original 1929 ebony gloss finish. Piano case shows signs of wear, finish losses, scratches, and wear from use. A mark is melted into the finish on the lid and visible when the lid is folded back. John Lennon smoked, and the mark could be a burn from a cigarette ashtray or hot ashes dropping on the finish. The mark could also be from a Fresnel oil lamp. According to Kendall Ross Bean’s 5-page inspection report preformed on April 22nd, 2022, Bean believes that the piano was restrung, re-hammered and a had a new pinblock, dampers, replaced keytops, and had the soundboard repaired before the piano was sold to John Lennon in 1978.
To obtain a copy of the 5-page inspection report by Kendall Ross Bean of Piano Finders, please contact Alex@alexcooper.com
To obtain a copy of the 5-page inspection report by Kendall Ross Bean of Piano Finders, please contact Alex@alexcooper.com
Provenance
The Lennon-Ono-Green-Warhol piano was donated by the Shaool family, Hagerstown, MD and proceeds from this auction will create a scholarship fund at Mercersburg Academy in the family's name.
Full provenance report by Karen Lile of Piano Finders is available at www.alexcooper.com
Full provenance report by Karen Lile of Piano Finders is available at www.alexcooper.com