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Reproductions and knock-offs of this piece have been around for some years, but the one shown here is an original. Standing 8" tall this bisque casting of Dracula was done in the 1940s. Legend has it that Lugosi himself (or perhaps, one of his family members) was the sculptor, and only 35 were made to hand out to friends. Nevertheless, it is a marvelous little work of art and worthy of mention to Monsterologists. It is estimated to be valued for up to $10,000 at auction.
The statuette is shown at the bottom right in the picture above. Since Lugosi is seen with Santa, could it be possible that the pieces were created to be given as Christmas gifts?
Here is the description of the auction lot:
Dracula/Lugosi Statuette (c. Late 1940s). (8" x
2.5").
This is the famed ceramic statuette with glaze fired
coloring, believed to have been possibly sculpted by actor Bela Lugosi himself
and given as a gift to his friends. There were rumored to be only around 25 of
the figures produced in the day. Of those 25 produced, only a very small
handful are known to have survived. Richard Sheffield, a close friend of Lugosi
was said to have been given one of the sculptures and made a mold from which he
sold unpainted versions in Forrest J. Ackerman's Famous Monsters of Filmland
magazine and numerous resin copies have been sold through the years from copies
of copies. This example is unbroken in any fashion and has fine crazing to the
glaze in the face and white base from age. The figure comes with a handcrafted
wooden base which the figure can be mounted on. From the Collection of Lynn
Naron. Very Fine.
2 Comments
Close this window Jump to comment formCool, we had never heard of this one...
November 4, 2016 at 10:12 AM
It is indeed, unique to Monsterology.
November 4, 2016 at 10:54 AM