May 10, 2004 - Sale 2006

Sale 2006 - Lot 88

Price Realized: $ 2,530
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 1,200 - $ 1,800
JOSEPH W. JICHA (1901- ) MIDAS / WHATSOEVER HE TOUCHES MIGHT BE GOLD. 1927.
371/2x25 inches. Continental Litho., Cleveland.
Condition A-: vertical and horizontal folds.
The Kokoon Club was founded in 1911 by Carl Moellman and William Sommer, young artists inspired by the dadaist movement and similar avant-garde organizations in Europe. "For artists who spent their days making advertisements and posters, the Kokoon Club provided a venue for subverting the traditional expectations of pictorial art. Their clubhouse became the epicenter of the true Bohemian lifestyle in Cleveland, and the name of the club soon became known for radical art" (Cleveland Artists Foundation Newsletter 2/1 February 2004). According to papers kept in the Kent State University Library Special Collections, amounting to an archive of the club's activities from 1922-1935, the name Kokoon derives from "the lowly cocoon . . . foreruner of the beautiful butterfly in hope that from this small begining something of beauty should develop and emerge." Among the club members were Carl Moellmann, Morris Grossman, Elmer Brubeck, Henry Keller, August Biehle, Joseph Jicha and Rolf Stoll. The yearly costume balls, begun in 1913, were originally intended as fundraising events, but turned into rather notorious events. "The event was a complete arts ball; everything was a work of art: the elaborate hall decorations, the tickets, the costumes, and above all the invitations. The invitations were poster-mailers designed every year as a hotly contested art competition. Kokoon Club posters were the ultimate blending of the commercial and the aesthetic. They were advertisements that were also cutting-edge fine art." (ibid) The following five lots represent the largest number of these posters to ever come to market at one time.Here, for the fourteenth Kokoon Club Ball, Midas in a flowing blue cape is descending on a crowd of gaily colored, cubist-inspired dancers. His wand, quite literally, turning their gyrating revelry into golden silhouettes. These costumed balls were so renowned for their debauchery, that in 1923, the city of Cleveland actually banned the ball based on charges of "immorality" and "drunkenness". The following year the city reinstated the event with the stipulation that attendees wear decent clothing.