Santa Monica Auctions


2525 Michigan Ave Suite A5, Santa Monica, California 90404
310-315-1937

About Auction House

Established in 1985, Santa Monica Auctions is an independently, owned and operated boutique auction house specializing in sourcing modern and contemporary art of all mediums in Santa Monica, CA. Catering to the local crowd as well as the international art community, Santa Monica Auctions offers live internet bidding, phone/absentee bids and a digital catalogue to accommodate last minute consignments, solidifying SMA as both a buyer and seller's market

Auction Previews & News

2 Results
  • Press Release
    LA WEEKLY NEWS / APRIL 25, 2018

    Robert Berman’s Santa Monica Auctions has been in business for decades, a twice-yearly weekend event offering rare fine art and ephemera gems with an above-average rate of interesting provenances. But even by his standards, Lot 110 at the Sunday, May 6, auction takes the cake. And the cats. And dogs. And clown suits. It’s everything. Lot 110 is a painting by the legendary Margaret Keane, of Big Eyesfame. At almost 4 x 6 feet, it is her largest canvas, and something of a crown jewel in her career. Commissioned by Jerry Lewis in 1961 as a portrait of the comedian and his family with his first wife, Patti Lewis, it originally features their five children (plus three cats and four dogs). Two years later, the couple had a sixth child, a son, and Keane came back and added him to the painting. You can see him as the small child on Patti’s lap, in the white onesie with the blue collar. Keane herself wrote of the experience, “Until such an unlikely time as I paint the Ride of the Valkyries, this shall remain my most gymnastic work. I had to use hitherto unsuspected muscles to tether this herd. There are 14 subjects and guess which one was the most difficult to keep in focus.” And she also addressed the situation with the Harlequin costumes. “Here the clownish part of him is seen only in the motley he wears. The rest is Jerry Lewis, the intense creative personality, devoted family man….” Devoted or not, the Lewises divorced, but Patti had the painting and it was willed to the estate when she died. One of their sons, who was managing the family estate, sold the painting to a buyer who was a friend of the family, for an undisclosed sum, with the stipulation that he could not sell the painting for at least five years. In fact, that buyer held on to it until Jerry Lewis died in 2017. Since then, this trusted but unnamed person inquired with a private dealer as to its sale. And that brings us to May 6. Not only will the…

  • Press Release
    This 1962 Jerry Lewis Family Portrait by Margaret Keane Exists. You’re Welcome.

    Robert Berman’s Santa Monica Auctions has been in business for decades, a twice-yearly weekend event offering rare fine art and ephemera gems with an above-average rate of interesting provenances. But even by his standards, Lot 110 at the Sunday, May 6, auction takes the cake. And the cats. And dogs. And clown suits. It’s everything. Lot 110 is a painting by the legendary Margaret Keane, of Big Eyesfame. At almost 4 x 6 feet, it is her largest canvas, and something of a crown jewel in her career. Commissioned by Jerry Lewis in 1961 as a portrait of the comedian and his family with his first wife, Patti Lewis, it originally features their five children (plus three cats and four dogs). Two years later, the couple had a sixth child, a son, and Keane came back and added him to the painting. You can see him as the small child on Patti’s lap, in the white onesie with the blue collar. Keane herself wrote of the experience, “Until such an unlikely time as I paint the Ride of the Valkyries, this shall remain my most gymnastic work. I had to use hitherto unsuspected muscles to tether this herd. There are 14 subjects and guess which one was the most difficult to keep in focus.” And she also addressed the situation with the Harlequin costumes. “Here the clownish part of him is seen only in the motley he wears. The rest is Jerry Lewis, the intense creative personality, devoted family man….” Devoted or not, the Lewises divorced, but Patti had the painting and it was willed to the estate when she died. One of their sons, who was managing the family estate, sold the painting to a buyer who was a friend of the family, for an undisclosed sum, with the stipulation that he could not sell the painting for at least five years. In fact, that buyer held on to it until Jerry Lewis died in 2017. Since then, this trusted but unnamed person inquired with a private dealer as to its sale. And that brings us to May 6. Not only will the…