Sam I Am - Diptych and Single

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Sam I Am - Diptych and Single

$395.00

Single - Right Image Only

ARABIC EDITION:
SOLD OUT
The Arabic portion of this edition is Sold Out. 

COLLABORATOR PROOF EDITION: 
RARE AVAILABILITY
Rare works from the Collaborators Proof edition may be available, please inquire with your art consultant or preferred Authorized Gallery for details. 


NOTE: The Collaborator Proof edition has been reserved for important public exhibitions, major gallery retrospectives, and select private collections.

Serigraph on Coventry Rag Paper
Authorized Estate Edition

Image Size: 11.75” x 8.5”
Paper Size: 14.75” x 11”

Limited Edition of 1500 Arabic Numbers
155 Collaborators’ Proofs


Diptych

ARABIC EDITION:
SOLD OUT
The Arabic portion of this edition is Sold Out.

COLLABORATOR PROOF EDITION:
RARE AVAILABILITY
Rare works from the Collaborators Proof edition may be available, please inquire with your art consultant or preferred Authorized Gallery for details. 


NOTE: The Collaborator Proof edition has been reserved for important public exhibitions, major gallery retrospectives, and select private collections.

Serigraph on Coventry Rag Paper
Authorized Estate Edition

Image Size: 11.75” x 18”
Paper Size: 14.75” x 20.5” 

Limited Edition of 850 Arabic Numbers
99 Patrons’ Collection
155 Collaborators’ Proofs
5 Hors d’ Commerce

Adapted posthumously from an early concept drawing and the final illustration for the 1960 book, Green Eggs and Ham.

Adapted posthumously from the final illustration for the 1960 book, Green Eggs and Ham.

Green Eggs and Ham was born out of a $50 wager between Dr. Seuss and his publisher, Bennett Cerf, who bet he couldn’t write an articulate, entertaining book using only fifty different words. The result was a 62-page volume composed of 49 monosyllabic words and a fiftieth three-syllable word “anywhere.” When Cerf heard Ted’s first reading of the book, he seemed dazed, shaking his head over the clear triumph of Green Eggs and Ham, which had begun as their private joke. Although he conceded the fifty-dollar bet, Ted cheerily “complained” throughout his life that Cerf never paid up. A small price for what ultimately became a national treasure.

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