LONDON (Reuters) – The original map of Winnie-the-Poohs Hundred Acre Wood by artist E.H. Shepard was bought for a record-breaking 430,000 pounds ($570,137) on Tuesday, auctioneers Sothebys said.
The map for A.A. Milnes childrens classic, completed in 1926, broke the record for the amount offered for any book illustration at auction, it added.
Unseen for nearly half a century, the map easily surpassed its pre-sale estimate of 100,000 to 150,000 pounds.
Featuring on the opening end-papers of the original book, the map introduces readers to the imagination of Christopher Robin and his woodland friends Eeyore and Roo.
Forty years later, it played a starring role in the Disney film “Winnie-the-Pooh and the Honey Tree” where it was brought to life as an animation in the films opening sequence.
Four other original Pooh illustrations were sold alongside the map, with the five fetching a combined total of 917,500 pounds compared with a 310,000 to 440,000-pound estimate.
Reporting by Jo Heywood; editing by Stephen Addison
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