The online auction entitled 'The Beatles Collection' started December 6th and is auctioning off rare conversations with each member of The Beatles.
According to Rolling Stone, U2 guitarist, The Edge, and renowned producer Bob Ezrin are raising money to benefit Music Rising by assembling a stunning collection of guitars from Paul McCartney, Dave Grohl, Green Day, Tom Morello, and more.
In addition to the 7 uncut, never-before-seen scenes, Quentin Tarantino is also offering up original handwritten scripts and exclusive audio commentary.
More than 1,000 items were sold over three days from artists including Eddie Van Halen, The Beatles, Elvis Presley, Cher, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Jimi Hendrix, Tupac, Whitney Houston, The Doors, Little Richard, and more.
One of the classic "Captain America" Harley-Davidson choppers that appeared in the counterculture icon, 'Easy Rider,' is up for auction. But its authenticity has been called into question.
'Everydays: The First 5000 Days' is a collage of all the images that Beeple has been posting online each day since 2007, and it just set a new high for an artwork that exists only digitally.
A whole host of big name musicians have donated guitars and other stringed instruments to an online auction to help raise relief for the touring industry.
Banksy's famous environmentally conscious version of Claude Monet's "Water Lily Pond" is coming up for auction at Sotheby's London and is expected to go for up to $6.5 million.
Along with memorabilia from the likes of 'Knight Rider,' 'Superman,' 'Lord of the Rings,' and real gear and equipment from the Apollo 11 and 17 missions, Julien's latest auction was putting up big numbers.
The manuscript resurfaced after nearly 50 years at a Christie's auction and now he's fully released the recording to the public.
Fans and collectors will soon have a chance to get his handwritten notes for "The Times They Are A-Changin'," "Lay Lady Lay," and "Subterranean Homesick Blues." And if they reach their estimated prices, they could go for over $4 million.
If you want to have handwritten lyrics to “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”, from The Beatles' ninth eponymous double album (so-called 'White Album'), all you need is the asking price of $195,000.
The artificial intelligence-fueled robot uses algorithms to analyze millions of works of art and produce its own, which are then voted on and auctioned off as NFTs.
The Whitney Houston OneOf collection also includes thousands of fixed-price NFTs, including archival photos from Houston’s early life and career.
The Bowie painting originally sold for just less than $5 and is a part of his "Dead Heads" series from the mid-90s.
Among the highlighted lots is a group of 95 Books on acting, film, and theater with notes in the margins in Brando's handwriting (estimate: $10,000 – 15,000).
He's auctioning off his latest horror feature anthology 'Killroy Was Here', and the future owner will have the rights to exhibit, distribute and stream the film.
Originally painted in 1887, the work of art has been in the possession by a single French family for more than a century.
In addition to a number of other big ticket music memorabilia items from Bob Dylan and Neil Peart, and they're all expected to haul in massive sums.
The plastic crown, worn by Notorious B.I.G. in the iconic 'King of New York' photoshoot, was originally bought for $6 and sold for substantially more at Sotheby's inaugural hip-hop auction along with memorabilia from Tupac, Slick Rick, Salt-N-Pepa, and more.
Julien's Auctions, in collaboration with the Recording Academy, are holding an auction to support artists suffering financially during this COVID-19 pandemic. The list of big name contributors is extensive and growing.
This year's Music Icons auction will feature Paul McCartney's handwritten lyrics to "Maxwell's Silver Hammer," Prince's 'Blue Cloud' guitar, Jim Morrison's 'Paris Journal', and much more.
The auction was held online-only due to the escalating Coronavirus pandemic but that didn't stop it from fetching some incredible sums of money for the 250 Beatles items on offer.
Jerry Garcia's iconic Fender Stratocaster was used to play on the Grateful Dead’s 1972 European tour and, among others, 'Europe ’72' - considered by many to be one of the best live sets around.