Ben Beaumont-Thomas 

Notorious BIG’s $6 crown sells for almost $600,000 at auction

Sotheby’s hip-hop auction also raises $126,000 for a 12-inch copy of Rammellzee track Beat Bop, with artwork by Jean-Michel Basquiat
  
  

The crown worn by the Notorious BIG, exhibited next to the photo in which it appeared.
The crown worn by the Notorious BIG, exhibited next to the photo in which it appeared. Photograph: Cindy Ord/Getty Images

A plastic crown costing $6 worn by the Notorious BIG has sold for $594,750 (£461,000) at Sotheby’s first ever auction of hip-hop memorabilia.

The crown was used by photographer Barron Claiborne in portraits made three days before the rapper’s murder in a drive-by shooting, and is signed by the Notorious BIG. It features “one point broken off, some general light wear and abrasions”, according to the listing. The sale price was double the $200,000-300,000 estimate.

A sealed 12-inch copy of one of hip-hop’s foundational tracks, Beat Bop by Rammellzee vs K-Rob released in 1983, sold for $126,000. It had been expected to sell for no more than $3,500, but its pedigree and its cover by Jean-Michel Basquiat pushed it far above the estimate. The price makes it among the most expensive records ever sold at auction (though some way off the record $790,000 paid for Ringo Starr’s 0000001-numbered copy of The White Album in 2015).

A cache of 22 love letters sent by Tupac Shakur to his high-school sweetheart Kathy Loy sold for $75,600. They show an emotional maturity he would soon bring to bear on his music. “I just want to be less sensitive and less of a pest,” he writes in one. “What I am feeling has to do with my insecurities, and I have to handle that on my own.” An autographed letter from the rapper also sold for $17,640.

Numerous items of clothing were sold, including colourful jackets worn by Salt-N-Pepa at the time of their hit Push It, a suit worn by Dr Dre and prototype Air Jordan trainers designed for Drake.

A commemorative postage stamp featuring Wu-Tang Clan, and signed by the group’s rapper-producer RZA, sold for $8,190.

Three artworks from De La Soul’s Daisy Age era trounced their estimates, with a study for the album cover Three Feet High and Rising selling for $21,420 (its peak estimate was $3,500).

Visual artworks by Janette Beckman, Shirt King Phade, rapper Schoolly D and more were also sold alongside flyers, posters and photography. A 2013 artwork by Fab 5 Freddy, one of hip-hop’s originators, sold for $22,680. The boombox installation Wall of Boom, by DJ Ross One, sold for $113,400. A Harlem subway sign, graffitied by artists between 1980-85, sold for $27,720, three times its estimate.

 

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